An expanding economy, new technologies, and changing consumer preferences provided growth opportunities for firms in interwar Australia. This period saw an increase in the number of large-scale firms in mining, manufacturing, and a wide range of service industries. Firms unable to rely solely on retained earnings to fund expansion turned to the domestic stock exchanges. A new data set of capital raisings constructed from reports of prospectuses published in the financial press forms the basis for the conclusion that many firms used substantial injections of equity finance to augment internally generated sources of funds. That they were able to do so indicates a strong increase in the capacity of local stock exchanges and a greater willingne...
The broad purpose of this study is to investigate the major sources of funds of small firms in the m...
This paper examines the links between economic growth and the nature of a country’s financial system...
Was the London Stock Exchange (LSE) little more than a Dickensian den of speculation, or did it make...
The Australian economy of the interwar period experienced noteworthy cyclical and secular trends. Se...
The purpose of this study has been to describe and analyse the rapid growth of Hume enterprises bet...
x, 227 leaves : ill. ; 34 cm.This thesis is a study of the growth of the firm in relationship to the...
This paper offers a re-interpretation of the drivers of structural change in Australia from federati...
The study investigates enterprise and entrepreneurship in New South Wales (NSW), Australia, mainly t...
This book is the first comprehensive account of how Australia attained the world's highest living st...
Recent studies of the experience of the British life insurance industry indicate that a period of tr...
This article analyses the motivations behind the international expansion of the Hume Pipe Company in...
The literature that documents the positive association between financial development and growth rais...
Australia has historical time series for a wide range of economic data. These include statistical in...
The small-scale pastoral ancl commercial community of Victoria in 1850 did not need a stock exchange...
Who financed the great expansion of the Victorian equity market, and what attracted them to invest? ...
The broad purpose of this study is to investigate the major sources of funds of small firms in the m...
This paper examines the links between economic growth and the nature of a country’s financial system...
Was the London Stock Exchange (LSE) little more than a Dickensian den of speculation, or did it make...
The Australian economy of the interwar period experienced noteworthy cyclical and secular trends. Se...
The purpose of this study has been to describe and analyse the rapid growth of Hume enterprises bet...
x, 227 leaves : ill. ; 34 cm.This thesis is a study of the growth of the firm in relationship to the...
This paper offers a re-interpretation of the drivers of structural change in Australia from federati...
The study investigates enterprise and entrepreneurship in New South Wales (NSW), Australia, mainly t...
This book is the first comprehensive account of how Australia attained the world's highest living st...
Recent studies of the experience of the British life insurance industry indicate that a period of tr...
This article analyses the motivations behind the international expansion of the Hume Pipe Company in...
The literature that documents the positive association between financial development and growth rais...
Australia has historical time series for a wide range of economic data. These include statistical in...
The small-scale pastoral ancl commercial community of Victoria in 1850 did not need a stock exchange...
Who financed the great expansion of the Victorian equity market, and what attracted them to invest? ...
The broad purpose of this study is to investigate the major sources of funds of small firms in the m...
This paper examines the links between economic growth and the nature of a country’s financial system...
Was the London Stock Exchange (LSE) little more than a Dickensian den of speculation, or did it make...