The relationship between interlocking directorates and corporate finance patterns is a widelyresearched aspect of the literature on national financial systems. This literature often
considers the United Kingdom to be analogous to the United States, without directly
investigating the nature and impact of finance-industry relationships. Based on a handcollected dataset covering eight benchmark years between 1950 and 2010, we start filling this
gap by combining historical narratives, social network-, and regression analyses. We
investigate whether finance-industry relations impact corporate borrowing patterns
differently across time periods. We find that network-embedding impacted corporate
borrowing from the 1950s to 1970s, but not thereafter. We also find that network structure
and its function do not always evolve in parallel, highlighting limitations of purely structural
approaches to understanding the link between corporate networks and firm behaviour and the
importance of the historical idiosyncrasies of each country case.
History
School
Loughborough University London
Published in
Business History
Volume
63
Issue
6
Pages
966-987
Citation
KERN, P. and SCHNYDER, G., 2021. Corporate networks in post-war Britain: Do finance-industry relationships matter for corporate borrowing? Business History, 63 (6), pp.966-987.
This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis in Business History on 25 June 2019, available online: https://doi.org/10.1080/00076791.2019.1621294