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Looking for a good book on the history of banking

Posted on 06/23/2002 8:18:51 AM PDT by Jason Kauppinen

Hi FReepers... I've been browsing Amazon and Mises.org looking for a history of banking from the Austrian Economics perspective but pickings seem to be pretty slim. Does anyone out there know of a book which covers this topic?


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1 posted on 06/23/2002 8:18:51 AM PDT by Jason Kauppinen
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To: Jason Kauppinen
There is some economic literature on "Scottish Banking" i.e., free banking. Tyler Cowen and Randall Kroszner wrote an article in the Journal of Money, Credit and Banking, May 1989, pp. 221-231 that may be of interest to you. I recall that the Cato Journal had a special issue on free banking from in around 1987. Kroszner wrote a working paper in 1995 talking about free banking as a model for developing countries (I attach a summary below.) You may want to go to Kroszner's web page (he's at the U Chicago Grad School of Bus.). He might have more information there. You may also want to go to the Cato Institute web site (www.cato.org) which might have some policy pieces on this subject.

Here's the summary of Kroszner:

Free Banking: The Scottish Experience as a Model for Emerging Economies
Author info | Abstract | Publisher info | Related research | Download info | Statistics
Author Info
Randall Kroszner
Abstract

Scotland's nineteenth-century experience with free banking offers lessons to inform contemporary policymakers. A relatively unregulated banking system may be a wise option for emerging markets, if high liability limits can be enforced.

The notion of free banking is at least as difficult to define as the notion of central banking. Instead, Kroszner focuses on a relatively unregulated banking system that operated in Scotland in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. (Sweden adopted a similar system.) Kroszner argues that a relatively unregulated system is a wise option for emerging markets today, which exhibit many features of the eighteenth and nineteenth century Scottish economy.


In terms of private institutions and monitoring (typically thought to be a central bank responsibility:


° A private clearing system is feasible.

° So are private development and enforcement of capital and liquidity standards.


Financial institutions have strong private incentives to create their own clearing system, to benefit both banks and the public. In creating such a system, the institutions develop standards for capital, liquidity, and prudential management that will become requirements for membership in the system. Modern examples: the Chicago Board of Trade and Chicago Mercantile Exchange.


Competition is generally compatible with prudence and coordination (although the excessive note issue by the Ayr Bank demonstrates that the system did not eliminate all rogues). The Ayr Bank is the only major exception to the smooth operation of Scotland's private clearing and monitoring system in more than a century, and the system helped to contain the problems from this bank's collapse --- fulfilled a role typically considered to belong to a central bank.


There are private alternatives to deposit insurance or to a central bank to maintain confidence in and foster the stability of the financial system.


° Sophisticated note and deposit contracts are feasible.

° Free entry is important to encourage innovation.

° Branching and portfolio diversification can substitute for deposit insurance, to stabilize the banking system. So can "extended" liability (beyond simple limited liability of the shareholders), to give depositors and note holders some assurance that a bank could withstand a negative shock. Another alternative to deposit insurance is the"option clause" or other contingent or equity-like contracts, which can solve or minimize the problem of bank runs.


Is any role left for a central bank as lender of last resort? An explicit central bank may not be needed, but rather mechanisms to provide added liquidity, perhaps through the clearing system, in times of trouble.


This paper --- a joint product of the Finance and Private Sector Development Division, Policy Research Department, and the Financial Sector Development Department --- was presented at a Bank seminar, "Financial History: Lessons of the Past for Reformers of the Present," and is a chapter in a forthcoming volume, Reforming Finance: Some Lessons from History, edited by Gerard Caprio, Jr. and Dimitri Vittas. Copies of this paper are available free from the World Bank, 1818 H Street NW, Washington, DC 20433. Please contact Daniele Evans, room N9-061, telephone 202-473-8526, fax 202-522-1955, Internet address pinfo@worldbank. org. November 1995. (29 pages)




The full report is available on our FTP server.


2 posted on 06/23/2002 8:31:23 AM PDT by financeprof
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