Banking and Finance from the Revolution to the Civil War

S. Murphy
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Abstract

In creating a new nation, the United States also had to create a financial system from scratch. During the period from the Revolution to the Civil War, the country experimented with numerous options. Although the Constitution deliberately banned the issuance of paper money by either Congress or the states, states indirectly reclaimed this power by incorporating state-chartered banks with the ability to print banknotes. These provided Americans with a medium of exchange to facilitate trade and an expansionary money supply to meet the economic needs of a growing nation. The federal government likewise entered into the world of money and finance with the incorporation of the First and Second Banks of the United States. Not only did critics challenge the constitutionality of these banks, but contemporaries likewise debated whether any banking institutions promoted the economic welfare of the nation or if they instead introduced unnecessary instability into the economy. These debates became particularly heated during moments of crisis. Periods of war, including the Revolutionary War, the War of 1812, and the Civil War, highlighted the necessity of a robust financial system to support the military effort, while periods of economic panic such as the Panic of 1819, the Panics of 1837 and 1839, and the Panic of 1857 drew attention to the weaknesses inherent in this decentralized, largely unregulated system. Whereas Andrew Jackson succeeded in destroying the Second Bank of the United States during the Bank War, state-chartered commercial banks, savings banks, and investment banks still multiplied rapidly throughout the period. Numerous states introduced regulations intended to control the worst excesses of these banks, but the most comprehensive legislation occurred with the federal government’s Civil War-era Banking Acts, which created the first uniform currency for the nation.
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从革命到内战的银行和金融
在创建一个新国家的过程中,美国还必须从零开始创建一个金融体系。从革命到内战期间,这个国家尝试了许多选择。虽然宪法故意禁止国会或各州发行纸币,但各州通过将州特许银行与印刷钞票的能力结合起来,间接地收回了这种权力。这为美国人提供了一种促进贸易的交换媒介,并提供了扩张性的货币供应,以满足一个不断发展的国家的经济需求。随着美国第一银行和第二银行的成立,联邦政府也进入了货币和金融领域。不仅批评者质疑这些银行的合宪性,而且同时代的人也在争论银行机构是否促进了国家的经济福利,或者是否给经济带来了不必要的不稳定。在危机时刻,这些争论变得尤为激烈。战争时期,包括独立战争、1812年战争和内战,强调了一个强大的金融体系来支持军事努力的必要性,而经济恐慌时期,如1819年恐慌、1837年和1839年恐慌以及1857年恐慌,则使人们注意到这种分散的、基本上不受监管的体系所固有的弱点。虽然安德鲁·杰克逊在银行战争中成功地摧毁了美国第二银行,但在此期间,州特许商业银行、储蓄银行和投资银行仍然迅速增长。许多州出台了旨在控制这些银行最严重的过度行为的法规,但最全面的立法发生在联邦政府内战时期的《银行法》(Banking act),该法案为美国创造了第一种统一货币。
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