After the dissolution of the Habsburg Empire, leaders in successor states were eager to become economically independent from the former capital Vienna. They therefore quickly implemented a set of neomercantilistic measures, especially nationalization programs. Nevertheless, the 1920s saw a reestablishment of the common market in the former territories of the Habsburg Empire in terms of interregional trade and interlocking directorates, mainly because of the business strategy of international financial syndicates that were based on the traditional Viennese commercial relations with the successor states. The international credit of Jewish bankers like Louis Rothschild, Rudolf Sieghart, and Max Feilchenfeld and others mattered. After the “Big ...
This paper seeks to reconcile two seemingly contradictory strands in the literature on economic deve...
This paper was written to provide students of banking and finance with an overview of the developmen...
Thesis (M.A.)--Boston University, 1950When World War I ended in 1918, Austria-Hungary, a dual-monarc...
After the dissolution of the Habsburg Empire, leaders in successor states were eager to become econo...
The contribution looks critically into the past experiences with credit-financing of industry by ban...
On the eve of World War I the Austrian Credit Mobilier system stood at the zenith of its development...
In 1929 the second biggest Austrian bank, the Boden-Credit-Anstalt (BCA), became insolvent and was t...
According to Rudolf Hilferding the funding of real economy (industry, commerce, agriculture) by bank...
In the interwar period, Austria slipped twice into a heavy budget crisis: in the early 1920s due to ...
Abstract: Austria-Hungary was from 1867 to the beginning of the first world war, one of Europe’s lar...
This dissertation analyzes the emergence of the Austro-Hungarian Bank (OeUB) as a modern lender of l...
In 1867, the "Compromise" between Austria and Hungary laid the foundation of a single currency syste...
From the perspective of science, art and intellectual life in general, Interwar Vienna was one of th...
This article seeks to square two seemingly contradictory strands in the literature on economic devel...
Introduction This paper addresses the political and institutional determinants of economic growth in...
This paper seeks to reconcile two seemingly contradictory strands in the literature on economic deve...
This paper was written to provide students of banking and finance with an overview of the developmen...
Thesis (M.A.)--Boston University, 1950When World War I ended in 1918, Austria-Hungary, a dual-monarc...
After the dissolution of the Habsburg Empire, leaders in successor states were eager to become econo...
The contribution looks critically into the past experiences with credit-financing of industry by ban...
On the eve of World War I the Austrian Credit Mobilier system stood at the zenith of its development...
In 1929 the second biggest Austrian bank, the Boden-Credit-Anstalt (BCA), became insolvent and was t...
According to Rudolf Hilferding the funding of real economy (industry, commerce, agriculture) by bank...
In the interwar period, Austria slipped twice into a heavy budget crisis: in the early 1920s due to ...
Abstract: Austria-Hungary was from 1867 to the beginning of the first world war, one of Europe’s lar...
This dissertation analyzes the emergence of the Austro-Hungarian Bank (OeUB) as a modern lender of l...
In 1867, the "Compromise" between Austria and Hungary laid the foundation of a single currency syste...
From the perspective of science, art and intellectual life in general, Interwar Vienna was one of th...
This article seeks to square two seemingly contradictory strands in the literature on economic devel...
Introduction This paper addresses the political and institutional determinants of economic growth in...
This paper seeks to reconcile two seemingly contradictory strands in the literature on economic deve...
This paper was written to provide students of banking and finance with an overview of the developmen...
Thesis (M.A.)--Boston University, 1950When World War I ended in 1918, Austria-Hungary, a dual-monarc...