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Banking theories in the United States before 1860

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fullscreen: Banking theories in the United States before 1860

Multivolume work

Identifikator:
1887156356
Document type:
Multivolume work
Author:
Schmoller, Gustav von http://d-nb.info/gnd/118609378
Title:
Grundriß der allgemeinen Volkswirtschaftslehre
Place of publication:
Berlin [u.a.]
Publisher:
Duncker & Humblot
Year of publication:
1900-
Collection:
Economics Books
Usage license:
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Volume

Identifikator:
1887156429
URN:
urn:nbn:de:zbw-retromon-236518
Document type:
Volume
Author:
Schmoller, Gustav von http://d-nb.info/gnd/118609378
Title:
Begriff. Psychologische und sittliche Grundlage. Literatur und Methode. Land, Leute und Technik. Die gesellschaftliche Verfassung der Volkswirtschaft
Volume count:
1.1901
Place of publication:
Berlin [u.a.]
Publisher:
Duncker & Humblot
Year of publication:
1901
Scope:
XIII, 482 Seiten
Digitisation:
2022
Collection:
Economics Books
Usage license:
Get license information via the feedback formular.

Chapter

Document type:
Multivolume work
Structure type:
Chapter
Title:
Einleitung. Begriff. Psychologische und sittliche Grundlage. Litteratur und Methode
Collection:
Economics Books

Contents

Table of contents

  • Banking theories in the United States before 1860
  • Title page
  • Contents
  • Part I. The utility of banks as a source of media of payment
  • Part II. The utility of banks as agencies in the distribution of loanable funds
  • Part III. Bank notes and bank deposits
  • Part IV. Banking policy and the business cycle
  • Index

Full text

BANKING POLICY 
175 
always provided with the means of instantly redeeming them 
when presented; hence, it is as important that the capital, which 
ought to furnish those means, should be frequently returned to 
it as that it should be profitably employed.” ! 
More interesting than the discussion of the proper length of 
loans * was the consideration given to the problem of the relative 
merits of advances made against accommodation paper as com- 
pared with discounts of paper representing trade transactions. 
To a considerable degree the two problems cannot be separated. 
Those who insisted upon the superiority of real paper as the basis 
for loans were usually equally anxious that loans should be for 
short periods and not subject to renewal; while an analogous 
connection can be shown between defenders of accommodation 
loans and of loans of longer maturity. 
Smith had urged that discounts based upon real paper cannot 
give rise to an unhealthy issue of bank notes? and the matter still 
remained a moot question in England. In this country, Bollman 
in 1816 advanced the thesis that real loans admit of no over- 
extension of credit,’ and in the second quarter of the century it 
became a popular one. Cooper, to take a typical example, thought 
that the amount of bank notes in circulation would vary exactly 
with the wants of commerce,’ if the policy of making none but 
real loans were adhered to. Accommodation loans disturbed the 
equilibrium, and, further, led to extravagance and bankruptcy. 
Tucker summarized the case for real, or “business paper,” as it 
was often called, by saying that loans of which it formed the basis 
were self-liquidating (to use a present-day term), encouraged 
industry and commerce without furnishing the means and incen- 
t C. F. Adams, “Principles of Credit,” Hunt's Merchants’ Magazine (March, 
1840), ii, 197. 
* Call loans received an interesting analysis, but it was principally with reference 
to their bearing upon commercial crises and it will be treated in that connection. 
See the last chapter. 
¥ Wealth of Nations, book II, chap. 2 (vol. i, p. 287). 
! Bollman, Plan for an Improved System (1818), p. 15. 
5 In all but a few cases a currency varying with the needs of trade was taken to 
mean one varying exactly as it would if wholly metallic. See supra, Chapter VII. 
8 Cooper, Lectures (1826), pp. 133-143.
	        

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Banking Theories in the United States before 1860. Harvard University Press, 1927.
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