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The history of the Bank is naturally one of interest, but also of continuing relevance to the Bank today. Events and circumstances over the past three hundred or so years have shaped and influenced the role and responsibilities of the Bank. They have moulded the culture and traditions, as well as the expertise, of the Bank which are relevant to its reputation and effectiveness as a central bank in the early years of the 21st century. At the same time, much of the history of the Bank runs parallel to the economic and financial history, and often the political history, of the United Kingdom more generally.
History of The Bank 3
Major Developments 3
Key moments in the Bank's history. 8
Governance and Structure 9
The Court of Directors 9
Structure 10
Governor of the Bank 10
Bank of England Museum 11
The Bank's collections 11
References………………………………………….……………………………….14
Vocabulary…………………………………...……………………………………..15
Samara State Technical University
The Bank of England
2012
Contents
History of The Bank 3
Major Developments 3
Key moments in the Bank's history. 8
Governance and Structure 9
The Court of Directors 9
Structure 10
Governor of the Bank 10
Bank of England Museum 11
The Bank's collections 11
The Bank of England was founded in 1694 to act as the Government's banker and debt-manager. Since then its role has developed and evolved, centred on the management of the nation's currency and its position at the centre of the UK's financial system.
The history of the Bank is naturally one of interest, but also of continuing relevance to the Bank today. Events and circumstances over the past three hundred or so years have shaped and influenced the role and responsibilities of the Bank. They have moulded the culture and traditions, as well as the expertise, of the Bank which are relevant to its reputation and effectiveness as a central bank in the early years of the 21st century. At the same time, much of the history of the Bank runs parallel to the economic and financial history, and often the political history, of the United Kingdom more generally.
f you want to get closer to the Bank's history and are visiting London, the Bank's Museum provides a unique insight into the history of the Bank and its business, alongside a great deal of material about the Bank today.
Major Developments
From the middle of the 17th century, England and London in particular, buzzed with ideas - indeed the era has been dubbed 'the age of projects' - but one which kept coming to the fore was the notion of a national bank. People sensed that the country was on the brink of a tremendous expansion of trade, but one vital element was lacking: what was needed was a bank or "fund of money" - more liquidity, in modern parlance - to drive the trade of the country. They looked with some envy across to the continent at the example of the Dutch who were then pre-eminent in Europe.
Central to the success of the Dutch was the Amsterdam Wisselbank, which had been founded in 1609. It provided the motive power for the Dutch economy by lending to the City of Amsterdam, the State in the form of the Province of Holland and trade in the shape of the Dutch East India Company as well as being responsible for coinage and, of course, exchange. Much later, in 1683, it was empowered to lend to private customers. Payments over a certain amount had to pass through it and it therefore was convenient for the important finance houses to hold accounts with it. Thus not only was it in a position to oversee the Dutch financial scene, it was also able to act as a stabilising influence on it.
Calls for
a National Bank in England
In England the argument for some kind of bank to gather momentum after
the Glorious Revolution of 1688 when William of Orange and Queen Mary
jointly ascended the throne of England. The political economist Sir
William Petty had recognised from the example of the Dutch that successful
credit- based trading could benefit a nation in many ways and help to
enlarge its sphere of influence: he wrote in 1682 "What remedy
is there if we have too little money? We must erect a Bank, which well
computed doth almost double the Effect of our coined Money; and we have
in England Materials for a Bank which shall furnish Stock enough to
drive the Trade of the whole Commercial World".
Dutch William had brought to his adopted country an understandable desire to help his native country in its war against the French and this proved to be the catalyst necessary for the idea of a national bank to be accepted, albeit grudgingly by some.
But it took a London-based Scots entrepreneur, William Paterson, to propose the scheme that eventually found favour: his first, proposed in 1691, had been rejected for several reasons. This was partly because, as he wrote in 1695, "Others said this project came from Holland and therefore would not hear of it, since we had too many Dutch things already". Under his scheme, in return for a loan of £1 million, the bills issued by his company should be made legal tender. This idea proved to be more than a century ahead of its time, and consequently unacceptable to the Parliamentary Committee.
