Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The history of banking began with the first prototype banks, that is, the merchants of the world, ... History of money; Banker (ancient) Branchless banking;
The history of money is the development over time of systems for the exchange of goods and services. ... Early history of banking in England. London: R. S. King (1929).
Rothbard, Murray N., History of Money and Banking in the United States.Full text (510 pages) in pdf format, A libertarian interpretation; Schweikart, Larry, ed. Banking and Finance to 1913 (1990), an encyclopedia with short articles by experts Schweikart, Larry, ed. Banking and Finance, 1913-1989 (1990), an encyclopedia with short articles by ...
A History of Money and Banking in the United States: The Colonial Era to World War II. Sebok, Miklos (2011). "President Wilson and the International Origins of the Federal Reserve System—A Reappraisal". White House Studies. 10 (4): 424– 447. Shull, Bernard (2005). The Fourth Branch: The Federal Reserve's Unlikely Rise to Power and Influence ...
U.S. banking regulations address privacy, disclosure, fraud prevention, anti-money laundering, anti-terrorism, anti-usury lending, and the promotion of lending to lower-income populations. Some individual cities also enact their own financial regulation laws (for example, defining what constitutes usurious lending).
The curse of paper-money and banking; or A short history of banking in the United States of America, with an account of its ruinous effects. (1833) An inquiry into the expediency of dispensing with bank agency and bank paper in fiscal concerns of the United States. (1837) The Journal of banking, from July 1841 to July 1842 (1841-1842)
A History of Money and Banking in the United States is a 2002 book by economist Murray Rothbard, released posthumously based on his archived manuscripts. [1] The author traces inflations, banking panics, and money meltdowns from the Colonial Period through the mid-20th century.
A wildcat bank is broadly defined as one that prints more currency than it is capable of continuously redeeming in specie. A more specific definition, established by historian of economics Hugh Rockoff in the 1970s, applies the term to free banks whose notes were backed by overvalued securities – bonds which were valued at par by the state, but which had a market value below par. [2]