Econ Ch 11 Sec 2
greenbacks, national currency, gold certificates, silver certificates, treasury coin notes
5 types of paper currency issued before banking system was overhauled in 1913
state chartered banks to join the NBS
A 10% tax was issued on all privately issued bank notes in order to force
people more secure about money; prevented overprinting (couldn't print more than they could back in gold)
Advantages of gold standard
bonds; paper currency
After selling _____ did not work in order to supply the Civil War, Congress decided to print _____ ________ for the first time since the constitution was adopted.
declared a national emergency that anyone holding more than $100 worth of gold/gold certificates must file a disclosure form with the Treasury
Because people felt more secure holding onto gold as opposed to paper currency, what did President Franklin D Roosevelt do?
gold stock may not grow fast enough; lots of people may decide to convert currency into gold, draining reserves; price of gold is not fixed; political risk of failure
Disadvantages of gold standard
notes could be exchanged for gold and silver
How did state banks assure the public that their money was useful?
Article 1 Section 8, Article 1 Section 10
Which articles prevented the government from printing paper money and instead left that power to private banks?
Civil War
Which war forced politically powerful local bankers to comply with changes concerning banking?
State banks
banks that received their charter to operate from the state government. Able to issue their own paper money by printing them in local shops.
United States notes
federal fiat currency that did not have gold or silver backing.
legal tender
fiat currency that must be accepted in payment for debts. AKA greenbacks
Gold standard act
fixed the price of gold at $20.67 per ounce
wildcat banks
fraudulent banks that printed large amounts of currency in remote areas to make currency redemption difficult
managed money supply
government or a designated agent controls the quantity, composition, and quality of the money supply
Establishing the national banking system
how did Congress prevent greenbacks from becoming worthless like the continental dollars?
inconvertible fiat money standard
monetary standard under which fiat money supply cannot be converted into silver or gold by its citizens
Gold standard
monetary standard under which the basic currency unit is equal to and can be exchanged for a specific amount of gold
gold certificates
paper currency backed by gold placed on deposit the the United States Treasury
silver certificates
paper currency backed by silver dollars and bullion placed on reserve with the Treasury
Treasury coin notes
paper currency issued by the Treasury that was redeemable in both gold and silver
National bank notes/national currency
paper currency of uniform appearance that is backed by US government bonds
Legal Tender Act
passed in 1862, authorized the Union government to print United States notes
Continental dollars
printed during the Revolutionary War, but became too abundant and caused people to distrust the government's money unless it was coin
National banks
privately owned banks that received their operating charters from the federal government
each bank issued currency in different sizes, colors, and denominations; temptation to issue too many notes; counterfeiting
problems with currency
Gold Reserve Act
required citizens, banks, and businesses to turn in their gold and gold certificates over to the US government
monetary standard
the mechanism designed to keep money portable, durable, divisible, and limited in supply