
Howard Bodenhorn's State Banking in Early America studies the financial experimentation that took place in the United States between 1790 and 1860. Dr. Bodenhorn's book explores regional differences in banking structures, which bear indirectly in the conection between financial and economic development. If a single theme emerges, it is that the United States benefitted from its free banking philosophy in which state governments, rather than a centralized authority, created financial structures designed to serve specific, local needs. Thus decentralized federalism provided state legislatures with a great deal of flexibility in their individual approaches to economic and financial issues. The important lessons to be learned from Dr. Bodenhorn's historical account are that successful banking systems are flexible, predictable, and incentive-compatible; they meet the needs of the borrowers, depositors and shareholders, and they reduce downside risks to generally agreed upon levels. These lessons imply that we cannot, a priori, define an optimal, one-size-fits-all banking system. We need to know something about the formal and informal institutions underlying an economy and about the risk preferences of its citizenry. Historically, outsiders view Americans as experimenters and risk takers. Nowhere is this experimentation and risk taking more apparent than in early American banking policies.
This book investigates the relationship between decentralized state banking systems and economic development in the United States during the period of 1790 to 1860. Howard Bodenhorn, an economist specializing in financial history, utilizes a comparative regional analysis to examine how individual state legislatures developed unique financial structures. He argues that the absence of a centralized banking authority allowed for a flexible, experimental approach that better served local economic needs than a uniform national system would have.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars and economic historians frequently cite this work as a foundational text for understanding the institutional diversity of early American finance. Readers often note the academic density of the prose, which provides a rigorous examination of historical economic data.
Page Count:
351
Publication Date:
2002-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190287314
ISBN-13:
9780190287313
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