{"title":"Postbellum Banking","authors":"R. Wright","doi":"10.1093/acrefore/9780199329175.013.885","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Between passage of the National Banking Acts near the end of the US Civil War and the outbreak of the Great War and implementation of the Federal Reserve System in 1914, a large, vibrant financial system based on the gold standard and composed of markets and intermediaries supported the rapid growth and development of the American economy. Markets included over-the-counter markets and formal exchanges for financial securities, including bills of exchange (foreign currencies), cash (short-term debt), debt (corporate and government bonds), and equities (ownership shares in corporations), initial issuance of which increasingly fell to investment banks. Intermediaries included various types of insurers (marine, fire, and life, plus myriad specialists like accident and wind insurers) and true depository institutions, which included trust companies, mutual and stock savings banks, and state- and federally-chartered commercial banks. Nominal depository institutions also operated, and included building and loan associations and, eventually, credit unions and Morris Plan and other industrial banks. Non-depository lenders included finance and mortgage companies, provident loan societies, pawn brokers, and sundry other small loan brokers. Each type of “bank,” broadly construed, catered to customers differentiated by their credit characteristics, gender, race/ethnicity, country of birth, religion, and/or socioeconomic class, had distinctive balance sheets and loan application and other operating procedures, and reacted differently to the three major postbellum financial crises in 1873, 1892, and 1907.","PeriodicalId":105482,"journal":{"name":"Oxford Research Encyclopedia of American History","volume":"39 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2020-08-27","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Oxford Research Encyclopedia of American History","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1093/acrefore/9780199329175.013.885","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
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Abstract

Between passage of the National Banking Acts near the end of the US Civil War and the outbreak of the Great War and implementation of the Federal Reserve System in 1914, a large, vibrant financial system based on the gold standard and composed of markets and intermediaries supported the rapid growth and development of the American economy. Markets included over-the-counter markets and formal exchanges for financial securities, including bills of exchange (foreign currencies), cash (short-term debt), debt (corporate and government bonds), and equities (ownership shares in corporations), initial issuance of which increasingly fell to investment banks. Intermediaries included various types of insurers (marine, fire, and life, plus myriad specialists like accident and wind insurers) and true depository institutions, which included trust companies, mutual and stock savings banks, and state- and federally-chartered commercial banks. Nominal depository institutions also operated, and included building and loan associations and, eventually, credit unions and Morris Plan and other industrial banks. Non-depository lenders included finance and mortgage companies, provident loan societies, pawn brokers, and sundry other small loan brokers. Each type of “bank,” broadly construed, catered to customers differentiated by their credit characteristics, gender, race/ethnicity, country of birth, religion, and/or socioeconomic class, had distinctive balance sheets and loan application and other operating procedures, and reacted differently to the three major postbellum financial crises in 1873, 1892, and 1907.
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从美国内战临近结束时《国家银行法》的通过到一战爆发和1914年联邦储备系统的实施,一个以金本位为基础、由市场和中介机构组成的庞大而充满活力的金融体系支撑了美国经济的快速增长和发展。市场包括场外交易市场和金融证券的正式交易所,包括汇票(外币)、现金(短期债务)、债务(公司和政府债券)和股票(公司的所有权股份),这些证券的首次发行越来越多地落在投资银行手中。中介机构包括各种类型的保险公司(海事、火灾和人寿保险公司,以及无数的专业保险公司,如意外和风力保险公司)和真正的存款机构,包括信托公司、互助和股票储蓄银行,以及州和联邦特许的商业银行。名义上的存款机构也在运作,包括建筑和贷款协会,最终还包括信用合作社、莫里斯计划和其他工业银行。非存款贷款机构包括金融和抵押贷款公司、公积金贷款协会、典当经纪人和其他小额贷款经纪人。从广义上讲,每种类型的“银行”都迎合了因信用特征、性别、种族/民族、出生国家、宗教和/或社会经济阶层而不同的客户,有不同的资产负债表、贷款申请和其他操作程序,对1873年、1892年和1907年三次主要战后金融危机的反应也不同。
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