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Walter Bagehot

Lombard Street : a description of the money market

In 'Lombard Street’, the money market is pictured as it really was in 1850–1870, and as Bagehot saw it with philosophic eyes. Beginning with the sentence, “The objects which you see in Lombard Street are the Bank of England, the joint stock banks, the private banks and the discount houses,” he describes briefly and clearly the respective functions of these different bodies in the organism of the city, according to his own close observation as a banker himself, knowing the ways and thoughts of the men he describes, and as a man of business likewise in other ways, knowing at first hand the relation of banking to the trade and commerce of the country.
285 printed pages
Copyright owner
Bookwire
Original publication
2017
Publication year
2017
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Quotes

  • Arif Shahhas quoted5 years ago
    main point on which one system of credit differs from another is 'soundness
  • Arif Shahhas quoted5 years ago
    Credit means that a certain confidence is given, and a certain trust reposed
  • Arif Shahhas quoted5 years ago
    cannot appeal, therefore, to experience to prove the safety of our system as it now is, for the present magnitude of that system is entirely n

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