Bust bank western

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The California Institute of Technology historian John Brewer suggests that Britain’s development from a peripheral player in Europe to one at the center of world affairs owed more to its bankers and bureaucrats than to its generals and soldiers.

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In particular, he was impressed with the Bank of England, which had performed well as the central bank for a growing British Empire since it was established in 1694. Hamilton wanted the fledgling new country to grow and become a commercial and military rival to the great powers in Europe. In many ways, the DNA of what would become the Federal Reserve System was a compromise between the two men’s visions about the proper role of government in the economy. Jefferson and Hamilton are archetypes of one of the most enduring debates in American politics, a debate over the nature of government and the centralization of political power. Toward a Progressive Banking Policy: The National Monetary Commission Study, Aldrich Plan, and the Federal Reserve Act of 1913.A Progressive Response to a Radically Changing Society and Economy.Second Bank of the United States, Andrew Jackson, and the Bank War.

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