2. The growth of banking and insurance Flashcards
How did the medieval money system develop
The medieval money system had developed from bartering to using bills of exchange as credit notes - involved charging interest - carried a risk to the supplier the they wouldn’t be paid
- However - they would receive more money in the long term, once the goods were delivered
How did money-lending and services associated with banking already exist before the Stuart period?
- Under Elizabeth I - Sir Thomas Gresham obtained loans from the money market in Antwerp - in 1571 opened the Royal Exchange - the first commercial building in Britain
How was the growth of lending made possible?
- By the lowering of interest rates, with the legal limit for interest rates as follows:
1571-1624: 10%
1624-1651: 8%
1651-1714: 6%
Made credit more attractive - banks and brokers needed to provide it
Growth of brokers
- Established networks of contacts who could provide money - particularly in London - with rates being offered below the legal limit in times of surplus
Money scrivener
Someone who lends money, or arranges the lending of money on behalf of others, usually to those wanting to raise money on guarantee or security.
First money scrivening firm
1650 - established by Robert Abbott
What political situation did the growth of money scriveners result from?
- Royalist landowners faced disaster in decade after Civil War - due to the Commonwealth’s move to confiscate their land and remove their capital
- Turned to London for loans in order to protect their assets and estates - encouraged men with wealth to offer their own capital as loans
- Abbot able to act as a successful broker in these transactions
How much passed through Robert Abbotts accounts from 1652 to 1655?
He charged a fee for his services - £1,137,646
- Firm taken over by his nephew, Robert Clayton, after Abbott died - became exceptionally wealthy
- By 1672 - Clayton received £3,515 per year in interest from loans alone
- Clayton and his business partner, John Morris, also responsible for writing first English cheque in 1659
- Acted as a promise to pay the receiver a specific amount
Timeline of events of banking and insurance
1571 - Royal Exchange opened
1601 - An ‘Assurance Court’ set up to deal with marine insurance matters
1636 - the first money-scrivening firm is established
1640 - Charles I seizes gold from the Tower of London, causing merchants to invest with goldsmith-bankers
1650 - the first coffee house was opened in Oxford
1659 - the first cheque is drawn
1672 - Charles Ii confiscates assets of goldsmith-bankers
1688 - Edward Lloyd opens his coffee house in London
Goldsmith bankers
- Traditionally - job was to forge items out of gold and silver for sale - therefore had secure private vaults for the storage of precious metals
- Merchants who accumulated large amounts of gold usually deposited this at the Royal Mint but - after Charles I seized it in 1640 - storing values w/ goldsmiths seen as safer option
Able to lend money they held in storage with interest
How many goldsmith bankers in 1670 and 1677?
1670 - 32
1677 - 44
Because goldsmiths were seen as trustworthy, they were able to borrow at between…
4% and 6% - so they could offer short term loans at a rate above 6%
What system was used by goldsmiths and money scriveners?
Paper-based - goldsmiths would often accept bills and notes from other banks and then attempt to raise funds to pay off the debt
What improve the stability of banking in Britain?
- The guild system of apprenticeship - banks knew each other through this - familiarity and reputation
- Therefore bankers keen to take business from each other - competition
How was banking not always able to flourish?
- The Commonwealth attempted to regulate finance through the Hale Commission - formed in 1652 - discussed a number of legal reforms:
- suggested the establishment of a register of property transactions - however, like the majority of the commission’s recommendations, it wasn’t acted upon