The development of capital markets in medieval Europe was shaped for centuries by the religious ban on lending money at interest. This paper examines how this prohibition developed as the outcome of strategic behavior by religious, commercial and political elites. A model is developed to analyze this hypothesis and to examine how the usury prohibition developed over time. It suggests that an important reason for the persistence of the ban was that it created a barrier to entry that enabled secular rulers, the Church, and a small number of merchant-bankers to earn monopoly rents.Usury Transaction costs Church Regulatory capture
The exceptions to the prohibition of "usury" make clear that "usury", in thirteenth century Canon La...
Circa 1100, money lending was the occupation par excellence of the Jews in England, France, and Germ...
Financial regulation was as hotly debated a political issue in the 19th century as it is today. We s...
What were the economic consequences of the usury doctrine in the Middle Ages?� We examine how mercha...
‘Where law or conscientious scruples prevent lending at interest, the capital which belongs to perso...
This paper presents a historical investigation of usury in the context of the development of credit ...
Vita.The concept of usury is found in Western man's earliest writings on ethical principles, e.g. th...
Society and its ideas, markets, and institutions are in the constant process of change. These transf...
A ban on the practice of usury, taking interest on loans, was evolved in medieval law both canonica...
This paper presents an in-depth historical investigation of the related but distinctive phenomena o...
The Prohibition of Loan at Interest, Principles and Current Developments. These days, even countries...
Starting in the mid-thirteenth century, kings, bishops, and local rulers throughout western Europe r...
Today usury consists in lending money at excessive rate of interest. At the threshold of the sixteen...
International audienceTheorizing interest in Scholastic economic thought can be viewed as a by-produ...
This paper considers the relevance of the Christian prohibition of usury for investment decisions co...
The exceptions to the prohibition of "usury" make clear that "usury", in thirteenth century Canon La...
Circa 1100, money lending was the occupation par excellence of the Jews in England, France, and Germ...
Financial regulation was as hotly debated a political issue in the 19th century as it is today. We s...
What were the economic consequences of the usury doctrine in the Middle Ages?� We examine how mercha...
‘Where law or conscientious scruples prevent lending at interest, the capital which belongs to perso...
This paper presents a historical investigation of usury in the context of the development of credit ...
Vita.The concept of usury is found in Western man's earliest writings on ethical principles, e.g. th...
Society and its ideas, markets, and institutions are in the constant process of change. These transf...
A ban on the practice of usury, taking interest on loans, was evolved in medieval law both canonica...
This paper presents an in-depth historical investigation of the related but distinctive phenomena o...
The Prohibition of Loan at Interest, Principles and Current Developments. These days, even countries...
Starting in the mid-thirteenth century, kings, bishops, and local rulers throughout western Europe r...
Today usury consists in lending money at excessive rate of interest. At the threshold of the sixteen...
International audienceTheorizing interest in Scholastic economic thought can be viewed as a by-produ...
This paper considers the relevance of the Christian prohibition of usury for investment decisions co...
The exceptions to the prohibition of "usury" make clear that "usury", in thirteenth century Canon La...
Circa 1100, money lending was the occupation par excellence of the Jews in England, France, and Germ...
Financial regulation was as hotly debated a political issue in the 19th century as it is today. We s...