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Unlike some other reproductions of classic texts (1) We have not
used OCR(Optical Character Recognition), as this leads to bad
quality books with introduced typos. (2) In books where there are
images such as portraits, maps, sketches etc We have endeavoured to
keep the quality of these images, so they represent accurately the
original artefact. Although occasionally there may be certain
imperfections with these old texts, we feel they deserve to be made
available for future generations to enjoy.
A leading economic historian presents a new history of financial
crises, showing how some led to greater globalization while others
kept nations apart  The eminent economic historian Harold
James presents a new perspective on financial crises, dividing them
into “good†crises, which ultimately expand markets and
globalization, and “bad†crises, which result in a smaller,
less prosperous world. Examining seven turning points in financial
history—from the depression of the 1840s through the Great
Depression of the 1930s to the Covid-19 crisis—James shows how
crashes prompted by a lack of supply, like the oil shortages of the
1970s, lead to greater globalization as markets expand and
producers innovate to increase supply. By contrast, crises
triggered by a lack of demand—such as the Global Financial Crisis
of 2007–2008—result in less globalization as markets contract,
austerity measures are imposed, and skepticism of government grows.
 By considering not only the times but also the observers
who shaped our understanding of each crisis—from Karl Marx to
John Maynard Keynes to Larry Summers—James shows how the uneven
course of globalization has led to new economic thinking, and how
understanding this history can help us better prepare for the
future.
With contributions from world-renowned figures such as Niall
Ferguson and Adair Turner, this volume investigates how financial
institutions and markets have undergone or reacted to past
pressures, and the regulatory responses that emerged as a result.
Reinsurance is an invisible service industry which enables
insurance companies to insure more risks and to make better use of
their resources. Until recently, reinsurers were only known to a
small minority outside the insurance community. Major disasters,
especially those caused by natural catastrophes, have increasingly
brought the industry into the spotlight. Yet what is perceived
today by a wider public still only represents a fraction of the
industry, and the mechanisms of reinsurance to deal with global
risk exposure are virtually unknown. The Value of Risk provides an
overview of how today's reinsurance industry developed. It
investigates for the first time the role of reinsurers in a
changing risk, economic, and market environment. Harold James
explains the fundamental principles of insuring and outlines the
evolution of the industry in his introductory essay. In Part I,
Peter Borscheid describes in detail the global spread of modern
insurance, which emerged in the late eighteenth century amidst
ideas of rationalism which attempted to quantify risk in monetary
terms, the setbacks it encountered, and how the market environment
changed over time. Professional reinsurance emerged with the rise
in insured risks in the industrialising mid-nineteenth century. By
the time the San Francisco Earthquake happened in 1906 the
reinsurance industry had become well established and showed a
remarkable ability to deal collectively with the catastrophe. David
Gugerli describes in Part II how the industry as a whole dealt with
such challenges but also the numerous exposures to a changing risk
landscape. Against this background, in Part III Tobias Straumann
examines the history of the Swiss Reinsurance Company, founded in
1863, providing a fascinating example of how professional risk
taking was developed over the last 150 years.
First Published in 1992. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor &
Francis, an informa company.
This book examines the role of Deutsche Bank, Germany's largest
commercial bank, during the Nazi dictatorship, and asks how the
bank changed and accommodated to a transition from democracy and a
market economy to dictatorship and a planned economy. Set against
the background of the world depression and the German banking
crisis of 1931, the book looks at the restructuring of German
banking and offers new material on the bank's expansion in central
and eastern Europe. As well as summarizing recent research on the
bank's controversial role in gold transactions and the financing of
the construction of Auschwitz, the book also examines the role
played by particular personalities in the development of the bank,
such as Emil Georg von Strauss and Hermann Abs.
With present concerns over the regulation of the banking industry
continuing to make headlines, an examination of the historiography
of financial crises is timely. With contributions from
world-renowned figures such as Niall Ferguson, Adair Turner and
William R White, this volume investigates how financial
institutions and markets have undergone or reacted to past
pressures, the role of financial innovations in this process and
the regulatory responses that emerged as a result.
The essays in this volume consider the involvement of business
corporations and of individual businessmen in the politics of the
1930s and 1940s: in the move away from the market and also from
democracy, towards state control and authoritarianism, including
the massive intervention of the state in property rights. How far
did businesses attempt to guide this intervention for their own
purposes, and to what extent did they succeed? This debate deals,
centrally, with the role of German business, of banks, of
industrial corporations, and of small tradesmen in the Nazi regime.
