The GloCoBank research team has progressed research across all of the planned actions and regions. Our work has focused on two main areas: collecting and preparing the data on the links between banks, and identifying and collecting evidence from relevant archives. The data team has built the correspondent bank dataset for 1920–1985 to c.300,000 global banking links to London and New York, representing c. 1.5 million data points. We have collected annual data for the period 1925-35 and made excellent progress collecting data for the period 1990-2000. Unlike earlier periods that are primarily dyadic, these data show multilateral networks between hundreds of cities around the world. Initial visualisations are very promising and data for 2005 and 2007 will follow. We collected supplementary data on the volume and geographic distribution of global correspondent banking payments messages from 1977-2011, and extra correspondent bank links of African banks in the 1970s.
In addition to collecting the data on bilateral bank links, a key strategy is to examine records from central banks as well as commercial banks. We have gathered a wide range of qualitative evidence from archives of banks, governments and central banks in the UK (London, Edinburgh, Manchester), Europe (Basel, Zurich, Brussels, Paris, Milan, Naples, Frankfurt, Hamburg, Berlin), Latin America (Mexico, Brazil, Argentina, Chile), East Asia (Shanghai, Beijing, Nanjing, Tianjin, Changchun, Shengyang, Tokyo, Hong Kong) and the USA (Palo Alto, Maryland, Washington).
So far we have published 4 articles and 6 working papers. Work was begun on the project monograph on the evolution of the architecture of global payments from 1870-2025. Papers from our 2nd international conference will form the basis for the publication of an edited collection. Over the course of the project our research team has included 10 PostDocs, most of whom continue to collaborate with us. We have also built new research collaborations with researchers in China, Japan and Nigeria.
To share our results, project members have presented papers at GloCoBank Research Network meetings and at 4 annual project workshops (Feb 2022, May 2023, Sep 2023, Sep 2024). The project organised 2 international conferences in Oxford in Mar 2023 and Mar 2025 (plus a PostDoc workshop). Team members also presented their research at conferences/seminars in Germany, France, Italy, UK, Austria, Switzerland, the Netherlands, Belgium, Luxembourg, Sweden, Spain, the USA, China and Japan, including events for policy-makers at the BIS, Austrian Central Bank and Bank of England. The project organised a specialist panel at the World Economic History Congress in Lund in July 2025.