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The First Anglo-Peruvian Debt and its Settlement, 1822–49
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 February 2009
Extract
On 31 January 1849 the representative of the Peruvian government, General Osma, and the Committee of Spanish American Bondholders signed an agreement in London on the terms for settling debts to British investors which had been in default since October 1825. More than a year before, the Peruvian president had spoken of his administration's desire ‘to bring this matter at once to a termination, and revive the credit which the Republic lost in Europe almost at the same time as it came into existence’ Peruvian credit was, as hoped, restored by the act of good faith in 1849, and was further boosted by the government's growing income from the guano trade, which had been in operation for almost a decade. Having wiped the slate clean in 1849, Peru went on to expand its overseas debt commitments and become, in the space of a few years, the largest Latin American borrower on the London money market. The year 1849, therefore, marks a notable turning point in Peruvian financial history.
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References
1 Mensage que El Presidente De La Republica Del Peru Dirige A Las Camaras Legislativas de 1847 (Lima, 1847), p. 18.Google Scholar Copy in Public Record Office, London, Foreign Office Archives, Peru (cited hereinafter as F.O. 61), Vol. 115.
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16 F.O. 61/118, Adams to Palmerston, 10 Oct. 1848. (In this despatch, Adams gives a history of the British government's activities on the question up to 1848.)
17 Ibid.
18 See Correspondence Between Great Britain And Foreign Powers, And Communications From The British Government To Claimants, Relative to Loans Made By British Subjects. 1823–1847, Parliamentary Papers (referred to hereinafter as P.P.) 1847, LXIX, 659–98.Google Scholar
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31 Levin, , op. cit., p. 54.Google Scholar Levin cites Jenks to the effect that the January decree was secured by diplomatic pressure in the interests of the bondholders. (Ibid., p. 55, n. 89.) Jenks, however, does not quite say this. ‘What assistance’, he writes, ‘British diplomacy rendered in arranging this matter, if any, is not known’ (op. cit., p. 120).
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39 F.O. 61/118, Adams to Palmerston, 10 Oct. 1848.
40 The Times, 24 July 1847, p. 6. What must have been particularly galling for them was that only four weeks after Yterregui had told the bondholders of his government's wish to have the talks moved back to Lima, and had heard of their objections to this, he had succeeded in drawing up a contract with the house of Cotesworth and Co. for the disposal of guano in Britain, whereby £120,000 was to be set aside from sales proceeds each year for the repayment of the debt. This proposed arrangement, however, was rejected by government and congress in Lima. F.O. 61/117, Robinson (chairman of the Committee of Spanish American Bondholders) to Palmerston, 5 June 1847; The Times, 22 July 1847, p. 6, and 9 Nov. 1848, p. 3; Gibbs' Letters, 16 April 11 June and 15 June 1847; Levin, , op. cit., p. 62, n. 116.Google Scholar
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53 F.O. 61–118, Palmerston to Barton, 16 Feb. 1848.
54 F.O. 61/118, Adams to Palmerston, 12 April 1848.
55 F.O. 61/118, Maclean Rowe to Adams, 16 April 1848.
56 F.O. 61/120, Maclean Rowe to Bondholders' Committee, 12 April 1848.
57 F.O. 61/120, Memorial of 11 March 1848.
58 F.O. 61/118, Palmerston to Adams, 16 March 1848.
59 F.O. 61/118, del Rio (Peruvian finance minister) to Maclean Rowe, 11 May 1848.
60 F.O. 61/118, Adams to Palmerston, 12 June 1848.
61 F.O. 61/118, Maclean Rowe to Adams, 16 May 1848.
62 F.O. 61/118, Adams to Pardo, 29 May 1848.
63 F.O. 61/118, Adams to Palmerston, 12 June 1848.
64 F.O. 61/118, Pardo to Adams, 27 June 1848.
65 F.O. 61/118, Adams to Pardo, 30 June 1848.
66 F.O. 61/118, Palmerston to Adams, 16 Sept. 1848.
67 The chairman of the bondholders' committee had written to him on the subject in July, asking again for support. F.O. 61/120, Robinson to Palmerston, 13 July 1848.
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72 F.O. 61/118, Pardo to Adams, 27 June 1848.
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74 F.O. 61/118, Adams to Palmerston, 12 Sept. 1848.
75 F.O. 61/118, del Rio to Maclean Rowe, 13 Sept. 1848.
76 F.O. 61/118, Adams to Palmerston, 12 Oct. 1848.
77 Ibid.
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80 F.O. 61/120, Palmerston to Robinson, 11 Dec. 1848.
81 The Times, 5 Jan. 1849, p. 6.
82 Ibid.
83 Ibid. The terms of the settlement as described by The Times differ in one small detail from those outlined in certain other sources. In the 1854 edition of Fenn's Compendium the annual increment for the deferred bonds is cited as ½ per cent and not ¼ per cent. ½ per cent also appears to be the figure given in Anales de la Hacienda Pública del Perú, edited by P. E. Dancuart and J. M. Rodriguez (see Levin, , op. cit., p. 63, n. 119).Google Scholar
84 Ibid.; Gibbs' Letters, 17 Jan. 1849.
85 The Times, 5 Jan. 1849, p. 6.
86 Ibid.
87 F.O. 61/122, Adams to Palmerston, 12 Nov. 1849.
88 Secretan, , op. cit. (1833 ed.), p. 136.Google Scholar
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90 F.O. 61/118, Pardo to Adams, 27 June 1848. The price of Peruvian bonds in London in June 1848 ranged between 30½ and 36, compared with the 16½ already cited for March 1842. See The Economist, Prices of Foreign Stocks, editions for June 1848.
91 The Times, 5 Jan. 1849, p. 6.
92 Cited in Levin, op. cit., p. 62, n. 118.
93 All prices, unless otherwise indicated, come from The Economist. The maximum quotations for each day have been cited.
94 The Times, 21 Dec. 1848, p. 6.
95 Ibid., 22 Dec. 1848, p. 6.
96 Ibid.
97 Ibid., 23 Dec. 1848, p. 3. Some buying also appears to have been done on Peruvian government account. In October 1848 Adams observed that £40,000 (face value) had been liquidated. F.O. 61/118, Adams to Palmerston, 10 Oct. 1848. By June 1849 the total was estimated to lie somewhere between £100,000 and £200,000. The Times, 20 June 1849, p. 7. Some of this debt-retiring, however, may have taken place in the spring of 1849, for the price of Peruvian bonds started rising again in March, reaching a level of 68 towards the end of the month.
98 Taking the last quotation before the conversion.
99 The total amount sent in for conversion up to 19 June 1849, two weeks or so after the new paper was issued, came to £1,473,000, face value. The Times, 20 June 1849, p. 7.
100 Ibid., 5 Jan. 1849, p. 6.
101 loc. cit.
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