An older discussion of how they may have facilitated the Nazi
takeover has been supplemented here by an investigation into how
they made the regime's policies possible, and the extent to which
the profit motive drove them to participate - with sometimes more,
sometimes less enthusiasm - in the politics of inhumanity. Such
discussion has been given further impetus by legal action,
initially in the United States, in the form of class action suits
on behalf of the victims of Nazism. What do such legal and
political debates mean for business history? What are the current
responsibilities of business facing the consequences of historical
action? And what lessons should be learned concerning the ethics of
business behaviour? The contributions to this volume were
originally presented as papers at a conference organised by the
Society for European Business History in Paris in November 1998.
The great rapidity of events in 1989-90, the collapse of Communism
in eastern Europe, together with German reunification, took both
participants and observers by surprise. "When the Wall Came Down"
provides a wide-ranging compendium of responses in Germany and
other countries - USA, Britain, USSR, France, Czechoslovakia,
Israel, Poland, Italy and Japan. Following the editors'
introduction which raises the issues implicit in the unification
process, the essays examine the various components of the debate:
modern Germany's relationship with its past, the role of German
intellectuals in public life, the implications of German unity for
the process of increased European political and economic
integration, prospects for peace and stability in Central Europe,
and the future of the nation-state. Present a diverse range of
views and countries, "When the Wall Came Down" provides an
extensive analysis of the German Question at this crucial time.
Contributors include : Henry Kissinger, Vaclav Havel, Ralf
Dahrendorf, Timothy Garton Ash, Conor Cruise O'Brien, Gunter Grass,
Jurgen Habermas, Stefan Heym, Christa Wolf, and Joachim Fest.
Although international finance and banking has been the subject of
much research and writing, the economic impact of banks on
industrial structures and the relations between banking and
industry in the twentieth century have remained a relatively
unexplored area. This 1991 volume examines and interprets the
economic effect of the financing of industry by banks and of the
banks' credit intermediation in industrialised economies.
Particular attention is given to the interplay of economics and
politics, to the connections between bankers and industrialists,
and to the significance of interlocking directorships. A special
section is devoted to a hitherto wholly neglected problem in
economic history: the vital influence of universal banking in small
but highly industrialised countries in central Europe and
Scandinavia.
Deutsche Bank, Germany's largest financial institution, played an important role in the expropriation of Jewish-owned enterprises during the Nazi dictatorship, both in the existing territories of Germany, and in the areas seized by the German army during World War II, particularly Austria, Czechoslovakia, and Poland. Drawing on new and previously unavailable materials, including branch records, and many from the Bank's own archives, Harold James examines policies that led to the eventual Genocide of European Jews. How much did the realization of the Nazi ideology depend on the acquiescence, the complicity, and the cupidity of individuals and economic institutions? Contradicting the traditional view that businesses were motivated by profit to cooperate with the Nazi regime, James closely examines the behavior of the bank and its individuals to suggest other motivations. James' unparalleled access and unusual perspective distinguishes this work as the only book to examine one company's involvement in the economic persecution of the Jews in Nazi Germany. Harold James is Professor of History at Princeton University. He is a member of the Independent Commission of Experts investigating the political and economic links of Switzerland with Nazi Germany, and of commissions to examine the roles of Deutsche Bank and Dresdner Bank. He is the author of several books on Germany economy and society, including Germany: The German Slump (Oxford University Press, 1986), A Germany Identity 1770-1990 (Routledge, 1993), and International Monetary Cooperation Since 1945 (Oxford University Press, 1996). He co-edited several books, including The Role of Banks in the Interwar Economy (Cambridge, 1991). James was also co-author of an earlier history of the commercial bank Deutsche Bank (Deutsche Bank 1870-1995, Weidenfeld and Nicholson, 1995) which won the Financial Times Global Business Book Award in 1996. He lives in Princeton, New Jersey.
Europe Contested analyses the failures and achievements of an
astonishing era of economic advance and political chaos, from the
First World War up to the present day. Beginning with the Great
War, the book goes on to examine connections between the
self-destruction of liberal democracy, market economics, and the
international political and security framework in the interwar
period. It then considers the mass politics that surrounded the
glorification of new-style leaders Lenin, Stalin, Mussolini, and
Hitler before moving on to explore the ways in which the interwar
legacy was superseded post-1945. James examines the deceptive
appearance of stability brought by a new convergence in European
politics that focused around the market and the principle of
liberal democracy, and demonstrates how the impact of globalization
and openness to migration and to destabilizing financial capital
flows has eroded traditional politics and ended the stable
left-right polarization at the core of the postwar order. This new
edition has been thoroughly updated throughout, demonstrating also
how an era of crisis is challenging Europe and its values.
Supported by boxed case studies, illustrations, chronologies and an
annotated bibliography, and focusing on Europe as a whole, it is
the perfect introduction for students of Modern European History.
