Bank Charter Act of 1844 (England)
The English Bank Charter Act of 1844 represents an important
step in the evolution of the Bank of England as a central bank with a monopoly
on the issuance of bank notes (paper money), one of the defining characteristics
of a central bank. Today all modern economies have central banks with a monopoly
on the issuance of bank notes, the Federal Reserve System in the United States
being a good example. In the early 1800s a multitude of commercial banks issued
their own bank notes in England, France, the United States, and other
countries.
- Important provisions in the Bank Charter Act are paraphrased as follows:The note issuing department of the Bank of England became separate and distinct from other departments. The bank removed it to a different building.
- The Bank of England was required to hold gold bullion equal in value to the volume of its bank notes issued in excess of 14 million pounds. The government debt secured most of the first 14 million pounds.
- The Bank of England was required to stand ready to redeem its bank notes into gold at the rate of 3 pounds 17 shillings and 9 pence per ounce of gold.
- The creation of new banks with the privilege to issue bank notes was prohibited.
- Banks currently issuing bank notes continued to issue notes as long as their total notes in circulation never exceeded their average for the 12 weeks preceding 27 April 1844.
- If a bank became insolvent it lost the right to issue bank notes.
- If a bank stopped issuing notes for any reason, it could never again put notes into circulation.
- If two or more banks combined and ended up with more than six partners, the new bank could not issue bank notes.
- The Bank of England was allowed to issue new bank notes backed by securities up to two-thirds of the value of discontinued country bank notes.
The government was forced to suspend the convertibility of Bank of England notes into gold during major financial crises. The financial crises of 1847, 1857, and 1866 all saw suspensions of convertibility.
The Bank of France has enjoyed a monopoly on the issuance of bank notes since
1848, and the Federal Reserve System, established in 1914, has always had a
monopoly on the issuance of bank notes. With the demise of the gold standard in
the 1930s, the practice of maintaining the convertibility of bank notes into
gold disappeared, giving central banks more freedom to inject liquidity into a
financial system during a crisis.
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