Lessons from a laissez-faire payments system: the Suffolk Banking System (1825-58)
Arthur J. Rolnick,
Bruce Smith and
Warren Weber
Quarterly Review, 1998, vol. 22, issue Sum, 21 pages
Abstract:
A classic example of a privately created interbank payments system was operated by the Suffolk Bank of New England (1825?58). Known as the Suffolk Banking System, it was the nation?s first regionwide net-clearing system for bank notes. While it operated, notes of all New England banks circulated at par throughout the region. Some have concluded from this experience that unfettered competition in the provision of payments services can produce an efficient payments system. But another look at the history of the Suffolk Banking System questions this conclusion. The Suffolk Bank earned extraordinary profits, and note-clearing may have been a natural monopoly. There is no consensus in the literature about whether unfettered operation of markets with natural monopolies produces an efficient allocation of resources. ; Reprinted in Quarterly Review, Fall 2002 (v. 26. no. 4)
Keywords: Suffolk Banking System; Payment systems (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 1998
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