1st Edition

Banking and Finance Case studies in the development of the UK financial sector

Edited By John F Wilson, Nicholas Wong, Steven Toms Copyright 2020

    This shortform book presents key peer-reviewed research selected by expert series editors and contextualised by new analysis from each author on how the specific field addressed has evolved.

    The book features contributions on the development of banking regulation in Scotland, the role of commercial banking on the functioning of the British corporate economy, the impact of British monetary policy on small firm growth, and the politics of corporate governance.

    Of interest to business and economic historians, this shortform book also provides analysis that will be valuable reading across the social sciences

    Introduction (John F. Wilson, Nicholas D. Wong and Steven Toms)

    1. The Move to Limited Liability Banking in Scotland and the Introduction of Bank Regulation (John Turner)

    2. The Commercial Banking Industry and its Part in the Emergence and Consolidation of the Corporate Economy in Britain before 1940 (Peter Wardley)

    3. Did They Have It So Good? Small Firms and British Monetary Policy in the 1950s (Francesca Carnevali)

    4. Corporate Governance in Political Climate: The 'City', Government and British Leyland Motor Company (Sue Bowden)

    Biography

    John Wilson is Pro Vice-Chancellor (Business and Law) at Northumbria University at Newcastle. He has published widely in the fields of business, management and industrial history, including ten monographs, six edited collections and over seventy articles and chapters. Most notably, his British Business History, 1720-1994 is still being used in UK universities. He was also the founding editor of the Journal of Industrial History, as well as co-editor of Business History for ten years.

    Nicholas D. Wong is Vice-Chancellor’s Senior Research Fellow at Newcastle

    Business School, Northumbria University. His research areas cover historical

    organisation studies and uses of the past, family business studies and

    entrepreneurship. He has published in Business History , International Journal

    of Contemporary Hospitality Management and Entreprise et Histoire . Nicholas

    won the John F. Mee Best Paper Award at the Academy of Management in 2018

    for his contribution to the Management History Division.

     

    Steven Toms spent fifteen years in senior management at Nottingham University

    as head of the undergraduate programme, chair of teaching committee and

    research director before becoming Head of York Management School in 2004.

    Professor Toms’s research interests cover the role of accounting, accountability

    and corporate governance in the development of organisations, particularly from

    a historical perspective. He is interested in perspectives that integrate financial

    models with economic and organisational theory and corporate strategy. Specific

    applications range from business history – in particular cotton and other textiles

    trades – to capital markets and social and environmental accounting. He was

    Editor of the journal Business History from 2007 to 2013.