Reviews

Lombard Street: A Description of the Money Market: Large Print by Walter Bagehot

zachlzhao's review against another edition

Go to review page

4.0

This book is filled with words of wisdom on the way that money works under contemporary financial systems. Written more than a century ago, the words still ring true today.

"The basis of it is false. It assumes that what works most easily when established is that which it would be the most easy to establish, and that what seems simplest when familiar would be most easily appreciated by the mind though unfamiliar. But exactly the contrary is true. Many things which seem simple and which work well when firmly established, are very hard to establish among new people, and not very easy to explain to them. Deposit banking is of this sort."

"The cardinal maxim is, that any aid to a present bad Bank is the surest mode of preventing the establishment of a future good Bank."

"The peculiar essence of our banking system is an unprecedented trust between man and man: and when that trust is much weakened by hidden causes, a small accident may greatly hurt it, and a great accident for a moment may almost destroy it."

inquiry_from_an_anti_library's review against another edition

Go to review page

challenging informative slow-paced

3.0

This book is a reaction to the amount of funds, the amount of debt that has become available at Lombard Street. So much money was available to lend and so much was borrowed that it seemed that everyone could get money if they were willing to pay enough for it. Banks acting as intermediaries between those who have money and those that need money. Lombard Street being a central location of the 19th century that comprised many banking institutions. With so much debt, and the economy being very interdependent, a need a rose for a reserve fund, what is now called a central bank. With a goal of reducing panic and crisis, but comes at a price of changing incentives and containing functions that can exacerbate the crisis.

A basic foundational fact about banking is that the institutions are depend on borrowed money. Credit means confidence and trust given. Banking acts as an intermediary between firms that are on the rise in which money can be easily employed, and firms which are stationary or declining that have more money that than can be used. Borrowed money enhances the ability of the firm to produce. From providing funds to start ventures, and also to lowering prices below those who are relying on just on their own money. 

With so much borrowed money comes the risk that the banking and industrial system would be in danger if enough people demanded money. Each industry is connected to others by the purchases they make. Should an industry have economic problems, the problems will reverberate to other industries. Prudent banks will save reserve money during normal times, to use in exigent times. Credit is a system that cannot easily be brought up. Breaking the system of credit will destabilize the economic system. There will be a long wait for a successor system. 

Due to the danger of an unexpected increase in demand for money from banks, a reserve fund is to lend that money needed to be established. Setting up a reserve found has many perils such requiring state aid, reduces incentive for banks to save money, depended on a single individual or group for decision making rather than the average wisdom and folly of competitors, and can be pressured by board of directors for high dividends which require a small reserve. There are many unexpected events and accidents that can cause a panic to the credit system, but a central bank needs to be prepared for all of them by keeping a large cash reserve.

During a time of crisis, the central bank’s goal is to reduce the alarm, and not do more to exacerbate the alarm. To do this, the central bank needs to lend vigorously. A high interest rate for the loans prevents those who do not need the money from obtaining more money, and acts as a fine on unreasonable timidity. Loans based on good securities should all be made. To refuse a loan based on good securities would be cause other loans from being fulfilled thereby exacerbate the panic. What qualifies as good securities is the same qualifications during normal times, easily convertible assets to solvent merchants. Simple rules tend to be uniform and can cause more problems than they fix because the dangers faced are complex and many. 

This book was written when the Bank of England was taking on the responsibilities of central banking. The lessons derived from this book are present in the 21st century, but there are also many adjustments. The writing of the book is not always smooth and has poor transitions, and contains many antiquated terminologies. Some of the arguments are contradictory and are not fully explained.
More...