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Publications on financial history 2007

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  16 September 2009

Serge Noiret
Affiliation:
European University Institute, Florence

Abstract

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Copyright © European Association for Banking and Financial History e.V. 2009

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References

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FINANCIAL HISTORY, CHRONOLOGICAL AND GEOGRAPHICAL CATEGORIES

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Fei, S., ‘“We must be taxed”: a case of populist urban fiscal reform in Ming Nanjing, 1368–1644’, Late Imperial China, 28/2, pp. 141.Google Scholar
Glahn, R. von, ‘Foreign silver coins in the market culture of nineteenth century China’, International J. of Asian Studies, 4/1, pp. 5178.Google Scholar
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Horesh, N., ‘The Bund and beyond: rethinking the Sino-foreign financial grid in pre-war Shanghai’, China Rev., 7.1 pp. 126.Google Scholar
Kim, S. J., ‘Taxes, the local elite, and the rural populace in the Chinju uprising of 1862’, J. of Asian Studies, 66/4, pp. 9931029.Google Scholar
Kuilman, J., ‘Institutional change, diversity and competition: foreign banks in Shanghai, 1847–2004’, in Hendrischke, H. and Krug, B. (eds.), The Chinese economy in the 21st century: enterprise and business behaviour, Cheltenham: Elgar, pp. 2141.Google Scholar
Latter, T., Hong Kong's money: the history, logic and operation of the currency peg, Hong Kong: Hong Kong University Press.Google Scholar
Li, A., ‘Cong yue haiguan dang'an kan qingmo Guangdong sheng liangci Gongzhai faxing [Looking at two public debt issues in Guangdong Province during the late Qing period as seen in archives from the Guangdong Customs Service]’, Jindaishi Yanjiu, 3, pp. 117–26.Google Scholar
Liu, J., ‘Lun jindai hezuo yundong jincheng zhong de ‘shang zi gui nong’: yi 20 shiji 30 niandai huabei nongcun wei Zhongxin [Return commercial capital to agriculture in the course of the modern cooperative movement: the example of rural North China during the 1930's]’, Zhongguo Nongshi, 26/2, pp. 113–21.Google Scholar
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Lin, J. Y. and Liu, M., ‘Rural informal taxation in China: historical evolution and an analytic framework’, China and World Economy, 15/3, pp. 118.Google Scholar
Ou, M., Wirtschaftliche Entwicklung und Innovationsfinanzierung in China seit der Wirtschaftsreform 1978. Eine systemisch-konstruktivistische (autopoietische) Erklärung auf der Grundlage der Entwicklungstheorie von Joseph Schumpeter, Norderstedt: Books on Demand.Google Scholar
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Shang, L., ‘Wanqing zhongguo jiaoxi zai xinshi gaodeng jiaoyu jigou de xinchou [Salaries of late Qing Chinese teachers in the new-style secondary educational institutions]’, Jindaishi Yanjiu, 2, pp. 137–41.Google Scholar
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Van Aelst, A., ‘A south-Chinese currency zone between the twelfth and nineteenth centuries’, in Lucassen, J. (ed.), Wages and currency: global comparisons from antiquity to the twentieth century, Bern: Peter Lang, pp. 97112.Google Scholar
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Datta, P., ‘Devolution of financial power to local self-governments: the “feasibility frontier” in West Bengal’, South Asia Research, 27/1, pp. 105–24.Google Scholar
Haider, N., ‘Structure and movement of wages in the Mughal Empire, 1500–1700’, in Lucassen, J. (ed.), Wages and currency: global comparisons from antiquity to the twentieth century, Bern and New York: Peter Lang, pp. 293322.Google Scholar
Lucassen, J., ‘The logistics of wage payments: changing patterns in northern India in the 1840s’, in Lucassen, J. (ed.), Wages and currency: global comparisons from antiquity to the twentieth century, Bern and New York: Peter Lang, pp. 349–90.Google Scholar
Prakesh, O., ‘Long distance trade, coinage and wages in India, 1600–1960’, in Lucassen, J. (ed.), Wages and currency: global comparisons from antiquity to the twentieth century, Bern and New York: Peter Lang, pp. 323348.Google Scholar
Rao, M. G. and Singh, N., ‘The political economy of India's fiscal federal system and its reform’, Publius, 37/1, pp. 2644.Google Scholar
Roy, T., ‘Globalisation, factor prices, and poverty in colonial India’, Australian Economic History Rev., 47/1, pp. 7394.Google Scholar
Blalock, G. and Roy, S., ‘A firm-level examination of the exports puzzle: why East Asian exports didn't increase after the 1997–1998 financial crisis’, World Economy, 30/1, pp. 3959.Google Scholar
Brück, S. and Sun, L., ‘Achieving effective governance under divided government and private interest group pressure: Taiwan's 2001 financial holding company law’, J. of Contemporary China, 16/53, pp. 655–80.Google Scholar
Choi, J. P. and Patterson, D., ‘Conglomerate regulation and aggregate concentration in Korea: an empirical analysis’, J. of the Asia Pacific Economy, 12/2, pp. 250–71.Google Scholar
Fukao, K., Ma, D. and Yuan, T., ‘Real GDP in pre-war East Asia: a 1934–36 benchmark purchasing power parity comparison with the US’, Rev. of Income and Wealth, 53/3, pp. 503–37.Google Scholar
Ho, J. S. and Lewis, J. B., ‘Wages, rents, and interest rates in Southern Korea, 1700 to 1900’, in Field, A. J. (ed.), Research in Economic History, vol. 24, San Diego and Amsterdam: JAI Press, Elsevier, pp. 217–83.Google Scholar
Hwang, J., Jiang, N. and Wang, P., ‘Collusion and overlending’, Economic Inquiry, 45/4, pp. 691707.Google Scholar
Kim, K., ‘Distinctive characteristics of the Joseon dynasty's fiscal policy in the nineteenth century’, Korea J., 47/2, pp. 99135.Google Scholar
Kim, S. J., ‘Taxes, the local elite, and the rural populace in the Chinju uprising of 1862’, J. of Asian Studies, 66/4, pp. 9931027.Google Scholar
Kim, Y. and Ying, Y. H., ‘An empirical assessment of currency devaluation in East Asian countries’, J. of International Money and Finance, 26/2, pp. 265–83.Google Scholar
Kim, Y., ‘Stock price reactions to M&A market events in Korea’, J. of Economic Research, 12/1, pp. 4164.Google Scholar
Aslam, M. and Hassan, A. A. G., ‘Malaysia: the role of state and foreign capital in regional development’, Asian Profile, 35/1, pp. 3358.Google Scholar
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