Description

Book Synopsis


Trade Review
Vickers has produced a book that stands out in the scholarship of the banking crisis of the 1930s. It's also greatly relevant to the recent financial collapse that has rocked the American and world economies. In the more than 75 years since the 1932 Chicago banking crisis little has changed. Insider abuse at banks, weak regulation, and the protection of miscreants by powerful politicians of both major parties characterize what happened in the 1930s and recently. Deeply probing research in records often over looked by scholars allows Vickers to carefully expose the web of private and public influence and often fraudulent behavior that sank Chicago's leading banks in the 1930s. His research should inspire scholars and investigators determined to discover the roots of our recent financial collapse. -- William H. Becker, The George Washington University
Panic in the Loop is timely in view of the current financial crisis. Vickers uncovers the corruption, betrayal, and theft of public and private funds in 1932 Chicago and establishes a model for uncovering contemporary financial chicanery. Discussion of the Enron crisis gives the analysis contemporary value and validity and raises the specter of corruption behind the sub-prime mortgage facade, corruption authorities (the regulated and the regulators) will use every device at their disposal to hide from the public. Scholars and students will find Panic in the Loop a worthy title for reading lists. -- David O. Whitten, Auburn University, and author, with Douglas Steeples, of Democracy in Desperation: The Depression of 1893
Rarely has the case for transparency in the regulation banks been made so well. It is hard to imagine that the bankers that caused the Chicago panic of 1932 would have been so brazen or the regulators so slow to stop them if their actions had been quickly made public. -- Eugine N. White, Rutgers University
In this book, Raymond Vickers, author of Panic in Paradise (1996), provides yet another masterful indictment of regulatory secrecy in the financial markets. Panic in the Loop highlights the pattern of 'crony banking' in the United States’ financial sector, this time examining the 1932 panic in Chicago. Vickers relates how a network of wealthy insiders in Illinois’s banking system—including state and federal regulators—enabled reckless, inappropriate, and illegal borrowing that eventually caused the failure of thirty-four Chicago banks during 1932. * Journal Of The Illinois State Historical Society *

Table of Contents
Contents Introduction Chapter 1: Insiders of Business and Banking: Samuel Insull and Charles Dawes Chapter 2: The Fall of Insull Chapter 3: Insiders at the Reconstruction Finance Corporation Chapter 4: Insider Abuse at the Dawes Bank Chapter 5: Dawes Plays His Hand Chapter 6: Playing the Young Card Chapter 7: The Winners and Losers Conclusion Bibliographical Essay Abbreviations Used in the Notes Notes Select Bibliography Index

Panic in the Loop

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    A Paperback by Raymond B. Vickers

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      View other formats and editions of Panic in the Loop by Raymond B. Vickers

      Publisher: Lexington Books
      Publication Date: 10/9/2013 12:00:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9780739166413, 978-0739166413
      ISBN10: 0739166417

      Description

      Book Synopsis


      Trade Review
      Vickers has produced a book that stands out in the scholarship of the banking crisis of the 1930s. It's also greatly relevant to the recent financial collapse that has rocked the American and world economies. In the more than 75 years since the 1932 Chicago banking crisis little has changed. Insider abuse at banks, weak regulation, and the protection of miscreants by powerful politicians of both major parties characterize what happened in the 1930s and recently. Deeply probing research in records often over looked by scholars allows Vickers to carefully expose the web of private and public influence and often fraudulent behavior that sank Chicago's leading banks in the 1930s. His research should inspire scholars and investigators determined to discover the roots of our recent financial collapse. -- William H. Becker, The George Washington University
      Panic in the Loop is timely in view of the current financial crisis. Vickers uncovers the corruption, betrayal, and theft of public and private funds in 1932 Chicago and establishes a model for uncovering contemporary financial chicanery. Discussion of the Enron crisis gives the analysis contemporary value and validity and raises the specter of corruption behind the sub-prime mortgage facade, corruption authorities (the regulated and the regulators) will use every device at their disposal to hide from the public. Scholars and students will find Panic in the Loop a worthy title for reading lists. -- David O. Whitten, Auburn University, and author, with Douglas Steeples, of Democracy in Desperation: The Depression of 1893
      Rarely has the case for transparency in the regulation banks been made so well. It is hard to imagine that the bankers that caused the Chicago panic of 1932 would have been so brazen or the regulators so slow to stop them if their actions had been quickly made public. -- Eugine N. White, Rutgers University
      In this book, Raymond Vickers, author of Panic in Paradise (1996), provides yet another masterful indictment of regulatory secrecy in the financial markets. Panic in the Loop highlights the pattern of 'crony banking' in the United States’ financial sector, this time examining the 1932 panic in Chicago. Vickers relates how a network of wealthy insiders in Illinois’s banking system—including state and federal regulators—enabled reckless, inappropriate, and illegal borrowing that eventually caused the failure of thirty-four Chicago banks during 1932. * Journal Of The Illinois State Historical Society *

      Table of Contents
      Contents Introduction Chapter 1: Insiders of Business and Banking: Samuel Insull and Charles Dawes Chapter 2: The Fall of Insull Chapter 3: Insiders at the Reconstruction Finance Corporation Chapter 4: Insider Abuse at the Dawes Bank Chapter 5: Dawes Plays His Hand Chapter 6: Playing the Young Card Chapter 7: The Winners and Losers Conclusion Bibliographical Essay Abbreviations Used in the Notes Notes Select Bibliography Index

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