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Ottoman financial integration with Europe: foreign loans, the Ottoman Bank and the Ottoman public debt

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  • ELDEM, EDHEM

Abstract

Between 1854 and 1881, the Ottoman Empire went through one of the most critical phases of the history of its relations with European powers. Beginning with the first foreign loan contracted in 1854, this process was initially dominated by a modest level of indebtedness, coupled with sporadic and inconsequential attempts by western powers to impose some control over the viability of the operation. From 1863 on, a second and much more intense phase began, which eventually led to a snowballing effect of accumulated debts. The formal bankruptcy of the Empire in 1875 resulted in the collapse of the entire system in one of the most spectacular financial crashes of the period. It was only six years later, in 1881, that a solution was found in the establishment of the Ottoman Public Debt Administration that would control a large portion of state revenues. The new system restored the financial stability of the Empire, but profoundly modified its rapports de force with Europe by imposing on it a form of foreign control that would have been unthinkable only ten or twenty years earlier. While bringing a much-needed stability to the flailing Ottoman financial situation and thus opening the way to economic development, the new system also radically changed the very nature of the process of integration, by introducing an imperialist dimension that had been lacking in the previous decades.

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  • Eldem, Edhem, 2005. "Ottoman financial integration with Europe: foreign loans, the Ottoman Bank and the Ottoman public debt," European Review, Cambridge University Press, vol. 13(3), pages 431-445, July.
  • Handle: RePEc:cup:eurrev:v:13:y:2005:i:03:p:431-445_00
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    Cited by:

    1. Hristiyan Atanasov, 2021. "Buying Ottoman Debt before the Bankruptcy: Some Observations on the Emission of New Bonds (ESHAM-I CEDID) in 1871–1872," Proceedings of the Centre for Economic History Research, Centre for Economic History Research, vol. 6, pages 86-103, November.
    2. Ecchia, Stefania, 2010. "The economic policy of the Ottoman Empire (1876-1922)," MPRA Paper 42603, University Library of Munich, Germany.
    3. Hanedar Avni Önder, 2015. "Foreign Bank Entry in the Late Ottoman Empire: The Case of the Imperial Ottoman Bank," Review of Middle East Economics and Finance, De Gruyter, vol. 11(3), pages 207-223, December.

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