'A Fund
for Perpetual Interest': The funded National Debt is born
After several more rejections Paterson put forward a plan for a 'Bank
of England' and a 'Fund for Perpetual Interest' although this time bills
were not mentioned. Supported by two powerful personalities - Charles
Montagu, Chancellor of the Exchequer, who looked after the Parliamentary
lobbying, and Michael Godfrey a leading merchant who ensured the ideas
acceptance in the City - it was all but inevitable, given the Government's
pressing need for funds, that the scheme should be approved by Parliament.
So Paterson's plan was accepted and the necessary Act passed. The public
were invited to invest in the new project and it was these subscriptions
totalling £1.2 million that were to form the initial capital stock
of the Bank of England and were to be on-lent to Government in return
for a Royal Charter.
The Government's immediate motive for creating the Bank was its pressing need for money - Paterson himself said that the Government accepted his proposal only as "a lame expedient for £1,200,000". And for some time afterwards the Government saw the Bank in that light - renewals of its Charter had to be paid for with loans, often painfully negotiated, from the Bank to the Exchequer. There was little in the Act creating the Bank to hint at what it would become - certainly no suggestion of a central bank, scarcely a hint of banking at all. But the Charter was enough. The Bank was big, it was incorporated with limited liability (extremely rare then) and it set out to take full advantage of this position.
To start with, the Bank was the Government's banker: managing the Government's accounts; managing (at some expenses to itself) the recoinage of 1696; providing and arranging loans to the Government. It was also a commercial bank, dealing in bills - the then equivalent of overdraft finance, furnishing finance for trade. It took deposits and issued notes, and with the development of the issue function it began to realise the dreams of some of the original projectors, of a Bank that would "double the Effect of out coined Money".
From the middle of the 17th century, England and London in particular, buzzed with ideas - indeed the era has been dubbed 'the age of projects' - but one which kept coming to the fore was the notion of a national bank. People sensed that the country was on the brink of a tremendous expansion of trade, but one vital element was lacking: what was needed was a bank or "fund of money" - more liquidity, in modern parlance - to drive the trade of the country. They looked with some envy across to the continent at the example of the Dutch who were then pre-eminent in Europe.
Central to the success of the Dutch was the Amsterdam Wisselbank, which had been founded in 1609. It provided the motive power for the Dutch economy by lending to the City of Amsterdam, the State in the form of the Province of Holland and trade in the shape of the Dutch East India Company as well as being responsible for coinage and, of course, exchange. Much later, in 1683, it was empowered to lend to private customers. Payments over a certain amount had to pass through it and it therefore was convenient for the important finance houses to hold accounts with it. Thus not only was it in a position to oversee the Dutch financial scene, it was also able to act as a stabilising influence on it.
A credit-based
economy
One particularly significant development around this time lay in the
perception of credit or 'imaginary money' as it was then called. It
represented a fundamental and distinctive principle in the new thinking
that was so prevalent during this age of ideas and experiments. Projectors
had begun to recognise the existence of an untapped source of assets,
albeit non-metallic, such as stocks of merchandise, tax receipts, revenues
on land and commercial obligations, against which 'credit' or 'imaginary
money' could be raised. Credit could be, they argued, the seed corn
of wealth. But what was the money? To the man in the street, money simply
meant coins, but the new thinking was overturning that Shibboleth: it
was suggesting that money could take other forms which would have no
intrinsic value and yet still possess qualities to enable it to be used
to make payments thereby fuelling and lubricating the economy. It was
inevitable, therefore, that when theory became practice and the funded
National Debt was born that crucial element, paper money, almost simultaneously
completed the equation.
Banker to
Government
The 18th century was a period dominated by governmental demand on the
Bank for finance: the National Debt grew from £12 million in 1700 to
£850 million by 1815, the year of Napoleon's defeat at Waterloo. Reliance
by government on the Bank had developed to such an extent that at the
renewal of the Charter in 1781 the Prime Minister, Lord North, described
the Bank as "from long habit and usage of many years………a
part of the constitution", and that it was "………to all
important purposes the public exchequer". North went on to explain
that "……..all the money business of the Exchequer" was
"done at the Bank, and as experiences had proved, with much greater
advantage to the public, then when it had formerly been done at the
Exchequer."
