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An Examination of Illinois Free Banks: Bank Ownership, Operations, and Free Bank Failures

  • Autores: Andrew Economopoulos
  • Localización: Essays in economic and business history: the journal of the economic and business historical society, ISSN 0896-226X, Nº. 39, 2021, págs. 148-168
  • Idioma: inglés
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  • Resumen
    • This article re-examines Illinois free banking from a new perspective: ownership structure. The claim that ownership influenced banking activity and note holder losses isanalyzed, and it is shown that ownership did not have a major impact on asset allocation and losses. Only Chicago residents who owned banks elsewhere appear to have used the banks for their interests. They neither issued loans to borrowers other than themselves or accepted deposits.

      Private bankers used free banks as a source of banknotes. A large proportion of the free banks had overlapping ownership, resulting in specie minimiz ation. Private bankers, whether local or from Chicago, and local owners were more likely to operate as traditional banks. All free banks were impacted by the 1853 change in the tax code, leading tofewer loans, more loans to stockholders, and more deposits in other banks. Free banks owned by Chicago private bankers generally closed without noteholders suffering losses. For closed banks owned byother ownership groups noteholder losses depended on the nature of the bonds held by the bank.


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