Moving Money analyses the influence of politics on financial systems. Daniel Verdier examines how information asymmetry and economies of scale over time have created a redistributional conflict between large and small banks, financial centres and their peripheries, and he discusses how governments have attempted to arbitrate this conflict. He argues that centralized states have tended to create concentrated, internationalized, market-based and specialized financial systems, whereas decentralized states have favoured dispersed, national, bank-based and, with a few exceptions, universal systems. Verdier then sets out to uncover the sources, political and economic, of cross-country variation in financial market organization, examining 15 to 20 OECD countries from 1850 onwards.
Managing your money can be intimidating, scary, and stressful.Theresa Yong wrote this guide as a simple resource for everyday people who want to get a handle on their finances. She explains how to...
This book is a story about your relationship with money !!! It's my Personel experience with family and how money came into my being. It is a open discussion of one womens experience with money men...
No doubt about it, moving is stressful. Whether you're leaving your home of thirty years or moving out of a place in which you've only lived six months, the idea of packing everything you own and...
Have you dug yourself into a financial hole and have no idea how to climb out? Although it may seem like it sometimes, you are not alone. Now is the time to do something about your past money...