Eventually, though, prudence and discretion proved insufficient. The Bank was the nation's bank, and at times of natural crisis its gold reserve was needed for national purposes.
From the middle of the 17th century, England and London in particular, buzzed with ideas - indeed the era has been dubbed 'the age of projects' - but one which kept coming to the fore was the notion of a national bank. People sensed that the country was on the brink of a tremendous expansion of trade, but one vital element was lacking: what was needed was a bank or "fund of money" - more liquidity, in modern parlance - to drive the trade of the country. They looked with some envy across to the continent at the example of the Dutch who were then pre-eminent in Europe.
Monetary
indiscipline leads to inflation
The wars with France which began in 1793 and lasted some 22 years put
an enormous strain on the nation's finances. In 1797 the Government
was obliged to protect the gold reserves for the war effort by declaring
the Bank's notes inconvertible. This 'Restriction Period', as it was
known, continued for six years after the end of the war, until 1821.
Because of the consequent shortage of coin the Bank issued £1 and £2
notes to keep the wheels of trade turning; but, inevitably, prices rose
generally and this provoked a fierce debate and the setting up of a
Parliamentary Select Committee which attributed the country's difficulties
mainly to the Bank's over-issue of paper. The Committee argued that
a paper currency which had ceased to be convertible into gold or silver
coin could only be kept up to its proper value by limiting its quantity,
in that way it would become again a sound currency. Monetarism was born.
There were many small banks issuing notes at this time and by no means were all of them sound. The hard time road to monetary discipline, which followed the return to convertibility, inevitably led to the failure of many of these partnerships which had irresponsibly expanded their note issues. The Bank of England's difficulties were neatly summarised in 1830 by William Cobbett, who could never be described as a friend of the Bank: he wrote "The Bank is blamed for putting out paper and causing high prices; and blamed at the same time for not putting out paper to accommodate merchants and keep them from breaking, It cannot be to blame for both and indeed is blamable for neither. It is the fellows that put out the paper and then break that do the mishchief".
The Country Bankers Act, a milestone in the development of banking in England, was passed by Parliament in 1826. It breached some of the Bank's former privilege by permitting the establishment of joint-stock banks with more than six partners but not within 65 miles of London. The Act allowed the Bank to establish branches in the major provincial cities from which it was able to increase its sphere of influence by sound note issue. In 1833, the Bank's notes were made legal tender for all amounts above £5, ensuring that in the event of a crisis, as long as the credit of the Bank remained good, the public would be satisfied with its notes and its reserves would consequently be safeguarded.
The Gold
Standard: the Bank's notes backed by gold
Regarded by some as the first move towards nationalisation, the 1844
Bank Charter Act was also the key step towards the Bank achieving the
monopoly of the note issue. There were to be no new issuers of notes
and those whose issues lapsed, or who were taken over, forfeited their
right to issue. But the crucial clause of the Act was a monetary one:
it provided that beyond the Bank's capital of £14 million, its notes
were to be backed by gold coin or bullion. This, together with a fixed
price for standard gold, laid the foundation for the gold standard which,
during the nineteenth century, spread worldwide and created a long period
of price stability with monetary policy, in effect, on auto-pilot.
Bank assumes
responsibility for financial stability
Monetary stability alone, however was not enough. There were, of course,
crises and in order to prevent systemic collapses the 1844 Act had to
be suspended: this occurred in 1847, 1857 and in 1866 when Overend Gurney,
one of the most prestigious City houses failed. Walter Bagehot, the
celebrated editor of the Economist wrote in 1866 about the Bank's part
in the crisis of that year that the Bank held, should hold and should
be responsible for holding "the sole banking reserve of the country".
