Native Capital: Financial Institutions and Economic Development in São Paulo, Brazil, 1850-1920This book studies the development of banks and stock and bond exchanges in São Paulo, Brazil, during an era of rapid economic diversification. It assesses the contribution of these financial institutions to that diversification, and argues that they played an important role in São Paulo's urbanization and industrialization by the start of the twentieth century. It finds that government regulatory policy was important in limiting and shaping the activities of these institutions, but that pro-development policies did not always have their intended effects. This is the first book on São Paulo's famous industrialization to identify the strong relationship between financial institutions and São Paulo's economic modernization at the turn of the century. It is unique in Brazilian economic history, but contributes to a body of literature on financial systems and economic change in other parts of the world. |
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... percent of the total value of Brazilian exports by the early twentieth century. These export earnings contributed to a breakaway sprint in income per capita gains in the southeast region of the country, creating many a coffee baron out ...
... they made the interest payments on time, about 5 percent of the value of the loan.22 Brazilian religious orders lent money in much the same way, earning significant portions of their 23 income from the extension of credit. So wealthy and.
... percent by the 1860s.13 The aging trend among the slave population continued from there. The 1872 census reported that almost one in five Brazilian slaves was more than fifty-one years old. The same census showed the stark reality of ...
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Contents
Brokers and Business Finance under the Empire | |
The Republican Revolution and the Rise of | |
The Republican Revolution and the Failure | |
Commercial Banking and the Business | |
Conclusions | |
NOTES | |
BIBLIOGRAPHY | |
INDEX | |