Forestall System
The Forestall system of Louisiana banking regulation,
established in the middle of a depression in 1842, was one of the most
successful and influential systems of state banking regulations, establishing
principles that became standard in banking regulation.
The Panic of 1837 had thrown the United States economy into a deep depression
that lasted until 1843. The depression was sparked by President Andrew Jackson’s
Specie Circular, requiring that only gold and silver specie (coinage) be used to
pay for land purchased from the government. The Specie Circular put the brakes
on a land boom. Banks across the United States, including Louisiana, suspended
payments, meaning they could no longer redeem their bank notes with specie. At
that time each bank issued its own bank notes, in contrast to the current
practice of issuing checking accounts. Louisiana boasted of nine commercial
banks when the Forestall system was put in place. All nine banks had suspended
payments.
Among the detailed regulations of the Forestall system was the requirement
that customers’ deposits could be loaned out only for 90 days. The capital contributed by bank owners was exempt from this limitation.
These short-term loans could not be renewed, and the law required that banks
publish the names of borrowers requesting renewals.
The Forestall system also forced banks to maintain specie reserves equal to
30 percent of their bank-note and deposit liabilities. The remaining 70 percent
had to be backed by short-term commercial loans.
Amidst the Panic of 1857 an epidemic of payment suspensions spread through
the United States. Thanks to the Forestall system, however, Louisiana banks were
among the few banks that continued to make specie payments. Other state
legislatures, noting the panic-proof resilience of the Louisiana banks, began to
insist upon cash reserves. The reserve policy of Louisiana banks enabled them to
continue to make remittances to their New York correspondents long after the
Civil War had started.
The success of the Forestall system created a predilection for cash reserves
in American banking regulation that remains an important element of national
banking regulation today. Commercial banks in the United States are required to
hold reserves either in the form of vault cash or deposits at a Federal Reserve
Bank. Deposits at another financial institution, government bonds, or other
forms of seemingly safe assets are not acceptable as legal reserves. The Federal
Reserves System usually requires commercial banks to hold reserves that range
between 10 to 20 percent of demand deposits.
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