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Dark matter credit : the development of peer-to-peer lending and banking in France

Title
Dark matter credit : the development of peer-to-peer lending and banking in France / Philip T. Hoffman, Gilles Postel-Vinay, Jean-Laurent Rosenthal.
ISBN
9780691182179
0691182175
Publication
Princeton, New Jersey : Princeton University Press, [2019]
Physical Description
303 pages : illustrations, maps ; 25 cm.
Summary
Prevailing wisdom dictates that, without banks, countries would be mired in poverty. Yet somehow much of Europe managed to grow rich long before the diffusion of banks. Dark Matter Credit draws on centuries of cleverly collected loan data from France to reveal how credit abounded well before banks opened their doors. This incisive book shows how a vast system of shadow credit enabled nearly a third of French families to borrow in 1740, and by 1840 funded as much mortgage debt as the American banking system of the 1950s. Dark Matter Credit traces how this extensive private network outcompeted banks and thrived prior to World War I--not just in France but in Britain, Germany, and the United States--until killed off by government intervention after 1918. Overturning common assumptions about banks and economic growth, the book paints a revealing picture of an until-now hidden market of thousands of peer-to-peer loans made possible by a network of brokers who matched lenders with borrowers and certified the borrowers' creditworthiness. A major work of scholarship, Dark Matter Credit challenges widespread misperceptions about French economic history, such as the notion that banks proliferated slowly, and the idea that financial innovation was hobbled by French law. By documenting how intermediaries in the shadow credit market devised effective financial instruments, this compelling book provides new insights into how countries can develop and thrive today. -- Provided by publisher.
Format
Books
Language
English
Added to Catalog
March 27, 2019
Series
Princeton economic history of the Western world.
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 265-298) and index.
Contents
Introduction
1740 and the rules of the game
Spatial variety versus centralization : change in eighteenth-century credit markets
The Revolution : collapse, reform, and modeling the space of debt
Networks of knowledge
The brief but significant life of an institutional innovation
The diffusion of banks : peer-to-peer credit markets as substitutes for banks
Banks and notaries
Prices return
Conclusion.
Citation

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