Friday, 18 January 2013

Formality, Informality and the Grey Zone




This week I am redirecting you to a post entitled: 'Between Informality and Formality: Hundi/Hawala in India', which I wrote for the 'India at LSE' blog. The article discusses how a South Asian indigenous financial institution known as hundi  or hawala - a living institution - often occupies uneasy ground between the 'black' economy, the grey middle zone, and an older more formal past, due to the changing nature of laws and financial culture.

Friday, 11 January 2013

What determined Interest Rates on Bills of Exchange?

1810 English Bill of Exchange
An English Bill of Exchange dated 1810.
Image courtesy of the British Museum Trustees.

 Interest rates on bills of exchange could fluctuate considerably. These rates depended on several factors: the prevailing market rate, the particular usage of the bill, the riskiness of the transaction, or the familiarity and strength of the connections involved in the exchange. Main commercial hubs which connected long-distance trading, often featured more favourable rates. Merchants frequently borrowed money through bills where interest rates were low, and sold where rates were high. In this way, complex systems of arbitrage evolved.