Goldsmith Bankers and the Birth of the Fractional Reserve System (Seventeenth and Early Eighteenth Centuries)
Mehmet Baha Karan (),
Wim Westerman () and
Jacob Wijngaard ()
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Mehmet Baha Karan: Hacettepe University
Wim Westerman: University of Groningen
Jacob Wijngaard: University of Groningen
Chapter Chapter 4 in A History of Banks, 2024, pp 99-128 from Springer
Abstract:
Abstract England (and Scotland) also fell out of the Middle Ages quite abruptly, with a Civil War (1642–1651), increasing the role of Parliament. War debts had eroded the financial system, and this is how London goldsmiths became trusted custodians. The Goldsmiths used their role to create paper money with banknotes and bills of exchange, above deposit levels, thereby introducing ‘fractional banking’. A lofty person was Edward Blackwell. British financial policy improved and opened up, but government debts remained an issue. Enter the Bank of England (1691), the world’s first genuine large central bank, also issuing banknotes. The U.K. had soon become the world’s leading nation.
Date: 2024
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:spr:conchp:978-3-031-62297-7_4
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DOI: 10.1007/978-3-031-62297-7_4
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