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2013 | Book

The American Monetary System

An Insider's View of Financial Institutions, Markets and Monetary Policy

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About this book

Today’s financial system is considerably more complex than in years past, as new financial instruments have been introduced that are not well understood even by the people and institutions that invest in them. Numerous high-risk opportunities are available, and the number of people who unwittingly wander into such ventures seems to grow daily. There is also the realization that people’s lives are affected by the financial system without their overt participation in it. Despite no active participation, pensions can be emasculated by a sudden decline in interest rates, or a rise in rates can increase the monthly payments on a mortgage, credit cards or other debt. This book looks at the history of the American banking system, including the passage of the Federal Reserve Act in 1913, the implementation of deposit insurance, along with certain other provisions of the Glass-Steagall Act of 1933, the Bretton-Woods agreements, the forces of technological innovation and the Dodd-Frank Act, passed by Congress in 2010 for regulatory reform. This book will be of interest to undergraduate and graduate level students that want to gain a broad understanding of how the financial system works, why it is important to the economy as a whole, and what its strengths and weaknesses are. Also, readers should gain an understanding of what the Federal Reserve, other regulators and other central banks are doing, and will be in a position to critique their actions and say with some depth of understanding why they agree or disagree with them.

Table of Contents

Frontmatter

Historical Perspectives on Money, Financial Institutions and Markets

Frontmatter
Chapter 1. What Gives Money Its Value? From Gold to Paper
Abstract
The monetary system of the United States evolved from an international gold standard. This standard, in its pure form, existed in the United States only briefly – roughly 1879 to 1914. However, some modified form of the gold standard – that is, a fractional gold bullion standard – remained in the United States until 1971. Since then, no metallic backing of American currency of any kind has existed. So, we were on and off and on and off again, for about 100 years.
William H. Wallace
Chapter 2. What Is Driving the Financial World Today?
Abstract
We survived the 1930s only to find that different kinds of economic problems waited for us in the 1940s. World War II devastated the economies of nations all over the world. In 1944, after it had become clear that the Allied powers would win, representatives of 44 free nations, not including Germany and Japan, gathered at the invitation of the United States to a conference in Bretton Woods, New Hampshire, to discuss and plan for the world economy after the war.
William H. Wallace

Banking: Asset and Liability Management; Banking Supervision and Regulation

Frontmatter
Chapter 3. How Are Banks Funded?
Abstract
The principal function of the banking system is to facilitate the process of intermediation – that is, to convert the savings of society into productive investments, by obtaining deposits and making loans. Note that the emphasis is on system, as opposed to the individual bank, because a single bank cannot accomplish this task, but the system as a whole can do so and does. This is the reason that banks are referred to as financial intermediaries – the banking system brings together savers and investors.
William H. Wallace
Chapter 4. How Do Banks Use Their Funds? The Asset Side of the Balance Sheet
Abstract
We have discussed virtually all funding sources for banks and bank holding companies – except the capital accounts, to which we shall return in Chap. 5. But first, we are interested in examining the kinds of assets which banks would typically hold, focusing on the earning assets – investments and loans.
William H. Wallace
Chapter 5. Who Owns the Banks? Bank Capital and the Basel Accord
Abstract
The subject of bank capital has received heightened attention in recent years because of the widespread belief that the level of capital held by banks and other financial institutions prior to the downturn in 2007 was inadequate to protect them from the losses they had to absorb in the recession which followed.
William H. Wallace
Chapter 6. How Safe Are Our Banks? Supervision and Regulation of the Financial System
Abstract
Who are the regulators? For the United States, they include the following:
William H. Wallace

Financial Markets and the Management of Financial Risk

Frontmatter
Chapter 7. What Makes the System Work? The Discipline of the Markets
Abstract
As we broaden our focus from just banks to all types of financial institutions and to the financial markets, we shall consider the roles that financial institutions play in the markets and look at their interdependence. We shall also consider the impact of changes in market conditions on the institutions. Finally, we shall examine financial risk and how it is managed – or in some instances, mismanaged.
William H. Wallace
Chapter 8. Who Finances American Industry? The Relative Roles of Commercial and Investment Banking
Abstract
In their book, Global Banking, Smith and Walter argue that there are three models of bank-industry linkages [1, p. 431]. The first is what they call the “outsider system,” which is essentially the English/American system. The typical industrial firm is semidetached from banks. Financing is done mainly through the capital markets, with short-term needs satisfied by commercial paper and longer-term needs through bonds or medium-term notes. Bank relationships are important for backstop lines, etc., but relationships remain at arm’s length.
William H. Wallace
Chapter 9. What Went Wrong, and What Are We Doing to Fix It? A Chronology of Financial Crises
Abstract
As we noted at the beginning, the US financial industry has been subject to mismanagement, unethical behavior, greed, corruption, excesses and abuses, fraud, and other outright criminal acts. While the industry has suffered some serious blows from these incidents, it has not been destroyed. In fact, one would hope that legislators, policymakers, and the public at large have learned from such incidents and that the industry in the final analysis has been strengthened by them.
William H. Wallace
Chapter 10. Why Have Financial Risks Skyrocketed, and How Is the Industry Dealing with It?
Abstract
We discussed briefly in Chap.​ 4 the variety of risks present in the financial industry that arise from the lending process. The most basic and pervasive of these is credit risk. It was the fundamental cause of the financial disaster of 2007–2012. Other risks of importance to financial institutions are market risk, associated with movements in interest rates, and foreign exchange risk, linked to movements in currency values. Finally, country risk, or political risk, may exist on rare occasions when governments or other sovereign entities repudiate outstanding debt and refuse to pay it. This type of risk may be controlled to a degree through careful country analyses and political assessments. Thus, the identification and measurement of risk, as well as the ability to control it, are basic requirements for the successful operation of financial institutions, bank, or nonbank.
William H. Wallace

Central Banking and Monetary Policy

Frontmatter
Chapter 11. What Are the Purposes and Functions of the Federal Reserve System?
Abstract
To understand the monetary policy process, we must take a more detailed look at the central bank itself, how it is structured, and why it is organized in the manner it is.
William H. Wallace
Chapter 12. How Is American Monetary Policy Made, and How Does It Affect the Domestic and Global Economies?
Abstract
The third and most powerful tool of monetary policy is open market operations. This involves the buying and selling of Treasury securities in the open market. As the Fed pays for securities that it buys, it puts funds into the banking system, which raises bank reserves and causes lower interest rates. Conversely, as the Fed is paid for securities that it sells, it draws funds from the banking system, which reduces reserves and causes an increase in interest rates.
William H. Wallace
Chapter 13. A Career with the Federal Reserve: Some Personal Reminiscences
Abstract
In earlier chapters I have related some of my personal experiences in the Federal Reserve as they relate to monetary policy, bank supervision, relations with the Congress, and other federal agencies. In this final chapter, I have collected some remembrances of other events and circumstances that were of special interest to me at the time. I hope the reader will find them of interest as well.
William H. Wallace
Backmatter
Metadata
Title
The American Monetary System
Author
William H. Wallace
Copyright Year
2013
Electronic ISBN
978-3-319-02907-8
Print ISBN
978-3-319-02906-1
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-02907-8