posted on 2010-02-04, 16:30authored bySvetlana Andrianova, Panicos O. Demetriades, Chenggang Xu
This paper contributes to the finance-growth literature by
examining the political economy origins of some of the most successful
financial markets in Europe and Asia. It provides historical evidence from
London, Amsterdam and Hong Kong that highlights the essential role
played by the government sector in kick-starting financial development.
We show that the emergence of financial systems did not occur through
laissez-faire approaches and that secure property rights alone were not
sufficient for financial development. In the cases of London and Amsterdam,
governments created large trade monopolies which were responsible
for all the major financial innovations of the time. In the case of Hong
Kong, where the financial developmentmodel was bank-based, large banking
monopolies with close links to the state were created. We argue that
the three examples are not special cases and the role of government in the
early stages of financial development has been widespread world-wide.