Making a Modern Central Bank examines a revolution in monetary and
economic policy. This authoritative guide explores how the Bank of
England shifted its traditional mechanisms to accommodate a newly
internationalized financial and economic system. The Bank's
transformation into a modern inflation-targeting independent
central bank allowed it to focus on a precisely defined task of
monetary management, ensuring price stability. The reframing of the
task of central banks, however, left them increasingly vulnerable
to financial crisis. James vividly outlines and discusses
significant historical developments in UK monetary policy, and his
knowledge of modern European history adds rich context to archival
research on the Bank of England's internal documents. A worthy
continuation of the previous official histories of the Bank of
England, this book also reckons with contemporary issues, shedding
light on the origins of growing backlash against globalization and
the European Union.
Making a Modern Central Bank examines a revolution in monetary and
economic policy. This authoritative guide explores how the Bank of
England shifted its traditional mechanisms to accommodate a newly
internationalized financial and economic system. The Bank's
transformation into a modern inflation-targeting independent
central bank allowed it to focus on a precisely defined task of
monetary management, ensuring price stability. The reframing of the
task of central banks, however, left them increasingly vulnerable
to financial crisis. James vividly outlines and discusses
significant historical developments in UK monetary policy, and his
knowledge of modern European history adds rich context to archival
research on the Bank of England's internal documents. A worthy
continuation of the previous official histories of the Bank of
England, this book also reckons with contemporary issues, shedding
light on the origins of growing backlash against globalization and
the European Union.
The essays, written by leading experts, examine the history of the
international financial system in terms of the debate about
globalization and its limits. In the nineteenth century,
international markets existed without international institutions. A
response to the problems of capital flows came in the form of
attempts to regulate national capital markets (for instance through
the establishment of central banks). In the inter-war years, there
were (largely unsuccessful) attempts at designing a genuine
international trade and monetary system; and at the same time
(coincidentally) the system collapsed. In the post-1945 era, the
intended design effort was infinitely more successful. The
development of large international capital markets since the 1960s,
however, increasingly frustrated attempts at international control.
The emphasis has shifted in consequence to debates about increasing
the transparency and effectiveness of markets; but these are
exactly the issues that already dominated the nineteenth-century
discussions.
Europe Contested analyses the failures and achievements of an
astonishing era of economic advance and political chaos, from the
First World War up to the present day. Beginning with the Great
War, the book goes on to examine connections between the
self-destruction of liberal democracy, market economics, and the
international political and security framework in the interwar
period. It then considers the mass politics that surrounded the
glorification of new-style leaders Lenin, Stalin, Mussolini, and
Hitler before moving on to explore the ways in which the interwar
legacy was superseded post-1945. James examines the deceptive
appearance of stability brought by a new convergence in European
politics that focused around the market and the principle of
liberal democracy, and demonstrates how the impact of globalization
and openness to migration and to destabilizing financial capital
flows has eroded traditional politics and ended the stable
left-right polarization at the core of the postwar order. This new
edition has been thoroughly updated throughout, demonstrating also
how an era of crisis is challenging Europe and its values.
Supported by boxed case studies, illustrations, chronologies and an
annotated bibliography, and focusing on Europe as a whole, it is
the perfect introduction for students of Modern European History.
Examines the role of Deutsche Bank, Germany's largest commercial
bank, during the Nazi dictatorship, and asks how the bank changed
and accommodated to a transition from democracy and a market
economy to dictatorship and a planned economy. Set against the
background of the world depression and the German banking crisis of
1931, the book looks at the restructuring of German banking and
offers material on the bank's expansion in central and eastern
Europe. As well as summarizing research on the bank's controversial
role in gold transactions and the financing of the construction of
Auschwitz, the book also examines the role played by particular
personalities in the development of the bank, such as Emil Georg
von Strauss and Hermann Abs.
Deutsche Bank, Germany's largest financial institution, played an
important role in the expropriation of Jewish-owned enterprises
during the Nazi dictatorship, both in the existing territories of
Germany, and in the areas seized by the German army during World
War II, particularly Austria, Czechoslovakia, and Poland. Drawing
on new and previously unavailable materials, including branch
records, and many from the Bank's own archives, Harold James
examines policies that led to the eventual Genocide of European
Jews. How much did the realization of the Nazi ideology depend on
the acquiescence, the complicity, and the cupidity of individuals
and economic institutions? Contradicting the traditional view that
businesses were motivated by profit to cooperate with the Nazi
regime, James closely examines the behavior of the bank and its
individuals to suggest other motivations. James' unparalleled
access and unusual perspective distinguishes this work as the only
book to examine one company's involvement in the economic
persecution of the Jews in Nazi Germany. Harold James is Professor
of History at Princeton University. He is a member of the
Independent Commission of Experts investigating the political and
economic links of Switzerland with Nazi Germany, and of commissions
to examine the roles of Deutsche Bank and Dresdner Bank. He is the
author of several books on Germany economy and society, including
Germany: The German Slump (Oxford University Press, 1986), A
Germany Identity 1770-1990 (Routledge, 1993), and International
Monetary Cooperation Since 1945 (Oxford University Press, 1996). He
co-edited several books, including The Role of Banks in the
Interwar Economy (Cambridge, 1991). Jameswas also co-author of an
earlier history of the commercial bank Deutsche Bank (Deutsche Bank
1870-1995, Weidenfeld and Nicholson, 1995) which won the Financial
Times Global Business Book Award in 1996. He lives in Princeton,
New Jersey.
