Title: The rise of commercial banks
1The rise of commercial banks
- Transfer banking.
- Goldsmith banking.
- From warehouse receipts to promissory notes,
financial intermediation and fractional reserve
banking. - Negotiable (transferable) banknotes and checks.
- Banks reduced the costs of monetary exchange,
resulting in fractional reserve banking, credit
money and financial intermediation.
2Fractional reserves and money
- Customers deposit 1000 oz at a single bank.
__________________________________ - 1000 oz (coins) 1000 oz (receipts)
- Money supply in economy 1000 oz gold coins,
since they are withdrawn for payment. - Bank loans 100 oz in coins because of fungibility
and idle reserves receipts become notes. - ______________________________________
- 900 oz (coins) 1000 oz (notes)
- 100 oz (loans)
- Money supply 1,100
3Fractional reserves and money
- ______________________________________
- 1000 oz (coins) 10,000 oz (notes)
- 9000 oz (loans)
- Money supply 10,000 oz (worth of notes).
- The money supply has grown 10-fold without
increase in the underlying commodity
4Note exchange and redemption
- Redemption costs and non-local note acceptability
? gold/silver still circulated. - Solutions to non-par/non-acceptability
- branch banking
- brokers
- banks
- clearinghouses
5The benefits of net-clearing
6Potential problems of fractional reserves
- Evolution of banking reduces transactions costs
and reduces the need for commodity reserves. But - Over-issue of banknotes and inflation
- Banking panics and deflation
7Banking crises and panic
- Bank runs
- Bank failures
- Declines in the money stock
- Suspension of payments/convertibility.
- Ultimate cause incomplete information about
bank-specific risk. Runs on or failures of a
particular bank can lead to a general distrust of
many banks, even healthy ones.
8The Panic of 1907
- May 1907 to June 1908 recession in which real
output fell 11. - October 14 eight banks in New York required
assistance with withdrawals. - October 21 Knickerbocker Trust Co. (third
largest in NY) suffered a run because of its
connection to the troubled banks. The run forced
suspension of payments. - October 21-23 runs occurred on other large
trusts in NY, but although assistance was given
by the NYCHA to prevent failure, a general alarm
remained. - October 24 Treasury provides assistance, but
bank loans in NY collapsed and stock market
prices collapsed.
9The Panic of 1907
- By the end of the week, the runs in NY seemed
under control, but the panic spread throughout
the country. NYCHA started issuing clearing house
certificates. But NY banks suspended payment to
country banks demanding currency and specie for
the correspondent bank balances. Soon thereafter,
suspension of convertibility occurred nationwide.
- By February, the crisis was over as confidence
was restored, primarily through restrictions of
payments. - The US money stock declined during the
recessionary period, but at a faster pace from
October to February because of the panic.. - This panic was the major impetus to the formation
of the Federal Reserve System in 1913, the US
central bank.
10Features of central banks
- Bank for other banks private commercial banks
can hold deposits and borrow from the central
bank. - Reserves centralized at the central bank
private banks hold claims on the central bank. - Note and deposit issue serve as high-powered
money, and are not typically redeemed. Monopoly
over note issue, usually legal tender. - Other special privileges from the government (if
they are not actually part of the government)
e.g. they keep government deposits. - Monetary policy
- Lender of last resort make loans to other banks
in times of liquidity crises - Authority to regulate banks and the financial
system.
11Lender of last resort
- Classical view (Bagehot and Thornton) central
bank should lend to any healthy bank, at a
penalty rate, that is need of liquidity, by
buying (discounting) their assets.
Walter Bagehot, 1826-1877
12Lender of last resort
- Free-banking view
- Panics due to legal restrictions on a)
branch-banking b) note issue - The role of clearinghouse associations.
13The Bank of England
- A central bank is not a natural product of
banking development. It is imposed from outside
or comes into being as the result of Government
favours. Vera Smith, 1936 - The Bank of England arose as a private bank given
special privileges in return for lending to the
British government.
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15The Bank of England a timeline
- 1694 Chartered as private bank to buy public
debt - 1697 Monopoly of chartered banking and limited
liability - 1708 Allowable capital doubled, and note issue
was prohibited to any bank with more than six
partners - 1797 War-time suspension of convertibility
fiat money - 1797-1821 Inflation discovery of monetary
policy - 1816 Move to gold rather than bimetallism
- 1821 Resumption of convertibility to gold.
- 1826 Joint-stock banks (non-partnerships) 65
miles away from London were allowed note issue to
provide some financial stability outside London. - 1833 Bank of England notes made legal tender
- 1844 Bank Charter Act split BoE into Issue and
Banking departments. - 1946 Bank of England Act nationalizes the bank.
16Political Ravishment, or The Old Lady of
Threadneedle-street in Danger!,
17The Colonial period
- Money and monetary standards during the American
colonial period followed Britain. Money was in
terms of British pounds/shillings/pence, defined
in terms of silver and gold. - Spanish silver dollars, pieces of eight defined
as 387 grains of pure silver, or about 4.5 silver
shillings.
