
In this lucid exploration of the world’s most influential financial hub, the author treats the money market as a tangible, everyday reality rather than an abstract theory. By stepping away from the endless debates over the historic 1844 legislation, the narrative focuses on the vibrant “post‑Peel” institutions that actually drive today’s lending and borrowing. Readers are guided through striking comparisons that reveal just how massive London’s floating loan‑fund is, dwarfing the deposits of Paris, New York, and even the German Empire.
The work paints Lombard Street as a paradox of sheer economic power and delicate maneuvering, illustrating how vast sums of cash circulate with astonishing fluidity. Through clear examples and straightforward language, the text demystifies the mechanisms that keep the market humming, offering a concrete picture of the forces shaping modern finance. It’s an invitation to understand the engine of money without getting lost in arcane legal arguments.
Language
en
Duration
~7 hours (445K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2003-08-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1826–1877
Best known for making politics and banking readable, this sharp Victorian writer explained how power really worked behind the scenes. His books on the British constitution and financial crises still shape how people think about government and markets.
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