We are now in the midst
of a major financial panic. This is not a unique occurrence in American
history. Indeed, we've had one roughly every 20 years: in 1819, 1836, 1857,
1873, 1893, 1907, 1929, 1987 and now 2008. Many of these marked the beginning
of an extended period of economic depression.
The
Granger Collection
President
Andrew Jackson destroying the Bank of the United States. Lithograph, 1828.
How could the richest
and most productive economy the world has ever known have a financial system so
prone to periodic and catastrophic break down? One answer is the baleful
influence of Thomas Jefferson.
Jefferson, to be sure,
was a genius and fully deserves his place on Mt. Rushmore. But he was also a
quintessential intellectual who was often insulated from the real world. He
hated commerce, he hated speculators, he hated the grubby business of getting
and spending (except his own spending, of course, which eventually bankrupted
him). Most of all, he hated banks, the symbol for him of concentrated economic
power. Because he was the founder of an enduring political movement, his
influence has been strongly felt to the present day.
Consider central banking.
A central bank's most important jobs are to guard the money supply --
regulating the economy thereby -- and to act as a lender of last resort to
regular banks in times of financial distress. Central banks are, by their
nature, very large and powerful institutions. They need to be to be effective.
Jefferson's chief
political rival, Alexander Hamilton, had grown up almost literally in a
counting house, in the West Indian island of St. Croix, managing the place by
the time he was in his middle teens. He had a profound and practical
understanding of markets and how they work, an understanding that Jefferson,
born a landed aristocrat who lived off the labor of slaves, utterly lacked.
Hamilton wanted to
establish a central bank modeled on the Bank of England. The government would
own 20% of the stock, have two seats on the board, and the right to inspect the
books at any time. But, like the Bank of England then, it would otherwise be
owned by its stockholders.
To Jefferson, who may
not have understood the concept of central banking, Hamilton's idea was what
today might be called "a giveaway to the rich." He fought it tooth
and nail, but Hamilton won the battle and the Bank of the United States was
established in 1792. It was a big success and its stockholders did very well.
It also provided the country with a regular money supply with its own
banknotes, and a coherent, disciplined banking system.
But as the Federalists
lost power and the Jeffersonians became the dominant party, the bank's charter
was not renewed in 1811. The near-disaster of the War of 1812 caused President
James Madison to realize the virtues of a central bank and a second bank was
established in 1816. But President Andrew Jackson, a Jeffersonian to his core,
killed it and the country had no central bank for the next 73 years.
We paid a heavy price
for the Jeffersonian aversion to central banking. Without a central bank there
was no way to inject liquidity into the banking system to stem a panic. As a
result, the panics of the 19th century were far worse here than in Europe and
precipitated longer and deeper depressions. In 1907, J.P. Morgan, probably the
most powerful private banker who ever lived, acted as the central bank to end
the panic that year.
Even Jefferson's
political heirs realized after 1907 that what was now the largest economy in
the world could not do without a central bank. The Federal Reserve was created
in 1913. But, again, they fought to make it weaker rather than stronger.
Instead of one central bank, they created 12 separate banks located across the
country and only weakly coordinated.
No small part of the
reason that an ordinary recession that began in the spring of 1929 turned into
the calamity of the Great Depression was the inability of the Federal Reserve
to do its job. It was completely reorganized in 1934 and the U.S. finally had a
central bank with the powers it needed to function. That is a principal reason
there was no panic for nearly 60 years after 1929 and the crash of 1987 had no
lasting effect on the American economy.
While the Constitution
gives the federal government control of the money supply, it is silent on the
control of banks, which create money. In the early days they created money both
through making loans and by issuing banknotes and today do so by extending
credit. Had Hamilton's Bank of the United States been allowed to survive, it
might well have evolved the uniform regulatory regime a banking system needs to
flourish.
Without it, banking
regulation was left to the states. Some states provided firm regulation, others
hardly any. Many states, influenced by Jeffersonian notions of the evils of
powerful banks, made sure they remained small by forbidding branching. In
banking, small means weak. There were about a thousand banks in the country by
1840, but that does not convey the whole story. Half the banks that opened
between 1810 and 1820 had failed by 1825, as did half those founded in the
1830s by 1845.
Many "wildcat
banks," so called because they were headquartered "out among the
wildcats," were simple frauds, issuing as many banknotes as they could
before disappearing. By the 1840s there were thousands of issues of banknotes
in circulation and publishers did a brisk business in "banknote
detectors" to help catch frauds.
The Civil War ended this
monetary chaos when Congress passed the National Bank Act, offering federal
charters to banks that had enough capital and would submit to strict
regulation. Banknotes issued by national banks had to be uniform in design and
backed by substantial reserves invested in federal bonds. Meanwhile Congress
got the state banks out of the banknote business by putting a 10% tax on their
issuance. But National banks could not branch if their state did not allow it
and could not branch across state lines.
Unfortunately state
banks did not disappear, but proliferated as never before. By 1920, there were
almost 30,000 banks in the U.S., more than the rest of the world put together.
Overwhelmingly they were small, "unitary" banks with capital under $1
million. As each of these unitary banks was tied to a local economy, if that
economy went south, the bank often failed. As depression began to spread
through American agriculture in the 1920s, bank failures averaged over 550 a
year. With the Great Depression, a tsunami of bank failures threatened the
collapse of the system.
The reorganization of
the Federal Reserve and the creation of the Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation hugely reduced the number of bank failures and mostly ended bank
runs. But there remained thousands of banks, along with thousands of savings
and loan associations, mutual savings banks, and trust companies. While these
were all banks, taking deposits and making loans, they were regulated, often at
cross purposes, by different authorities. The Comptroller of the Currency, the
Federal Reserve, the FDIC, the FSLIC, the SEC, the banking regulators of the
states, and numerous other agencies all had jurisdiction over aspects of the
American banking system.
The system was stable in
the prosperous postwar years, but when inflation took off in the late 1960s, it
began to break down. S&Ls, small and local but with disproportionate
political influence, should have been forced to merge or liquidate when they
could not compete in the new financial environment. Instead Congress made a
series of quick fixes that made disaster inevitable.
In the 1990s interstate
banking was finally allowed, creating nationwide banks of unprecedented size.
But Congress's attempt to force banks to make home loans to people who had
limited creditworthiness, while encouraging Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to take
these dubious loans off their hands so that the banks could make still more of
them, created another crisis in the banking system that is now playing out.
While it will be
painful, the present crisis will at least provide another opportunity to give
this country, finally, a unified banking system of large, diversified,
well-capitalized banking institutions that are under the control of a unified
and coherent regulatory system free of undue political influence.
Mr. Gordon is the
author of "An Empire of Wealth: The Epic History of American Economic
Power" (HarperCollins, 2004).