If the Bank had been slow to recognise its responsibility for financial
stability in earlier cases, its reaction in 1890, when Baring Brothers
were threatened, heralded a new era in the Bank's stewardship of the
Square Mile. A rescue operation in the form of a guarantee fund was
orchestrated by the Governor of the Bank and more than £17 million
was promised, much of it from the by now powerful joint-stock banks.
The crisis was averted but the leading role played by the Bank demonstrated
the responsibility it had come to feel for the stability of the banking
system as a whole.
The Bank's second century had thus seen the two key elements of central banking emerge - the concern for monetary stability, born during the inflationary excesses of the Napoleonic wars; and the responsibility for financial stability, developed in the banking crises of the mid-19th century.
1931: Britain
off the Gold Standard
As with the French wars a century before, the First World War saw the
link with gold broken and the issue of low denomination notes once more.
A vain attempt was made in 1925 to return to the discipline of the gold
standard but it failed and in 1931 the United Kingdom left the standard
for good. The country's gold and foreign exchange reserves were transferred
to the Treasury although their day-to-day management was and still is
handled by the Bank. The note issue became entirely fiduciary, that
is to say not backed by gold.
During and after the war internal changes began to take place at the Bank, presaging the modern Bank. The Governorship, which had until then generally been held for two years only, and then sometimes on a part-time basis, became a full-time professional post. Lord Cunliffe served for five years; Montagu Norman for twenty-four. Specialists were recruited to the staff. Relations with overseas central banks were built up. During Montagu Norman's governorship (1920-44) the Bank deliberately moved away from commercial business and increasingly assumed the role of a central bank. Assistance was given in the rationalisation and redeployment of a war-based economy to one which might help to rebuild war-ravaged Europe, and Norman was one of the leading players in the establishment in 1931 of the Bank for International Settlements - a forum for central bankers - in Switzerland.
And the relationship with the Treasury changed. The funds which the Bank was deploying in its operations in the market were increasingly public funds. As noted earlier, the gold and foreign exchange reserves passed to the Treasury in 1931. Norman once famously remarked that he was "the instrument of the Treasury".
1946: Bank
of England nationalised
Nationalisation, after the Second World War, therefore made little immediate
practical difference to the Bank. It shifted final authority over monetary
policy to "the other end of town", but that tendency had been
established years earlier. The Bank remained the Treasury's adviser,
agent and debt manager.
During and for years after the war it administered exchange control and various borrowing restrictions on the Treasury's behalf.
The cheap money policies in the 1930s persisted for some years after the war, but during the 1950s and 1960s (partly under the influence of the Radcliffe Report, but more importantly as a result of US academic work) there was a revival of interest in monetary policy. As the apparatus of post-war controls was gradually lifted, the need for an active monetary policy became more evident, and the serious inflation of the 1970s and early 1980s proved the catalyst for change. Monetary targets were introduced in 1976, and reinforced in the early 1980s. These proved unreliable as a sole guide to policy, but the consensus was clearly established: price stability is desirable in its own right and a necessary condition of sustainable growth; inflation reduces growth and has other social costs; inflation is a monetary phenomenon; and without appropriate monetary measures inflation cannot be properly brought under control.
1997: Bank
now responsible for monetary policy
In 1997 the Government announced its intention to transfer full operational
responsibility for monetary policy to the Bank of England. The Bank
thus rejoined the ranks of the world's "independent" central
banks. However, debt management on behalf of the Government was transferred
to HM Treasury, and the Bank's regulatory functions passes to the new
Financial Services Authority.
Key moments in the Bank's history.
King William
& Queen Mary
When William and Mary came to the throne in 1688, public
finances were weak. The system of money and credit was in disarray.
A national bank was needed to mobilise the nation's resources.
William
Paterson
William Paterson proposed a loan of £1,200,000 to the Government. In
return the subscribers would be incorporated as the Governor and Company
of the Bank of England.
The Royal
Charter
The money was raised in a few weeks and the Royal Charter was sealed
on 27th July 1694. The Bank started life as the Government's banker
and debt-manager, with 17 clerks and 2 gatekeepers. In 1734 the Bank
moved to Thread-needle Street, gradually acquiring land and premises
to create the site seen today.