18The Colonial period
- First government-issued paper money by
Massachusetts in 1690, to finance soldiers
defeated on raids to Quebec
20 shillings, 1690
19The Colonial period
- Colonial governments began issuing bills of
credit, debt promising to pay silver in the
future. - These bills were generally transferable without
endorsement, so they circulated as a medium of
exchange, and were convertible on maturity
20Revolutionary war finance
- As with England in the late 1600s, financing the
Revolutionary War was difficult for the colonies
no taxing authority and couldnt borrow
effectively. Continental Congress issued bills of
credit paper money called Continentals that
were not tightly linked to gold and silver
33 cent US Note a Continental. Issued February
1776
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22The first American banks
- The Pennsylvania Bank (1780) didnt issue
notes. - Bank of North America (1781) incorporated by
Continental Congress to help finance government
expenses issued banknotes.
23Constitutional monetary standards
- The Constitution gives sole right to Congress to
coin Money and regulate the Value thereof and
forbade state governments from issuing bills of
credit or coining money. - Coinage Act of 1792. US dollar equal to 371.25
grains (0.7734 ounces) of pure silver or 24.75
grains (0.05156 ounces) of pure gold (nominal
silver price was 1.29 per ounce and that of gold
19.39 per ounce.) mint ratio 15 to 1. There was
to be free coinage.
24First Bank of the United States
- Private bank with 20 year charter, 1791-1811.
- Motives a) finance new government b) facilitate
payment of taxes c) convenience and resource
saving of paper money. - Privileges a) Convertible notes accepted by
government for taxes and payments b) government
depository c) could branch in any state d) no
other banks to be established during life.
Alexander Hamilton
25Suspension of convertibility
- With War of 1812, US Treasury issued
interest-bearing notes that were held by banks as
reserves, so banknotes increased, leading to
inflation and shortage of specie. Suspension of
convertibility followed. At wars end, with
government finances improving, a national bank
was once again proposed as means to improve the
payments system and to resume convertibility.
26Second Bank of the US and resumption
- Chartered 1816 to 1836.
- Similar rights and privileges
- To provide uniform currency.
- Temporary resumption in 1817, but Second BUS
over-issue led to inflation/suspension. - Convertibility generally restored in 1821.
Nicholas Biddle
Andrew Jackson
27Coinage Act of 1834
- Reduced gold content of the dollar from 24.75
grains to 23.22 grains pure gold, or Pg 20.67. - The mint ratio (silver to gold) increased to 16
to 1. - With the relative price of gold still 15.5 to 1,
gold replaced silver as the commodity money. - Thus, from 1792 to 1834, silver was the primary
commodity money from 1834 to 1860, gold was,
even though there was a de jure bimetallic
standard
28The Free-banking period
- With the demise of the Banks of US, the federal
government stepped out of the bank-regulation and
chartering business. Even though states couldnt
constitutionally issue money, they could charter
banks. Many states enacted free-banking laws a)
free entry with minimum capital requirement b)
note issued secured by state bonds c) notes had
to be redeemable in specie on demand d) limited
liability.
29Pre-war composition of the money stock
- 1859 the money stock in the US was just over
670 million. 40 specie in circulation, 27
state bank notes, 33 bank checking deposits.
Bank reserves of specie fluctuated between 20
and 35 of note and deposit liabilities.
30Greenbacks
- Feb. 1862 US Government issued notes to finance
the Civil War, the so-called Greenbacks. - Unbacked by gold or silver true fiat money
and supported by legal tender laws (see top of
notes to the right). - Dollar price of gold doubled during this period.
31The National Banking System
- National Bank Act 1863
- Standardized bank notes
- 110 backed by US bonds
- Legal tender, but convertible into lawful money
(base money).
Bank note issued by Quakertown National Bank 1897
32The National Banking System
- 1865 10 tax on state banknotes and the rise
of demand deposits.
Bank note issued by Quakertown National Bank 1897
33Resumption of convertibility
- Resumption at 20.67 was desired, requiring
deflation as greenbacks were retired. - Resumption Act of 1875 ended the suspension of
convertibility.
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35The Crime of 1873
- Coinage Act of 1873 eliminated the free-coinage
of silver, in effect removing silver from the
monetary system. This was an important political
issue in US for years to come
William Jennings Bryan
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37The Founding of the Federal Reserve System
- The Panic of 1907 and the National Monetary
Commission - Federal Reserve Act of 1913
- Federal Reserve to issue notes with 40 gold
backing, to promote an elastic currency.
Nelson Aldrich
38The Great Depression
- Collapse of the banking system
- average suspensions from 1921 to 1929 635
- average suspensions 1930 to 1933 2299 with 4004
in 1933 alone. - Banking Holiday and reforms
- Creation of the FDIC
- Reorganization of the FED
- The US stock of gold was nationalized
- Gold re-valued to 35/ounce.
39Bretton Woods
- Fixed exchange rates
- US to hold gold
- Dollars to serve as reserve currency
- Collapse in 1971 as US inflation increased
- Gold outflows and Nixons closing of the gold
window in 1971.
40Banking Business
- Balance sheet of commercial banks
- __________________________________________________
___________________ - Reserves (liquid assets/cash) Checkable
deposits - Securities (mostly government) Non-transaction
deposits - Loans (commercial, consumer, etc.) Borrowing
(Fed, banks) - Net worth (equity capital)
- Loans and securities 80
- Reserves 3
- Checking accounts 10 of total liabilities.
- Basic tradeoff of banking interest earning
versus liquidity
41Banking industry
- Dual banking system and supervision
- Restrictions and government intervention
- Branching National Banking Act 1863, McFadden
Act 1927, Riegle-Neal Act 1994 - Scope Glass-Steagall Act of 1933,
Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act of 1999 - Interest rates Reg. Q, DIDMCA 1980
- Deposit insurance FDIC in 1934.