Published December 2002 | Published
Journal Article Open

The Development of Intermediation in French Credit Markets: Evidence from the Estates of Burgundy

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Abstract

We document how intermediaries shaped markets or, conversely, how market institutions constrained intermediaries. In Dijon, where the Estates of Burgundy's debt amounted to nearly half of all bonds in that small market, there was limited need for intermediaries. In the 1740s the borrowing needs of the province expanded, and the estates began to borrow in Paris, where their debt remained a small fraction of the market, and where they relied on notaries to place their bonds and to create a secondary market. These developments assured the estates' capacity to borrow and thus Burgundian autonomy from the French Crown.

Additional Information

© 2002 Economic History Association. The authors would like to thank Stephen Haber, Thomas Hubbard, Naomi Lamoreaux, and Philip Leslie for comments on a previous draft. Rosenthal gratefully acknowledges the support provided by grants from the National Science Foundation (SES 9022192) and the RBSL Bergman Foundation.

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