Money doctor

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In 20th-century history, a money doctor refers to economic and financial experts that helped countries improve their financial and monetary policies, often through the creation or reform of the national central bank. Both the expression and practice of money doctors were most common in the first half of the century, after which their individual contributions were increasingly replaced by the more institutionalized role of the International Monetary Fund. Most money doctors were themselves working on behalf of a government or central bank, or of the Economic and Financial Organization of the League of Nations during the interwar period; some influential private bankers advising governments were also viewed as money doctors. Prominent money doctors included Americans Charles Arthur Conant and Edwin W. Kemmerer, Argentine Raúl Prebisch, Belgian Robert Triffin, Britons Otto Niemeyer and Walter J. F. Williamson, Frenchman Jean Monnet and Charles Rist, and Japanese Megata Tanetarō  [ ja ]. [1] [2]

Contents

Overview

International economic advice, referred to as money doctoring, became a fully recognized professional activity by the mid-1920s, building on longstanding earlier practice and reinforced by international consensus-building at the Brussels International Financial Conference (1920) and the Genoa Economic and Financial Conference (1922). [3]

An early example had been Jean Gustave Courcelle-Seneuil, a French economist in the employment of the Government of Chile in the late 1850s and early 1860s. [1] :8 The advice provided by early money doctors to governments was often linked with strategies of foreign influence or even domination, as in the case of Megata Tanetarō who in the early 1900s advised the Korean Empire on improving the country's chaotic monetary system but simultaneously advanced Japanese interests that would soon result in Korea's colonization. [4] [1] :11-12 In China, two successive money-doctoring initiatives were led before World War I, respectively by American Jeremiah Jenks in 1903 and Dutchman Gerard Vissering in 1912. [5]

In the aftermath of the Brussels and Genoa conference, money doctors were employed by the League of Nations to help stabilize national economies and establish independent central banks, particularly in countries of Central and Eastern Europe. They included Dutchman Alfred Rudolph Zimmerman  [ nl ], [6] :143 Swiss Charles Schnyder von Wartensee, Dutchman Anton van Gijn  [ nl ], and American Robert Kay in Austria; [7] American Jeremiah Smith Jr. and Briton Harry Arthur Siepmann in Hungary; [8] [9] :293 Frenchmen René Charron  [ bg ], Jean Watteau, Pierre Cheysson, and Estonian Nikolai Köstner in Bulgaria; [10] [11] [12] Briton William Horace Finlayson in Greece; [13] :112 and Briton Walter James Franklin Williamson in Estonia. [14] Meanwhile, several Latin American governments hired Kemmerer to advise them on monetary reforms, such as Mexico in 1917, Guatemala in 1919, Colombia in 1923, Chile in 1925, Ecuador in 1927, Bolivia in 1928, and Peru in 1931. [1] :14

Aftermath

The reference to money doctors has been made in more recent contexts, not least that of Russia in the 1990s. [3] The expression has also been used in unrelated contexts, e.g. to refer to investment advisers. [15]

See also

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 Matthew Bacon; Ruiyuan Cheng; Katherine (Xinyuan) Liu; William Ma; Gavin McElhennon; Dagny Patton; Elizabeth Qiao; Parth Thakkar (December 2022), Money Doctors from the 1800s to the Present (PDF), Johns Hopkins University Institute for Applied Economics, Global Health, and the Study of Business Enterprise
  2. Andrés Álvarez, Vincent Bignon, Anders Ögren & Masato Shizume, ed. (2024), Money Doctors Around the Globe: A Historical Perspective, Springer{{citation}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: editors list (link)
  3. 1 2 Marc Flandreau, ed. (2003). Money Doctors: The Experience of International Financial Advising 1850-2000. Routledge.
  4. Michael Schiltz (2012). The Money Doctors from Japan: Finance, Imperialism, and the Building of the Yen Bloc, 1895–1937. Harvard University Press.
  5. Tai-kuang Ho (2016), "Money doctors and their reform proposals for China reconsidered, 1903-29", Oxford Economic Papers, 68 (4): 1016–1038, doi:10.1093/oep/gpw031, JSTOR   44122839
  6. Nathan Marcus (2018), Austrian Reconstruction and the Collapse of Global Finance, 1921–1931 , Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, doi:10.2307/j.ctvqht5b, ISBN   9780674088924, JSTOR   j.ctvqht5b, S2CID   157700178
  7. Nathan Marcus (2016), "Les conseillers étrangers à la Banque nationale d'Autriche 1923-1929 : contrôle ou coopération ?", Histoire, économie & société, 35 (4): 8–20
  8. "Jeremiah Smith Jr. (1870–1935)". Dumbarton Oaks.
  9. Zoltán Peterecz (Fall 2009), "Picking the Right Man for the Job: Jeremiah Smith, Jr. and American Private Influence in the Financial Reconstruction of Hungary", Hungarian Journal of English and American Studies, 15 (2): 285–305, JSTOR   41274479
  10. Fabien Cardoni; Nathalie Carré de Malberg; Michel Margaira (2012), "Inspecteurs des Finances en fonction auprès d'organisations internationales", Dictionnaire historique des Inspecteurs des finances 1801-2009, Histoire économique et financière - XIXe-XXe, Paris: Institut de la gestion publique et du développement économique, pp. 1040–1044, ISBN   9782821837034
  11. "File R4583/10C/13517/1355 - Financial situation of Bulgaria - Services of M. Pierre Cheysson, Commissioner of the League of Nations". United Nations Library and Archives.
  12. "Estonia and Bulgaria: 100 Years of Diplomatic relations". Embassy of Estonia in Bucharest. 2022.
  13. Michalis Psalidopoulos (October 2019), History of the Bank of Greece 1928-2008: From government's banker to guardian of financial stability (PDF), Athens: Bank of Greece
  14. "Eesti Pank". Estonian E-Repository.
  15. Nicola Gennaioli, Andrei Shleifer & Robert W. Vishny (February 2015), "Money Doctors" (PDF), Journal of Finance (LXX:1)