2018
DOI: 10.1111/ehr.12742
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Loans of the revolution: how Mexico borrowed as the state collapsed in 1912–13

Abstract: This article assesses why the French and US banks Paribas and Speyers underwrote a series of loans to revolutionary Mexico in 1912 and 1913, when the state was in the process of collapsing. This is a case of a war debt that failed to prevent the borrowing government from suspending payments and subsequently falling. Based on unpublished primary documents, the article shows that the 1913 loan involved a conflict of interest. The credit delayed a default and sustained the price of Mexican securities while Pariba… Show more

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Cited by 2 publications
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“…⁵ See Weller (2018) for the capacity of Mexico to access loans in that context, understood as a problem of asymmetric information. (Ludlow & Marichal, 1998, p. 22).…”
Section: The Point Of Departure In the Mexican Storymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…⁵ See Weller (2018) for the capacity of Mexico to access loans in that context, understood as a problem of asymmetric information. (Ludlow & Marichal, 1998, p. 22).…”
Section: The Point Of Departure In the Mexican Storymentioning
confidence: 99%