Commercial
functions
The Bank managed the Government's accounts and made loans to finance
spending at times of peace and war. A commercial bank too, it took deposits
and issued notes.
The 18th
Century
During the 18th Century the Government borrowed more and more money.
These outstanding loans were called the National Debt.
1781: renewal
of the Bank's Charter
Reliance on the Bank of England was such that when its charter
was renewed in 1781 it was described as ' the public exchequer'.
The bankers'
bank
By now the Bank was acting as the bankers' bank too. It was liable to
fail if all its depositors decided to withdraw their money at the same
time. But the Bank made sure it kept enough gold to pay its notes on
demand.
The 'Restriction
Period'
By 1797 war with France had drained the gold reserves. The Government
prohibited the Bank from paying its notes in gold. This Restriction
Period lasted until 1821.
The 19th
Century
The 1844 Bank Charter Act tied the note issue to the Bank's gold reserves.
The Bank was required to keep the accounts of the note issue separate
from those of its banking operations and produce a weekly summary of
both accounts. The Bank Return, as it's called, is still published every
week.
Lender of
last resort
In the 19th Century the Bank took on the role of lender of last resort,
providing stability during several financial crises.
The First
World War: 1914-18
During the First World War the National Debt jumped to £7 billion.
The Bank helped manage Government borrowing and resist inflationary
pressures.
Gold
In 1931 the United Kingdom left the gold standard; its gold and foreign
exchange reserves were transferred to the Treasury. But their management
was still handled by the Bank and this remains the case today.
Nationalisation
1946
After the Second World War the bank was nationalised. It remained the
Treasury's adviser, agent and debt manager.
Financial
crises
During the 1970s, the Bank played a key role during several banking
crises. The Bank was at the fore when monetary policy again became a
central part of Government policy in the 1980s.
Operational
independence May 1997
In May 1997 the Government gave the Bank responsibility for setting
interest rates to meet the Government's stated inflation target. This
was enshrined in the 1998 Bank of England Act.
Managing
the modern bank
The Bank's governing body, the Court of Directors, as it's known, is
made up of the Bank's Governor and 2 Deputy Governors, and 9 Non-Executive
Directors (under the Banking Act 2009).
The Court of Directors
The Court of Directors is responsible for managing the affairs of the Bank, other than the formulation of monetary policy. Court's responsibilities under the Bank of England Act 1998 ('the 1998 Act') include determining the Bank's objectives and strategy, and ensuring the effective discharge of the Bank's functions and the most efficient use of its resources. Since the 2009 Banking Act ('the 2009 Act'), the Bank has had a statutory objective to 'contribute to protecting and enhancing the stability of the financial systems of the United Kingdom' and the Court, consulting HMTreasury and on advice from the Financial Stability Committee (see below), determines the Bank's strategy in relation to that objective.
The members of Court are appointed by the Crown. The nine Directors are all non-executive. One of them is designated by the Chancellor of the Exchequer to chair Court.
The Governors are appointed by the Crown for periods of five years, and the Directors for three years.
Structure
In working towards its core purposes, the Bank is organised into four main operational areas - Monetary Analysis and Statistics, Markets, Financial Stability and Banking Services, supported by a Central Services area. This structure was introduced in June 1998 to reflect the Bank's new responsibilities in the light of the 1998 Bank of England Act.
Governor of the Bank
Mervyn King is Governor of the Bank of England and is Chairman of the Monetary Policy Committee and Financial Policy Committee. He was previously Deputy Governor from 1998 to 2003, and Chief Economist and Executive Director from 1991. Mervyn King was a non-executive director of the Bank from 1990 to 1991.
Born in 1948, Mervyn King studied at King’s College, Cambridge, and Harvard (as a Kennedy Scholar) and taught at Cambridge and Birmingham Universities before spells as Visiting Professor at both Harvard University and MIT. From October 1984 he was Professor of Economics at the London School of Economics where he founded the Financial Markets Group.