Imperial Politics, Open Markets and Private Ordering: The Global Grain Trade (1875-1914)

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Sciences Po

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Global cities Internationalization Globalisation Vehicle bodies Standard of value Turnery (Lathe work) Turning Lathe work Commercial routes Sea routes Sea lines of communication Foreign trade routes Ocean routes Routes of trade Uniform conditions of contract Uniform contracts Standard conditions of contract Contracts, Uniform Standard contracts Standardized contracts Uniform terms of contract Contracts, Standard Group dynamics Association Groups, Social Natural science Sciences Science of science Electoral politics Political behavior Politics Mass political behavior Practical politics Political thought Government Political theory Civil government Commonwealth, The Science, Political Administration Politics Public markets Legislative acts Legislative enactments Acts, Legislative Enactments, Legislative Laws (Statutes) International investment Foreign investments Offshore investments Outward investments Capital imports Foreign direct investment Foreign investment Capital exports FDI (Foreign direct investment) Empires Neocolonialism Colonialism Expansion (United States politics) Urban housing Homes Slum clearance Housing needs Housing--Social aspects Houses Affordable housing Residences Seaports Ports Harbours Paws Hands Paw Grains Cereal grains Cereals Breadstuffs Geography, Political Funds Funding Single-family homes Homes Domiciles Houses One-family houses Residences Residential buildings Courts--Law and legislation Judiciary Corn trade Exchanges, Produce Exchanges, Commodity Commodities exchange Produce exchanges Commodity markets Architecture, Rural Rural architecture Domestic architecture Houses Home design One-family houses Villas Residences Politics and suffrage Government and politics Politics Political history Finance, commerce, confiscations, etc

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Jérôme Sgard, « Imperial Politics, Open Markets and Private Ordering: The Global Grain Trade (1875-1914) », Archive ouverte de Sciences Po (SPIRE), ID : 10670/1.rplrhf


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From the 1870s onwards, global commodity markets were all governed by self-standing private bodies, typically controlled by elite merchants. The London Corn Trade Association thus standardized supply from across the world, turning grain into a fungible commodity; it arbitrated disputes; and it offered to traders a range of standard contracts that integrated the value chains, from the various export harbors till destination. Enforcement rested on market power and the threat of blacklisting, which were inherently extra-territorial: few merchant houses in the world could afford being expelled from the London market. On the other hand, governments, whether sovereign or colonial, played a very limited direct role in how transactions were conducted. Ultimately, however, this private trading platform worked under English law exclusively and it was upheld by both the London courts and the Bank of England. It was both global and local, and hence a full part of Britain’s imperial project. It policed a global network of private commercial routes while mediating the demands for market integration and the sheer instability of the global political geography. Rule-based market power should thus be seen as a specific factor in Britain’s economic supremacy, together with relative productivity levels or capital exports.

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