"[An] indispensable account of the prehistory of the U.S. economic security state."<b>---Henry Farrell, <i>Foreign Affairs</i></b>

How the creation of a new banking infrastructure in the early twentieth century established the United States as a global financial powerThe dominance of US multinational businesses today can seem at first like an inevitable byproduct of the nation’s superpower status. In Dollars and Dominion, Mary Bridges tells a different origin story. She explores the ramshackle beginnings of US financial power overseas, showing that US bankers in the early twentieth century depended on the US government, European know-how, and last-minute improvisation to sustain their work abroad. Bridges focuses on an underappreciated piece of the nation’s financial infrastructure—the overseas branch bank—as a brick-and-mortar foundation for expanding US commercial influence.Bridges explores how bankers sorted their new communities into “us”—potential clients—and “them”—local populations, who often existed on the periphery of the banking world. She argues that US bankers mapped their new communities by creating foreign credit information—and by using a financial asset newly enabled by the Federal Reserve System, the bankers’ acceptance, in the process. In doing so, they constructed a new architecture of US trade finance that relied on long-standing inequalities and hierarchies of privilege. Thus, racialized, class-based, and gendered ideas became baked into the financial infrastructure.Contrary to conventional wisdom, there was nothing inevitable or natural about the rise of US finance capitalism. Bridges shows that US foreign banking was a bootstrapped project that began as a side hustle of Gilded Age tycoons and sustained itself by relying on the power of the US state, copying the example of British foreign bankers, and building alliances with local elites. In this way, US bankers constructed a flexible and durable new infrastructure to support the nation’s growing global power.
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“This is a finely executed monograph, which uses one bank, the International Banking Corporation (IBC), a subsidiary of First National City Bank of New York (and thus an ancestor of Citigroup), to show vividly the internationalization of US financial business in the very early twentieth century.”—Harold James, Princeton University “Foreign branches of US banks played a seminal role in extending American power and empire abroad. Bridges’s engaging history of global branch banking in the first half of the twentieth century paints a vivid picture of the day-to-day banking activities that held together ever-growing networks of credit, payments, and currencies, and in turn boosted the status of the dollar. In our current moment, this superb deep dive into history helps us understand the resilience of the financial system built on these foundations, even in a world seemingly ripe with challenges and contestations of the dollar’s status as a global reserve currency.”—Vanessa Ogle, Yale University“A significant scholarly contribution, revisiting the world of US finance and empire from the purview of bankers, managerial men-on-the-spot, and the Federal Reserve, traipsing across four continents.”—Marc-William Palen, University of Exeter
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780691248134
Publisert
2024-10-08
Utgiver
Vendor
Princeton University Press
Høyde
235 mm
Bredde
156 mm
AldersnivĂĽ
U, P, G, 05, 06, 01
SprĂĽk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet

Forfatter

Biographical note

Mary Bridges, a historian of the twentieth-century United States, is the Ernest May Fellow in History and Policy at Harvard Kennedy School’s Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs.