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Market Failure, Information Asymmetries, and Monopoly Profits: The Barranquilla Railway and Pier Company in Colombia, 1888–1933

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 September 2024

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Abstract

This article presents a business history of the Barranquilla Railway and Pier Company (BRPC) and its impact on Colombia’s Caribbean region. It explores the company’s operations, profitability, shareholders, infrastructure development, and competition with other coastal railways for insights into the role of foreign capital in regional growth. The BRPC’s railway and port infrastructure connected the coastal city of Barranquilla with the Colombian interior, allowing the city to supplant Cartagena as the country’s principal international port. Statistical analysis reveals the railway’s remarkable profitability, which attracted transnational investors, who consolidated majority control. The company’s ability to leverage engineering expertise and capital underscored its strategic significance, yet its interests centered on protecting its transport monopoly. The railway’s lack of visibility in London and information asymmetries shaped investor perceptions. Extending the pier demonstrated BRPC’s role in accommodating rising export volumes during Colombia’s “despegue cafetero.” However, the railway faced obsolescence, as the government opened the obstructing Bocas de Ceniza sandbank and pursued railway nationalization. The railway’s redundancy, demographic shifts, and rise of Buenaventura underscore its eventual decline. This paper reveals the complex dynamics between foreign capital, infrastructure, and trade monopolies in shaping uneven development. It highlights the BRPC’s overlooked yet fundamental role in Colombia’s export economy and Barranquilla’s ascendancy.

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This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution and reproduction, provided the original article is properly cited.
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2024. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of Business History Conference
Figure 0

Figure 1. Map showing the BRPC and the Bocas de Ceniza sandbank it was built to avoid.Source: Posada, The Colombian Caribbean, 118.

Figure 1

Table 1. The Barranquilla Railway Company accounts F/Y 1989/90–1929/30

Figure 2

Figure 2. Return on capital and share capital and capital structure: F/Y 1889/90–F/Y 1929/30.Sources: Guildhall Library, Stock Exchange Reports, 879, 928, 974, 1021, 1067, 1115–1116, 1167, 1217–1218, 1267, 1318–1319, 1369–13670, 1420–1421, 1469, 1512, 1557, 1602, 1647, 1693, 1738, 1782, 1830, 1879, 1929, 2030, 2081.

Figure 3

Figure 3. BRPC nominal dividends, effective dividends for shares held before 1912/13 (1) and effective dividends for shares acquired between F/Y 1912/13 and F/Y 1920/21 (2): F/Y 1904/05–F/Y 1929/30.Sources: Guildhall Library, Stock Exchange Reports, 879, 928, 974, 1021, 1067, 1115-1116, 1167, 1217–1218, 1267, 1318–1319, 1369–1370, 1420–1421, 1469, 1512, 1557, 1602, 1647, 1693, 1738, 1782, 1830, 1879, 1929, 2030, 2081.

Figure 4

Figure 4. Corporate debenture yields 1892–1910.Sources:Investor Monthly Manual, 1892–1910.

Figure 5

Figure 5. BRPC shareholders by size.Sources: Shareholder Registers 1891, 1913, 1920, 1929, Companies House, Company No. 26163 (Barranquilla Investments Ltd).58

Figure 6

Figure 6. BRPC major shareholders by percentage of share capital.Sources: Shareholder Registers 1891, 1913, 1920, 1929, Companies House, Company No. 26163 (Barranquilla Investments Ltd).

Figure 7

Figure 7. Plans for expansion of the BRPC pier, 1916.Source: Kincaid, Waller, Manville & Dawson Consulting Engineers, June 1916, AGN, Ferrocarriles, vol. 321, f. 405.

Figure 8

Figure 8. Colombian coffee exports by port, 1916–1926 (tons).Source: Posada, Colombian Caribbean, 161.

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Figure 9. BRPC annual receipts F/Y 1904/05–F/Y 1930/31.Source: F/Y 1904–F/Y 1929/30: see Table 1, F/Y 1930/31: “Company Results” The Times, November 4, 1931.

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Figure 10. Population growth of caribbean ports.Sources: 1850, 1870: Estados Unidos de Colombia, Anuario estadístico de Colombia, 1875, 30, 39; 1905: República de Colombia, Estadística anual de la república de Colombia de 1905, 41, 46; 1912: República de Colombia, Censo general de la república de Colombia levantado el 5 de marzo de 1912, 32, 33, 43; 1928: República de Colombia, Anuario de estadística general de 1929, 3. 1938: República de Colombia, Anuario general de estadistica 1938, 6, 7, 11; 1951: República de Colombia, Censo de poblacion de 1951 Magdalena, 7.