Research Catalog
Insider lending : banks, personal connections, and economic development in industrial New England
- Title
- Insider lending : banks, personal connections, and economic development in industrial New England / Naomi R. Lamoreaux.
- Author
- Lamoreaux, Naomi R.
- Publication
- Cambridge [England] ; New York : Cambridge University Press, 1994.
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Status | Format | Access | Call Number | Item Location |
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Not available - Please for assistance. | Text | Use in library | HG2601 .L36 1994 | Off-site |
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Details
- Additional Authors
- National Bureau of Economic Research.
- Description
- xiii, 170 pages, 10 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations; 28 cm.
- Summary
- Banks in early nineteenth-century New England functioned very differently from their modern counterparts. Most significantly, they lent a large proportion of their funds to members of their own boards of directors or to others with close personal connections to the boards. In Insider Lending, Naomi R. Lamoreaux explores the workings of this early nineteenth-century banking system - how and how well it functioned and the way it was regarded by contemporaries.
- She also traces the processes that transformed this banking system based on insider lending into a more impersonal and professional system by the end of the century. In the particular social, economic, and political context of early nineteenth-century New England, Lamoreaux argues, the benefits of insider lending outweighed its costs, and banks were instrumental in financing economic development. As the banking system grew more impersonal, however, banks came to play a more restricted role in economic life. At the root of this change were the new information problems banks faced when they conducted more and more of their business at arm's length.
- Difficulties in obtaining information about the creditworthiness of borrowers and in conveying information to the public about their own soundness led them to concentrate on providing short-term loans to commercial borrowers and to forsake the important role they had played early on in financing economic development.
- Series Statement
- NBER series on long-term factors in economic development
- Uniform Title
- NBER series on long-term factors in economic development.
- Subject
- Note
- "NBER."
- Bibliography (note)
- Includes bibliographical references and index.
- Contents
- 1. Vehicles for accumulating capital -- 2. Insider lending and Jacksonian hostility toward banks -- 3. Engines of economic development -- 4. The decline of insider lending and the problem of determining creditworthiness -- 5. Professionalization and specialization -- 6. The merger movement in banking.
- ISBN
- 0521460964
- 0512469964 (canceled/invalid)
- LCCN
- 93032161
- OCLC
- 28800376
- ocm28800376
- Owning Institutions
- Columbia University Libraries