Author:
Granados Oscar M.,Torres James V.
Abstract
This article provides aggregate data on credit flows in Santafé de Bogotá, the capital of the Viceroyalty of New Granada (present-day Colombia, Ecuador and western Venezuela). By perusing a thorough report submitted to Bourbon authorities on notarial transactions, which included both ecclesiastical and non-ecclesiastical loans in the city, the article estimates the volume and size of lending activity while exploring how distinct types of credit interacted and shaped the business milieu of the region. It argues that by the late 1770s, Catholic Church lending had ceased to be the main source of investable funds in the region, with merchants and other non-ecclesiastical investors injecting growing funds into sectors traditionally avoided by ecclesiastical lenders such as commerce, mining and manufacturing. Network analysis suggests that merchants became brokers between different credit sources, alleviating information asymmetries and opening the credit market to borrowers with collateral and institutional restrictions willing to pay higher interest rates. Finally, by focusing on New Granada, the largest gold producer of the Spanish Empire, the article identifies some distinctive credit patterns that are different from those developed in silver-driven economies such as New Spain and Peru. Thus, the article provides new paths to study Latin American financial history.
Funder
Universidad de Bogotá Jorge Tadeo Lozano
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Reference66 articles.
1. Entry, information, and financial development: a century of competition between French banks and notaries;Hoffman;Exploration in Economic History,2015
2. Bogotá Notaries. Notaría 1, vols. 181, 184 and 192.
3. Torres, J. (2021). Trade in a changing world: gold, silver, and commodity flows in the Northern Andes 1780–1840 . PhD dissertation, Georgetown University.
4. Antecedentes del crédito en Colombia: Los Censos en Santafé en la segunda mitad del siglo XVIII;Ortiz;Tiempo and Economía,2016