Christiaan van Bochove
Radboud University Nijmegen
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Publication
Featured researches published by Christiaan van Bochove.
The Journal of Economic History | 2013
Christiaan van Bochove
Secondary markets for public debt in Europes most advanced preindustrial markets, Britain and the Dutch Republic, differed markedly. They were liquid in Britain, but not in the Republic. This article demonstrates that economic geography determined the shape of primary markets and the secondary markets that were based on them. Configuring financial markets in preindustrial Europe was thus not a uniform process leading to one ideal-type market structure. The development of markets with advanced financial institutions did not naturally produce liquid markets. While financial markets in preindustrial Europe were rooted in local circumstances, they functioned well while adapting to them.
The Economic History Review | 2014
Christiaan van Bochove
External borrowing constituted an important part of sovereign finances in early modern Europe. As payments could not be enforced through third parties, sovereigns had to convince lenders of their commitment to service their loans. Although the literature has dealt with this problem extensively, little is known about what supported lending in early modern Europe. This article therefore asks whether and how commitment mechanisms identified in the sovereign borrowing literature made external borrowing safer in early modern Europe. It attempts to answer this question by analysing the loans that a small and peripheral state (Denmark) issued in Europes foremost international investment hub (eighteenth�?century Holland). Primary sources demonstrate that Denmark inspired confidence in investors and serviced its loans well; a new dataset with securities prices reveals yields to maturity in accordance with this. Economic spillovers (domestic economic damage) and reputation (loss of access to external loans) are identified as the mechanisms that kept the Danish sovereigns committed to honouring their debts. The Danish case shows, however, that these commitment mechanisms could only be adopted after the growth and integration of northern Europes economies. This suggests that commitment mechanisms are not as universally applicable as the literature often seems to claim.
Archive | 2008
Christiaan van Bochove
European Review of Economic History | 2014
Christiaan van Bochove; Ton Van Velzen
Tijdschrift voor Sociale en Economische Geschiedenis/ The Low Countries Journal of Social and Economic History | 2004
Christiaan van Bochove
Continuity and Change | 2015
Christiaan van Bochove; Heidi Deneweth; Jaco Zuijderduijn
Archive | 2013
Christiaan van Bochove; Heidi Deneweth; Jaco Zuijderduijn
TSEG/ Tijdschrift voor Sociale en Economische Geschiedenis/ The Low Countries Journal of Social and Economic History | 2018
Christiaan van Bochove
Continuity and Change | 2017
Christiaan van Bochove
De Zeventiende Eeuw. Cultuur in de Nederlanden in interdisciplinair perspectief | 2014
Christiaan van Bochove