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Other People's Money - How Banking Worked in the Early American Republic (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R1,230
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Other People's Money - How Banking Worked in the Early American Republic (Hardcover)
Series: How Things Worked
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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Pieces of paper that claimed to be good for two dollars upon
redemption at a distant bank. Foreign coins that fluctuated in
value from town to town. Stock certificates issued by turnpike or
canal companies-worth something...or perhaps nothing. IOUs from
farmers or tradesmen, passed around by people who could not know
the person who first issued them. Money and banking in antebellum
America offered a glaring example of free-market capitalism run
amok-unregulated, exuberant, and heading pell-mell toward the next
"panic" of burst bubbles and hard times. In Other People's Money,
Sharon Ann Murphy explains how banking and money worked before the
federal government, spurred by the chaos of the Civil War, created
the national system of US paper currency. Murphy traces the
evolution of banking in America from the founding of the nation,
when politicians debated the constitutionality of chartering a
national bank, to Andrew Jackson's role in the Bank War of the
early 1830s, to the problems of financing a large-scale war. She
reveals how, ultimately, the monetary and banking structures that
emerged from the Civil War also provided the basis for our modern
financial system, from its formation under the Federal Reserve in
1913 to the present. Touching on the significant role that numerous
historical figures played in shaping American banking-including
Alexander Hamilton, James Madison, Benjamin Franklin, Henry Clay,
Daniel Webster, and Louis Brandeis- Other People's Money is an
engaging guide to the heated political fights that surrounded
banking in early America as well as to the economic causes and
consequences of the financial system that emerged from the turmoil.
By helping readers understand the financial history of this period
and the way banking shaped the society in which ordinary Americans
lived and worked, this book broadens and deepens our knowledge of
the Early American Republic.
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