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Savings banks as an institutional import : the case of nineteenth-century Ireland

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  • Cormac Ó Gráda

Abstract

The article examines the early history of provident institutions or trustee savings banks in Ireland. Combining aggregate data and an archive-based study of one savings bank, it describes the growth and performance of this ‘institutional import’. By and large, Irish savings banks catered for the lower-middle and middle classes, not the poor as intended by the founders of the movement. The article also explains how the collapse of three savings banks in 1848 dealt savings banks in Ireland as a whole a blow from which they never really recovered.
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Suggested Citation

  • Cormac Ó Gráda, 2002. "Savings banks as an institutional import : the case of nineteenth-century Ireland," Working Papers 200203, School of Economics, University College Dublin.
  • Handle: RePEc:ucn:wpaper:200203
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    File URL: http://hdl.handle.net/10197/481
    File Function: First version, 2002
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    Cited by:

    1. McLaughlin, Eoin & Pecchenino, Rowena A., 2024. "Helping the poor help themselves: Social enterprise and Ireland's peculiar microfinance revolution, c. 1836-1845," Accountancy, Economics, and Finance Working Papers 2024-08, Heriot-Watt University, Department of Accountancy, Economics, and Finance.

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