Everything about Benjamin Strong Jr totally explained
Benjamin Strong Jr. (born
1872, Fishkill-on-Hudson,
New York state - October
1928) was an American
economist. He served as Governor of the
Federal Reserve Bank of New York for 14 years until his death. Strong exerted great influence over the policy and actions of the entire
Federal Reserve System.
Economic policies and advocacy
His policy of maintaining price levels during the
1920s through the open market purchase of securities, and his willingness to maintain the liquidity of banks during panics, have been praised by
monetarists and harshly criticized by
Austrians.
Strong was also involved in the establishment of the
Federal Reserve System. After the panics of the 1890s, leading bankers believed a private central bank should be created to issue money. The public was adamantly opposed to the establishment of a central bank. Strong, who was Vice President of Banker’s Trust of New York, was
JP Morgan's emissary to the secret
Jekyll Island (Georgia) expedition in 1910—one of the selected members who stayed at the luxurious Jekyll Island Hunt Club retreat in November for a private ten-day conference. Also in attendance were
Paul Warburg, a recent immigrant from a prominent German banking family who was a partner in the New York banking house of
Kuhn, Loeb & Co.; Senator
Nelson Aldrich (Nelson Rockefeller was named after Aldrich, his maternal grandfather);
A. Piatt Andrew, Assistant Secretary of the Treasury and Special Assistant to the National Monetary Commission (the only other NMC member besides Aldrich); and other bankers including
Frank Vanderlip, president of the National City Bank of New York;
Henry P. Davison, senior partner of J.P. Morgan Company; and Charles D. Norton, president of the Morgan-dominated First National Bank of New York.
What came to be known as the Aldrich Plan was drafted by these men during their conference at
Jekyll Island. The plan was written in secrecy, as the public would never approve of a banking reform bill written by bankers; much less of a plan for a central bank. The Aldrich Plan was introduced in the
U.S. Congress, and followed by much debate, but never came to a vote, because the party in favor of it was voted out, and the Glass-Owens Bill was introduced instead.
The general outline of the Aldrich Plan did eventually serve as the model upon which the Federal Reserve System was created with, however, significant changes that placed control into political hands (via the Board of Govenors, selected by the
President of the United States), and limited the role of professional bankers in its operation to that of the 12 branches. It met with Warburg's satisfaction, as he said that minor changes could be adjusted administratively later. The term Central Bank purposely was kept out of its name, as Warburg and others warned it wouldn't be passed otherwise.
A bill creating the
Federal Reserve System was approved by Congress three years later, after much heated debate, and signed into law on December 23, 1913 after initial hesitation on the part of President
Woodrow Wilson, and after a conference between him and
Bernard Baruch, one of his largest campaign donors. The Federal Reserve System is similar to the National Reserve Association proposed by The Aldrich Plan, but with vastly differing management and control.
Strong became President of Banker’s Trust in 1914, and shortly thereafter was appointed Governor of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York the same year, which position he maintained until his death in 1928.
Economic historian
Charles P. Kindleberger states that Strong was one of the few American policymakers interested in the troubled financial affairs of
Europe in the 1920s, and that had he not died in 1928, just a year before the
Great Depression, he might have been able to maintain stability in the international financial system.
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