This paper provides an overview of the public finances of the Cape Colony in the period during which it was governed by the Dutch East India Company (1652–1795). Using information from secondary sources, the paper discusses the expenditures and revenue sources of the Company at the Cape; in addition, it reports findings on the composition and distribution of the tax burden derived from an analysis of the “opgaafrolle” (the annual censuses that were undertaken to determine tax obligations). It shows that the Company’s expenses exceeded its revenues throughout the period under review and that the tax system was broadly progressive. While the Dutch East India Company invested little in the economic development of the Cape Colony, it d...
Objective - This study aims to analyse the Colonial Drain process to prove the colonial land profits...
The governments of the Habsburg Empire (1477-1579) and the Dutch Republic (1579) depended largely on...
The relationship between the VOC (Dutch East India Company) and its servants fundamentally changed w...
CITATION: Fourie, J., Jansen, A. & Siebrits, K. 2013. Public finances under private company rule : t...
Revenue farming (pacht or verpachtingen in Dutch) is a fiscal institution that existed in Java since...
This study contributes to debates on the efficacy of institutions in settler colonies by comparing t...
Abstract: The retail of alcohol was so central to the economy and society of the Cape of Good Hope d...
Three important questions about the Dutch Cape Colony are investigated in this dissertation: 1) how ...
Most historians regard the Cape Colony of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries as an impoverishe...
Kuitenbrouwer and Schijf focus on multiple directors from companies with their main activities in th...
The resource curse literature underscores the fact that extractive economies face challenges in dive...
The Dutch East India Company (VOC) is generally viewed as the first modern corporation, yet its 1602...
With their legal personhood, permanent capital with transferable shares, separation of ownership and...
The economic and historical literature is divided about the role of metropolitan identity for the de...
Colonial possessions were a source of substantial revenue for the Dutch economy for over three centu...
Objective - This study aims to analyse the Colonial Drain process to prove the colonial land profits...
The governments of the Habsburg Empire (1477-1579) and the Dutch Republic (1579) depended largely on...
The relationship between the VOC (Dutch East India Company) and its servants fundamentally changed w...
CITATION: Fourie, J., Jansen, A. & Siebrits, K. 2013. Public finances under private company rule : t...
Revenue farming (pacht or verpachtingen in Dutch) is a fiscal institution that existed in Java since...
This study contributes to debates on the efficacy of institutions in settler colonies by comparing t...
Abstract: The retail of alcohol was so central to the economy and society of the Cape of Good Hope d...
Three important questions about the Dutch Cape Colony are investigated in this dissertation: 1) how ...
Most historians regard the Cape Colony of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries as an impoverishe...
Kuitenbrouwer and Schijf focus on multiple directors from companies with their main activities in th...
The resource curse literature underscores the fact that extractive economies face challenges in dive...
The Dutch East India Company (VOC) is generally viewed as the first modern corporation, yet its 1602...
With their legal personhood, permanent capital with transferable shares, separation of ownership and...
The economic and historical literature is divided about the role of metropolitan identity for the de...
Colonial possessions were a source of substantial revenue for the Dutch economy for over three centu...
Objective - This study aims to analyse the Colonial Drain process to prove the colonial land profits...
The governments of the Habsburg Empire (1477-1579) and the Dutch Republic (1579) depended largely on...
The relationship between the VOC (Dutch East India Company) and its servants fundamentally changed w...