Steering the Wheels of Commerce: State and Enterprise in International Trade Finance, 1914-1929

AutorIn Name
Gordon Myles
Jamieson
Academic writing genre
PhD thesis
Status
abgeschlossen/terminé
DozentIn Name
Prof.
Mary
O’Sullivan
Institution
Institut d'histoire économique Paul Bairoch
Place
Genève
Year
2020/2021
Abstract
Existing historical studies on international trade finance (ITF) in the interwar period overwhelmingly focus on highly specialised questions relating to the operation of financial markets and monetary systems. This thesis adopts an alternative approach by studying the political economy of ITF between the Great War and the Great Depression. Based on case studies of Britain, the United States, Germany, and the League of Nations, the thesis uses ITF as window into the sustained efforts by national and international actors to rebuild global capitalism after World War I. Despite the creation of new state institutions, the private arrangements that had sustained ITF before the war survived largely intact in its aftermath. But continuity did not imply inertia. On the contrary, thanks in particular to central banks, these arrangements proved to be remarkably adaptable when it came to dealing with the new risks and increased complexity that resulted from the conflict.

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