A History of Central Banking in Great Britain and the United States

Front Cover
Cambridge University Press, 2005 M06 6 - 439 pages
Central banks in Great Britain and the United States arose early in the financial revolution. The Bank of England was created in 1694 while the first Banks of the United States appeared in 1791-1811 and 1816-36, and were followed by the Idependent Treasury, 1846-1914. These institutions, together with the Suffolk Bank and the New York Clearing House, exercised important central banking function before the creation of the Federal Reserve System in 1913. Significant monetary changes in the lives of these British and American institutions are examined within a framework that deals with the knowledge and behavior of central bankers and their interactions with economists and politicians. Central Bankers' behavior has shown considerable continuity in the influence of incentives and their interest in the stability of the financial markets. For example, the Federal Reserve's behavior during the Great Depression, the low inflation of the 1990s, and its resurgence the next decade follow from its structure and from government pressures rather than accidents of personnel.
 

Contents

IV
1
V
8
VI
9
VII
14
VIII
20
IX
27
X
32
XI
34
XXXVIII
196
XXXIX
211
XL
218
XLI
244
XLII
247
XLIII
256
XLIV
261
XLV
275

XII
47
XIII
60
XIV
62
XV
67
XVI
75
XVII
89
XVIII
96
XIX
101
XX
107
XXI
113
XXII
117
XXIII
120
XXIV
123
XXV
134
XXVI
139
XXVII
153
XXVIII
156
XXIX
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XXX
166
XXXI
169
XXXII
176
XXXIII
181
XXXIV
184
XXXV
189
XXXVI
191
XXXVII
194
XLVI
277
XLVII
280
XLVIII
293
XLIX
297
L
314
LI
323
LII
328
LIII
330
LIV
336
LV
340
LVI
342
LVII
344
LVIII
347
LIX
350
LX
351
LXI
369
LXII
375
LXIII
377
LXIV
382
LXV
389
LXVI
397
LXVII
399
LXVIII
401
LXIX
425
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About the author (2005)

John H. Wood is R. J. Reynolds Professor of Economics at Wake Forest University, Winston-Salem, North Carolina. He has also taught at the Universities of Birmingham, Pennsylvania, and Singapore and at Northwestern University. A Life Fellow of Clare Hall, Cambridge, and a Visiting Fellow of the American Institute for Economic Research, Professor Wood has also been a full-time or visiting economist at the Federal Reserve Board and the Federal Reserve Banks of Chicago, Dallas, and Philadelphia. His earlier studies of central banking include in 1967 the first application of the theory of economic policy to Federal Reserve behavior.

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