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Whose Self-Interest? Social Elites, Religious Competition, and the Rise of Raiffeisen Banks in the Netherlands

Authors :
Colvin, Christopher L.
Cantaluppi, Anna
Colchester, Chloe
Costabile, Lilia
Hofmann, Carmen
Schenk, Catherine
Weber, Matthias
Source :
Colvin, C L 2020, Whose Self-Interest? Social Elites, Religious Competition, and the Rise of Raiffeisen Banks in the Netherlands . in A Cantaluppi, C Colchester, L Costabile, C Hofmann, C Schenk & M Weber (eds), Social Aims of Finance: Rediscovering Varieties of Credit in Financial Archives . European Association for Banking and Financial History (EABH), Frankfurt am Main, pp. 155-180 . < http://bankinghistory.org/wp-content/uploads/EABH36-Social-Aims-Book-AW-Web.pdf >
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
European Association for Banking and Financial History (EABH), 2020.

Abstract

The reasons proposed in the extant literature for the emergence of boerenleenbanken (Dutch Raiffeisen cooperative banks) at the turn of the twentieth century fall into three categories: (1) to meet untapped market demand; (2) as an organizational response to economic and technical change; and (3) as an extension of socio-religious confessional politics. I use business history case studies of boerenleenbanken established in the neighbouring villages of Loosduinen and Rijswijk to weigh the relative importance of these accounts. While all three play a part in explaining the market entry of this new type of banking business, I conclude that the third reason was probably critical; boerenleenbanken should be viewed as a component of the wider movement towards the economic confessionalization of the Netherlands

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Colvin, C L 2020, Whose Self-Interest? Social Elites, Religious Competition, and the Rise of Raiffeisen Banks in the Netherlands . in A Cantaluppi, C Colchester, L Costabile, C Hofmann, C Schenk &amp; M Weber (eds), Social Aims of Finance: Rediscovering Varieties of Credit in Financial Archives . European Association for Banking and Financial History (EABH), Frankfurt am Main, pp. 155-180 . < http://bankinghistory.org/wp-content/uploads/EABH36-Social-Aims-Book-AW-Web.pdf >
Accession number :
edsair.od......2607..18504bf36abf82ec65be41ae4154accf