The debate over the institutions that link economic growth to public finance tends to disregard the need for savings to finance growing public debt. In seventeenth-century Holland the structure, size, and issuing rates of the debt were determined by investors’ preferences, wealth accumulation, and changing private investment opportunities. The growth of savings enabled the creation of a huge debt largely with short-term bills. Issuing rates dropped because savings outstripped private investment alternatives. In Holland, and probably elsewhere as well, credible commitment and efficient fiscal institutions were necessary, but not sufficient to create liquid secondary markets and low costs of capital
Although intellectual historians have long established that the evolution of national debt had a dec...
Why did the country that borrowed the most industrialize first? Earlier research has viewed the expl...
This research paper aims to investigate the complex relationship between public debt and economic gr...
The debate over the institutions that link economic growth to public finance tends to disregard the ...
The formation of the Dutch state has recurrently been related to a 'financial revolution' dating fro...
The formation of the Dutch state has recurrently been related to a 'financial revolution' dating fro...
During the eighteenth century European governments began systematically using an international credi...
The governments of the Habsburg Empire (1477-1579) and the Dutch Republic (1579) depended largely on...
The book is structured as follows. Chapter 1 introduces medieval Holland as a significant entity for...
Public debt as a financial development device This article develops the idea that public debt can b...
The problems experienced by the Dutch economy during the last seven years are discussed, problems fo...
The article analyzes the evolution of the Amsterdam capital market as a consequence of Dutch oversea...
On the basis of a newly constructed dataset of the national accounts of the province of Holland in t...
Although intellectual historians have long established that the evolution of national debt had a dec...
Although intellectual historians have long established that the evolution of national debt had a dec...
Although intellectual historians have long established that the evolution of national debt had a dec...
Why did the country that borrowed the most industrialize first? Earlier research has viewed the expl...
This research paper aims to investigate the complex relationship between public debt and economic gr...
The debate over the institutions that link economic growth to public finance tends to disregard the ...
The formation of the Dutch state has recurrently been related to a 'financial revolution' dating fro...
The formation of the Dutch state has recurrently been related to a 'financial revolution' dating fro...
During the eighteenth century European governments began systematically using an international credi...
The governments of the Habsburg Empire (1477-1579) and the Dutch Republic (1579) depended largely on...
The book is structured as follows. Chapter 1 introduces medieval Holland as a significant entity for...
Public debt as a financial development device This article develops the idea that public debt can b...
The problems experienced by the Dutch economy during the last seven years are discussed, problems fo...
The article analyzes the evolution of the Amsterdam capital market as a consequence of Dutch oversea...
On the basis of a newly constructed dataset of the national accounts of the province of Holland in t...
Although intellectual historians have long established that the evolution of national debt had a dec...
Although intellectual historians have long established that the evolution of national debt had a dec...
Although intellectual historians have long established that the evolution of national debt had a dec...
Why did the country that borrowed the most industrialize first? Earlier research has viewed the expl...
This research paper aims to investigate the complex relationship between public debt and economic gr...