The Nederlandsch-Indische Escompto Maatschappij (NIEM, lit. 'Dutch [East] Indies discount company') was a significant Dutch bank, founded in 1857 in Batavia, Dutch East Indies. In the first half of the 20th century, it was the smallest of the “big three” commercial banks, behind the Netherlands Trading Society and the Nederlandsch-Indische Handelsbank, that dominated the Dutch East Indies’ financial system alongside the note-issuing Bank of Java.[1]
In 1949, following Indonesian independence, its name was changed to Escomptobank. Its main operations in Indonesia were nationalized in 1958, and later integrated into Bank Mandiri. Its residual Dutch operations went through multiple restructurings and mergers, and count among the many predecessor entities of ABN AMRO.
Creation and development in the Dutch East Indies
The NIEM was founded in 1857 by Paulus Tiedeman Jr. and Carel Wiggers van Kerchem, initially as a subsidiary of their Tiedeman & van Kerchem partnership.[2] It was only the second private financial institution (after the Bank of Java, established in 1828) from which merchants and traders in the Dutch East Indies could receive credit,[3] as the Netherlands Trading Society had not yet become a bank by then. It engaged into no activities other than commercial banking, providing credit to trade and industry, and unlike other local players, did not extend long-term agricultural loans. For that reason, the agricultural crisis of 1884 hardly affected the NIEM.The NIEM remained small until 1888, then started to grow rapidly. In late 1901, the NIEM's shareholders decided to move away from the original partnership model. Jan Dinger left the partnership, in which he had joined Tiedeman and van Kerchem, and formed the NIEM's first management board together with Ede Abraham Zeilinga. Since 1922 the head office in Batavia had been located in a building designed by L.M. van den Berg & W.H. Pichel. The NIEM had offices - with date and architect as far as is known- in, among others,; Bandung (1912, P.A.J. Moojen), Batavia (1913, P.A.J. Moojen), Banjarmasin (1930, Fermont-Cuypers), Bogor (1932, J.J. Jiskoot)), Cirebon, Yogyakarta, Makassar, Magelang
Indonesian independence and aftermath
In 1949, the NIEM changed its name to Escomptobank, but remained headquartered in Jakarta. In 1958, however, its operations in Indonesia were nationalized,[2] and became part of Bank Dagang Negara, which in 1999 merged with there other state-owned banks, Bank Bumi Daya, Bank Ekspor Impor Indonesia, and Bank Pembangunan Indonesia, to form Bank Mandiri. As a consequence, most former NIEM properties in Indonesia became branches of Bank Mandiri.
The remaining operations, assets and claims in the Netherlands were restructured as Nedesco Bank, whose business activities were acquired in 1960 by the Nederlandse Overzee Bank.[6] In 1969, the Nederlandse Overzee Bank in turn merged with Mees & Hope, which in 1975 was acquired by Algemene Bank Nederland. ABN then merged with AMRO Bank to form ABN AMRO in 1991, and in 1992 Mees & Hope subsequently merged with AMRO's investment banking arm, Pierson Heldring & Pierson, to form MeesPierson
Gallery
See also
- Bank of Java
- Netherlands Trading Society
- Nederlandsch-Indische Handelsbank
- Nederlandsch-Indische Levensverzekerings en Lijfrente Maatschappij
- Japanese government-issued currency in the Dutch East Indies
- List of banks in the Netherlands
References
- Shibata Yoshimasa. The monetary policy in the Netherlands East Indies under the Japanese administration Bijdragen tot de Taal-, Land- en Volkenkunde, Brill, 1996^
- Inventaris van het archief van de NederlandsIndische Escompto-Maatschappij, Nedescobank NV, 1859-1975 Dutch National Archive, 1985^
- Alexander Claver. Dutch Commerce and Chinese Merchants in Java: Colonial Relationships in Trade and Finance, 1800-1942