TY - JOUR
T1 - Credit without banks
T2 - The Amsterdam water bailiff's ledger of 1856
AU - Verwaaij, Daan
AU - Van Bochove, Christiaan
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2019 European Association for Banking and Financial History e.V.
PY - 2019/8
Y1 - 2019/8
N2 - Before banks rose to dominate credit markets, ordinary people raised credit themselves or through alternative intermediaries. However, obtaining a comprehensive overview of the size and functioning of the non-bank segments within the credit market has been a great challenge for historians. Notarial deeds are widely available, but typically shed light on the borrowing of relatively well-to-do members of society. Probate inventories and insolvency records do provide insight into the modest loans of ordinary people, but only haphazardly and not for the overall stock of loans. This article exploits an exogenous shock, the Discipline Act introduced in the Netherlands in 1856, which forced lenders to record all unredeemed loans they had provided to a particular group of borrowers: seafarers. The c.14,000 loans that were recorded, in combination with several additional sources, provide a unique insight into the overall size, composition and functioning of a particular segment of the non-bank credit market.
AB - Before banks rose to dominate credit markets, ordinary people raised credit themselves or through alternative intermediaries. However, obtaining a comprehensive overview of the size and functioning of the non-bank segments within the credit market has been a great challenge for historians. Notarial deeds are widely available, but typically shed light on the borrowing of relatively well-to-do members of society. Probate inventories and insolvency records do provide insight into the modest loans of ordinary people, but only haphazardly and not for the overall stock of loans. This article exploits an exogenous shock, the Discipline Act introduced in the Netherlands in 1856, which forced lenders to record all unredeemed loans they had provided to a particular group of borrowers: seafarers. The c.14,000 loans that were recorded, in combination with several additional sources, provide a unique insight into the overall size, composition and functioning of a particular segment of the non-bank credit market.
KW - Amsterdam
KW - loans
KW - nineteenth century
KW - non-bank credit
KW - seafarers
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85064903989&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1017/S0968565019000076
DO - 10.1017/S0968565019000076
M3 - Review article
AN - SCOPUS:85064903989
SN - 0968-5650
VL - 26
SP - 171
EP - 195
JO - Financial History Review
JF - Financial History Review
IS - 2
ER -