Dollars and Dominion: US Bankers and the Making of a Superpower
By (Author) Professor Mary Bridges
Princeton University Press
Princeton University Press
15th January 2025
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Economic history
International economics
History
332.150973
Hardback
280
Width 156mm, Height 235mm
How the creation of a new banking infrastructure in the early twentieth century established the United States as a global financial power
The dominance of US multinational businesses today can seem at first like an inevitable byproduct of the nations superpower status. In Dollars and Dominion, Mary Bridges tells a different origin story. She explores the ramshackle beginnings of US financial power overseas, showing that US bankers in the early twentieth century depended on the US government, European know-how, and last-minute improvisation to sustain their work abroad. Bridges focuses on an underappreciated piece of the nations financial infrastructurethe overseas branch bankas brick-and-mortar foundations for expanding US commercial influence.
Bridges explores how bankers sorted their new communities into uspotential clientsand themlocal populations, who often existed on the periphery of the banking world. She argues that US bankers mapped their new communities by creating foreign credit informationand by using a financial asset newly enabled by the Federal Reserve System, the bankers acceptance, in the process. Doing so, they constructed a new architecture of US trade finance that relied on longstanding inequalities and hierarchies of privilege. Thus racialized, class-based, and gendered ideas became baked into the financial infrastructure.
Contrary to conventional wisdom, there was nothing inevitable or natural about the rise of US finance capitalism. Bridges shows that US foreign banking was a bootstrapped project that began as a side hustle of Gilded Age tycoons that sustained itself by relying on the power of the US state, copying the example of British foreign bankers, and building alliances with local elites. In this way, US bankers constructed a flexible and durable new infrastructure to support the nations growing global power.
Mary Bridges, a historian of the twentieth-century United States, is a postdoctoral fellow at Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies.