From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Agricultural Bank of the USSR ( Russian: Сельскохозяйственный банк СССР), commonly referred to as Selkhozbank ( Russian: Сельхозбанк), was a significant component of the Soviet banking system from its establishment in 1932 to 1959, when it was merged with Prombank and Tsekombank to form the Construction Bank of the USSR, known as Stroybank. [1]: 31 

Overview

The bank was first established in 1932 as the "Bank for Financing Socialist Agriculture" ( Russian: Банк финансирования социалистического земледелия), and renamed as Agricultural Bank in August 1933 (full name in Russian: Банк финансирования социалистического сельского хозяйства). Like the Tsekombank in residential construction, the Selkhozbank was a mere conduit for budgetary appropriations and had no autonomy in its credit allocation. [2]: 886 

See also

Notes

  1. ^ George Garvy (1977). "The Origins and Evolution of the Soviet Banking System: An Historical Perspective" (PDF). Money, Financial Flows, and Credit in the Soviet Union. National Bureau of Economic Research.
  2. ^ George Garvy (December 1972), "Banking Under the Tsars and the Soviets", Journal of Economic History (32:4), Cambridge University Press: 869–893


From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Agricultural Bank of the USSR ( Russian: Сельскохозяйственный банк СССР), commonly referred to as Selkhozbank ( Russian: Сельхозбанк), was a significant component of the Soviet banking system from its establishment in 1932 to 1959, when it was merged with Prombank and Tsekombank to form the Construction Bank of the USSR, known as Stroybank. [1]: 31 

Overview

The bank was first established in 1932 as the "Bank for Financing Socialist Agriculture" ( Russian: Банк финансирования социалистического земледелия), and renamed as Agricultural Bank in August 1933 (full name in Russian: Банк финансирования социалистического сельского хозяйства). Like the Tsekombank in residential construction, the Selkhozbank was a mere conduit for budgetary appropriations and had no autonomy in its credit allocation. [2]: 886 

See also

Notes

  1. ^ George Garvy (1977). "The Origins and Evolution of the Soviet Banking System: An Historical Perspective" (PDF). Money, Financial Flows, and Credit in the Soviet Union. National Bureau of Economic Research.
  2. ^ George Garvy (December 1972), "Banking Under the Tsars and the Soviets", Journal of Economic History (32:4), Cambridge University Press: 869–893



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