Bank of Finland 200 years I: Imperial cashier to central bank
Kuusterä, Antti; Tarkka, Juha (12.01.2011)
2011
Julkaisun pysyvä osoite on
https://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi:bof-201411113167Sisällysluettelo
6 Acknowledgements
9 Prologue
19 International intrigue engulfs Finland
32 Northern European monetary conditions at the time of foundation 41 Early banking in the Kingdom of Sweden
63 Monetary development in Russia
73 First promises of a Bank of Finland
90 A convoluted creation process
111 Slowly moving Finland
118 The Bank of Finland's early years
145 The Bank as a lender, 1813-1840
157 Efforts to replace Swedish currency
165 Sweden's currency reform
172 The rouble goes back on silver
180 Finland prepares for a reform
197 Bank of Finland regulations 1840
205 International development of central banking principles
214 Monetary consequences of the Crimean War
220 Russia fails to return to silver standard
226 Towards monetary reform in Finland
247 Effects of the state fund reform
250 The Bank of Finland as a lender 1841-1867
261 The Bank of the Estates
272 Subordinate to the Diet
278 International moves to gold
286 War in the Balkans prolongs rouble weakness
288 Finland moves to the gold standard
299 Fixing of the rouble to gold
306 Demands for monetary unification
313 The economy picks up
320 Monetary policy under the gold standard
334 Becoming a central bank
353 Structures of governance
370 Operations and staff
394 The World war and monetary system
410 Bank of Finland during the civil war months
438 Bank's finances in the crisis years
446 Ground zero: monetary policy in 1918-19
460 Back to the gold standard
484 Monetary policy on the gold standard
503 Currency crisis, gold standard abandoned
522 The sterling club
535 The Bank of Finland as bank rescuer
544 A more bank-like appearance
551 Fast turnover among board members
565 Banking in the 1920s and 1930s
592 The Parliamentary Supervisory Council
600 Through fortune and adversity to "a magnificent undertaking"
626 Appendix
629 Sources and literature
643 Name index
9 Prologue
19 International intrigue engulfs Finland
32 Northern European monetary conditions at the time of foundation 41 Early banking in the Kingdom of Sweden
63 Monetary development in Russia
73 First promises of a Bank of Finland
90 A convoluted creation process
111 Slowly moving Finland
118 The Bank of Finland's early years
145 The Bank as a lender, 1813-1840
157 Efforts to replace Swedish currency
165 Sweden's currency reform
172 The rouble goes back on silver
180 Finland prepares for a reform
197 Bank of Finland regulations 1840
205 International development of central banking principles
214 Monetary consequences of the Crimean War
220 Russia fails to return to silver standard
226 Towards monetary reform in Finland
247 Effects of the state fund reform
250 The Bank of Finland as a lender 1841-1867
261 The Bank of the Estates
272 Subordinate to the Diet
278 International moves to gold
286 War in the Balkans prolongs rouble weakness
288 Finland moves to the gold standard
299 Fixing of the rouble to gold
306 Demands for monetary unification
313 The economy picks up
320 Monetary policy under the gold standard
334 Becoming a central bank
353 Structures of governance
370 Operations and staff
394 The World war and monetary system
410 Bank of Finland during the civil war months
438 Bank's finances in the crisis years
446 Ground zero: monetary policy in 1918-19
460 Back to the gold standard
484 Monetary policy on the gold standard
503 Currency crisis, gold standard abandoned
522 The sterling club
535 The Bank of Finland as bank rescuer
544 A more bank-like appearance
551 Fast turnover among board members
565 Banking in the 1920s and 1930s
592 The Parliamentary Supervisory Council
600 Through fortune and adversity to "a magnificent undertaking"
626 Appendix
629 Sources and literature
643 Name index