ABSTRACT

This book analyses the formation of the Spanish banking system. It provides a general overview of European financial systems in operation during the mid-nineteenth century, followed by a detailed analysis of the economic and institutional changes that gave rise to a new form of banking in Spain.

The chapters analyse changes on banking regulation; study the social origin of banks’ promoters; investigate the economic results of banks; and evaluate the interaction between banks and the economy as a whole. Finally, the causes, extent and consequences of monetary plurality in Spain and its European context are discussed. As such, this book covers the gap that exists in the Spanish banking historiography. Until now only the Bank of Spain and its predecessors had been adequately examined. As the Bank of Spain acted mostly as the state’s financial agent, we know very little about private-sector financing. This text provides data and analysis for a more comprehensive view of early Spanish financial development in a comparative European framework. The Origins of Modern Banking in Spain should be considered essential reading for financial history students and scholars, as well as anybody interested in longview approaches to modern financial development.

chapter |10 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|38 pages

Money and banking in Europe, 1700–1890

The formation of new financial systems

chapter 3|20 pages

Bourgeoisie and provincial banks

Social origins of the new banking elite

chapter 5|44 pages

Provincial banks of issue and the Spanish economy

Money and credit

chapter 6|16 pages

The unexpected end of monetary plurality

A premature demise?