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War, Bond Prices, and Public Opinion: How Did the Amsterdam Bond Market Perceive the Belligerents' War Effort During World War One?. Economy and History.

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dc.contributor.author Jopp Tobias A.
dc.date.accessioned 2024-01-26T21:34:51Z
dc.date.available 2024-01-26T21:34:51Z
dc.date.issued 2021
dc.identifier.citation Jopp. War, Bond Prices, and Public Opinion: How Did the Amsterdam Bond Market Perceive the Belligerents' War Effort During World War One?. Economy and History. - Tübingen: Mohr Siebeck, 2021 - 1 online resource (337 p.). - URL: https://libweb.kpfu.ru/ebsco/pdf/2731098.pdf
dc.identifier.isbn 3161595378
dc.identifier.isbn 9783161595370
dc.identifier.uri https://dspace.kpfu.ru/xmlui/handle/net/178375
dc.description Description based upon print version of record.
dc.description.tableofcontents Cover -- Title -- Preface -- Table of contents -- List of tables -- List of figures -- List of abbreviations -- I. Introduction -- 1. World War One as a study object of the economic historian -- 2. The war and sources on how it was perceived by the public -- 3. Capital market data as an alternative indicator of perception -- 3.1. Bond prices -- how new an indicator? -- 3.2. What do bond prices say? -- 3.3. Agnostic event analysis -- 3.4. Pros and cons of the "capital market data approach to perception" -- 4. Study design -- 4.1. Research questions -- 4.2. Why Amsterdam?
dc.description.tableofcontents 4.3. Structure of the study -- 4.4. Placing the study -- II. Historical background, sources, and data -- 1. The Netherlands and World War One -- 2. Sources on sovereign bonds traded in Amsterdam -- 2.1. Amsterdam bond prices -- 2.2. Additional bond price and miscellaneous data -- 3. Description of the created sovereign bond database -- 3.1. The Amsterdam cross-section of sovereign bonds -- 3.2. Market price indices and liquidity -- 3.3. Representative bonds versus country indices -- 3.4. Comparative market development and cross-trading -- 4. Potential and limitations of the database
dc.description.tableofcontents 4.1. Time frame -- 4.2. Price formation -- 4.3. Capital market regulation -- 4.4. Who were the investors? -- III. Turning points in the perception of the Great Powers' war effort -- 1. The problem -- 2. Which breaks have been detected so far? -- 3. How timetable analysis can help -- 4. Data selection -- 5. Empirical findings -- 5.1. Shifting mean regressions as the technical point of departure -- 5.2. Turning points in investors' perception at a glance -- 5.3. Explaining turning points in the major powers' series -- 5.4. Explaining turning points in the minor powers' series
dc.description.tableofcontents 6. Checking for the turning points' robustness -- 6.1. Including economic variables -- 6.2. Results of the robustness check -- 7. Discussion -- 7.1. Turning points versus blips -- the example of Germany -- 7.2. Agnostic turning points versus turning points "informed by historiography" -- 7.3. Simple sovereign bonds-based perception indices -- IV. Perception of alliance credibility -- 1. The problem -- 2. Alliance formation before and during the war -- 2.1. The various alliances at a glance -- 2.2. Measuring the alliances' strength -- 3. Alliance credibility -- 4. Data selection
dc.description.tableofcontents 5. Empirical findings on a "global" test -- 5.1. Starting from a simple approximation of co-movement -- correlation coefficients -- 5.2. Do we find cointegrating relationships? -- 6. Empirical findings on a "sub-periods" test -- 6.1. Correlation coefficients once more -- 6.2. Was perceived credibility unstable? -- 7. Discussion -- 7.1. Measuring the degree of alliance integration -- 7.2. What can Granger-causality tell? -- V. Conclusions -- 1. Turning points summary -- 2. Have historians missed out on major events? -- 3. Alliance perception summary -- 4. Outlook -- List of sources and references
dc.description.tableofcontents Primary sources -- Dutch historical newspapers/journals/handbooks/laws
dc.language English
dc.language.iso en
dc.publisher Tübingen Mohr Siebeck
dc.relation.ispartofseries Economy and History. v.2
dc.relation.ispartofseries Economy and History.
dc.subject.other Bond market -- History -- Netherlands -- Amsterdam -- 20th century.
dc.subject.other World War, 1914-1918 -- Economic aspects.
dc.subject.other Electronic books.
dc.title War, Bond Prices, and Public Opinion: How Did the Amsterdam Bond Market Perceive the Belligerents' War Effort During World War One?. Economy and History.
dc.type Book
dc.description.pages 1 online resource (337 p.).
dc.collection Электронно-библиотечные системы
dc.source.id EN05CEBSCO05C103017


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