ABSTRACT

This book sheds new light on the role played by European banks in the economic colonization of much of the globe. Based on previously unused archival material, it examines the origins and development of imperial banking systems. Contributors utilize new developments and methodology in business history to explore a broad range of countries including Cuba, Brazil, Portugal, South Africa and Algeria. 

The central topic of interest in this book is the institutional history of central, issuing and rediscounting banks. While much attention has been paid to the British, Dutch and French banks and financial instituions, this book is unique in its focus on colonial and overseas banking. Using a range of case studies, this book highlights both the immense variety and cohesion that defined colonial banking practices.

This book will be of interest to researchers concerned with international finance and banking and economic history.

part |20 pages

Overall issues

chapter |18 pages

Issues about European colonial banking

Varieties of cultures, models and histories

part |91 pages

Colonial banking

chapter |16 pages

Colonial banking: one model, two histories

Cuba and Puerto Rico before independence

chapter |22 pages

Dutch colonial and imperial banking

Different ways of entry and exit

chapter |19 pages

Strategies for market monopolization

The Register of Co-operation and the ‘imperial banks' in South Africa in the 1920s–1980s

chapter |8 pages

From colonial and imperial banking to independent banking

A dialectical perspective of the evolution of Angola

part |69 pages

French colonial banking

chapter |33 pages

Colonial banking in French North Africa

Banque de l'Algérie et de la Tunisie (1851–1963)

chapter |25 pages

Parisian banking networks and the empire

Measuring the influence of ‘colonial' bankers

chapter |8 pages

Concluding remarks

Colonial banking, imperial banking, overseas banking, imperialist banking: convergences, osmoses and differentiation