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In the late eighteenth and early nineteenth century, Scotland had a stable financial system. Its stability arose from the pressure that private banks, which had the right to issue bank notes, placed on each other to behave prudently. Unlike in England, the Scottish banking system had no central...
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This study examines whether the transition from a system of multiple issuing banks to a monopoly on currency issuance was a step in the Bank of Spain’s becoming a central bank in the true sense of the word (a non-profit-maximizing institution); or on the contrary, whether the Bank used its...
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Intro -- _Hlk488832294 -- __DdeLink__3072_333543986 -- Figure 1 Spending equilibrium: free banking -- Figure 2 Quarterly value of Fedwire transactions and nominal GDP (1992 = 100) -- Figure 3 US CPI (average 1982-84 = 100), US nominal GDP (million of dollars) -- The authors -- Foreword --...
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This paper studies why currency and monetary shock hit Indonesia's economy and banking sector so severely and the measures that were taken to deal with the banking crisis, the lessons learned, and challenges faced in restructuring and strengthening the banking system. The vulnerable state of the...
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