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America's Bank: The Epic Struggle to Create the Federal Reserve
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America's Bank: The Epic Struggle to Create the Federal Reserve
Quotes of Book: America's Bank: The Epic
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Roger Lowenstein
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America's Bank: The Epic
VARIOUS OTHER BANKERS-heirs to the Indianapolis convention-carried on the fight for reform. However, unlike Warburg, they favored establishing an asset currency, a decentralized scheme based on each individual bank's loans.
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Roger Lowenstein
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America's Bank: The Epic
Warburg was shocked by the primitiveness of American finance. Whereas banks in Germany functioned with near-military cohesiveness, banking in America, he concluded, suffered from an ethos of extreme individualism.
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Roger Lowenstein
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America's Bank: The Epic
A chief attraction of the real bills theory was that it took decisions regarding the money supply out of human hands. John Carlisle, Treasury secretary under Cleveland, maintained that issuing notes "is not a proper function of the Treasury Department, or of any other department of the Government." The task was just too difficult. Rather, Carlisle said, currency should be "regulated entirely by the business interests of the people and by the laws of trade.
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Roger Lowenstein
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America's Bank: The Epic
The moment was highly polarizing. Populists agitated for an income tax, tariff reform, regulation of railroads, and direct election of U.S. senators {who were chosen by the legislatures}. Workers erupted in sometimes violent strikes-notably, the Pullman strike of 1894, which halted much of the nation's rail traffic and led to rioting and acts of sabotage, and was ultimately suppressed by federal troops.
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Roger Lowenstein
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America's Bank: The Epic
America's abandonment of the gold standard would have shocked the founders, who took for granted that money had to be more than mere paper. More than anything, going off gold {which occurred in stages, culminating under Nixon} expanded the Fed's charter. It made the agency the supreme arbiter
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Roger Lowenstein
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America's Bank: The Epic
Glass's nature was to fret. He was intensely agitated by the pressure from bankers for a centralized scheme and worried that bankers had gotten to Wilson {a suspicion, of course, that was entirely correct}.
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Roger Lowenstein
_
America's Bank: The Epic
Regardless of how earnestly bankers trumpeted the virtues of laissez-faire, in times of unrest markets looked to Washington to provide stability.
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Roger Lowenstein
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America's Bank: The Epic
Warburg hesitated before daring to reply. "Your bank is so big and so powerful, Mr. Stillman, that when the next panic comes, you will wish your responsibilities were smaller.
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Roger Lowenstein
_
America's Bank: The Epic
Warburg rifled off a congratulatory note to Owen. He revealed his true feelings about the Senate {including Owen} to a fellow European, to whom he groused, "It is a terribly tiring business to try to influence these hundred obstinate and ignorant men.
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Roger Lowenstein
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America's Bank: The Epic
Three questions divided reformers: Who should issue the new currency? To what degree should the system be centralized? And should bankers or politicians be in control?
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