How philosophical differences between Eurozone nations led to the
Euro crisis-and where to go from here Why is Europe's great
monetary endeavor, the Euro, in trouble? A string of economic
difficulties in Eurozone nations has left observers wondering
whether the currency union can survive. In this book, Markus
Brunnermeier, Harold James, and Jean-Pierre Landau argue that the
core problem with the Euro lies in the philosophical differences
between the founding countries of the Eurozone, particularly
Germany and France. But the authors also show how these seemingly
incompatible differences can be reconciled to ensure Europe's
survival. Weaving together economic analysis and historical
reflection, The Euro and the Battle of Ideas provides a forensic
investigation and a road map for Europe's future.
Although international finance and banking has been the subject of research and writing, the economic impact of banks on industrial structures and the relations between banking and industry in the twentieth century have remained relatively unexplored areas. This volume examines and interprets the economic effect of the financing of industry by banks and of the banks' credit intermediation in industrialized economies. Particular attention is given to the interplay of economics and politics, to the connections between bankers and industrialists, and to the significance of interlocking directorships. A special section is devoted to a hitherto wholly neglected problem in economic history: the vital influence of universal banking in small but highly industrialized countries in central Europe and Scandinavia.
Why is Europe's great monetary endeavor, the Euro, in trouble? A
string of economic difficulties in Greece, Ireland, Spain, Italy,
and other Eurozone nations has left observers wondering whether the
currency union can survive. In this book, Markus Brunnermeier,
Harold James, and Jean-Pierre Landau argue that the core problem
with the Euro lies in the philosophical differences between the
founding countries of the Eurozone, particularly Germany and
France. But the authors also show how these seemingly incompatible
differences can be reconciled to ensure Europe's survival. As the
authors demonstrate, Germany, a federal state with strong regional
governments, saw the Maastricht Treaty, the framework for the Euro,
as a set of rules. France, on the other hand, with a more
centralized system of government, saw the framework as flexible, to
be overseen by governments. The authors discuss how the troubles
faced by the Euro have led its member states to focus on national,
as opposed to collective, responses, a reaction explained by the
resurgence of the battle of economic ideas: rules vs. discretion,
liability vs. solidarity, solvency vs. liquidity, austerity vs.
stimulus. Weaving together economic analysis and historical
reflection, The Euro and the Battle of Ideas provides a forensic
investigation and a road map for Europe's future.
Die fundamentalen Probleme der Wirtschaftskrise in den spaten 20er
und fruhen 30er Jahren des 20. Jahrhunderts bleiben nach wie vor
eine intellektuelle Herausforderung. Wie kaum ein anderes Datum der
jungsten Weltgeschichte hat der "Schwarze Donnerstag" des 24.
Oktober 1929 den Glauben an die Rationalitat der Markte erschuttert
und deren Verwundbarkeit aufgezeigt. Die "Grosse Depression" des
fruhen 20. Jahrhunderts als - fatales - Ergebnis eines Versuchs zu
werten, das Rad der Geschichte zuruckzudrehen und mit Kontrolle,
Protektionismus, Nationalismus und Autarkie dem freien Verkehr von
Waren, Kapitalstromen und nicht zuletzt Menschen zu begegnen, ist
eine der Botschaften dieses Bandes. Aus dem Inhalt: Harold James,
Introduction: Interpreting the Great Depression Albrecht Ritschl,
International Capital Movements and the Onset of the Great
Depression: Some International Evidence Dietmar Rothermund,
Currencies, Taxes and Credit. Asian Peasants in the Great
Depression, 1930-1939 Monika Rosengarten Carl-Ludwig Holtfrerich,
Economic Policy Positions and Influence of the International
Chamber of Commerce during the Great Depression Gerald D. Feldman,
Insurance Company Collapses in the World Economic Crisis. The
Frankfurter Allgemeine Versicherungs-AG (Fevag) and the Austrian
Phonix Patricia Clavin, Explaining the Failure of the London World
Economic Conference Robert Skidelsky, The Great Depression: Keyness
Perspective Christoph Buchheim, The "Crisis befor the Crisis" - The
Export Engine Out of Gear Forrest Capie, The International
Depression and Trade Protection in the 1930s Solomos Solomou, Trade
Protection in the 1930s"
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