The History of Banks and Banking - podcast episode cover

The History of Banks and Banking

Apr 26, 202517 minEp. 1755
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Summary

This episode explores the fascinating history of banking, from its ancient origins in Mesopotamia to the complex, technology-driven systems of today. It covers key developments like the emergence of public banks, the impact of the Industrial Revolution, the regulatory responses to financial crises, and potential future models such as decentralized finance. The episode provides a comprehensive overview of how banking has evolved over thousands of years.

Episode description

One of the biggest and most important industries in the world is banking.  Banks are large, control an enormous amount of money, and are often the most influential economic institutions in most countries.  Yet, banks are not a modern invention. Banks, in one form or another, have been around for thousands of years and have evolved into the modern institutions we have today over that time. Learn more about the history of banking and how it came to be on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily. Sponsors Mint Mobile Cut your wireless bill to 15 bucks a month at mintmobile.com/eed Quince Go to quince.com/daily for 365-day returns, plus free shipping on your order! Stitch Fix Go to stitchfix.com/everywhere to have a stylist help you look your best Tourist Office of Spain Plan your next adventure at Spain.info  Stash Go to get.stash.com/EVERYTHING to see how you can receive $25 towards your first stock purchase and to view important disclosures. Subscribe to the podcast!  https://everything-everywhere.com/everything-everywhere-daily-podcast/ -------------------------------- Executive Producer: Charles Daniel Associate Producers: Austin Oetken & Cameron Kieffer   Become a supporter on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/everythingeverywhere Update your podcast app at newpodcastapps.com Discord Server: https://discord.gg/UkRUJFh Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/everythingeverywhere/ Facebook Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/everythingeverywheredaily Twitter: https://twitter.com/everywheretrip Website: https://everything-everywhere.com/  Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Transcript

One of the biggest and most important industries in the world is banking. Banks control an enormous amount of money and are often the most influential economic institutions in most countries. Yet banks are not modern inventions. Banks in one form or another have been around for thousands of years and have evolved into the modern institutions that we know today. Learn about the history of banks and banking and how they came to be on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily.

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in the fall of 1986. Ronald Reagan found himself at the center of a massive scandal that looked like it might bring down his presidency. Did you make a mistake in sending arms to Tehran, sir? No. It became known as the Iran-Contra Affair. And I'm not taking any more questions in just a second. I'm Leon Nafok.

co-creator of Slow Burn. In my podcast, Fiasco, Iran-Contra, you'll hear all the unbelievable details of a scandal that captivated the nation nearly 40 years ago, but which few of us still remember today. The things that happened were so bizarre and insane, I can't begin to tell you. Please do. To hear the whole story, listen to Fiasco, Iran-Contra, wherever you get your podcasts.

Banks and banking can be a very confusing topic. How banks work is often opaque to the average person. I've been planning a series of episodes covering various aspects of banks and banking and how they work. However, I realized that before I jump into those topics, I should probably do an episode covering the history of banking.

Previously, I've done episodes on the history of money, and much of that will tie into this episode. While banks and money are obviously closer related, they're ultimately very different things. Banking began not with paper money or computers, but with agricultural commodities. In Mesopotamia around 3000 BC, temples and palaces provided secure spaces where people could store grain and other valuables.

Priests and temple workers served as the world's first bankers, issuing receipts for deposits, clay tablets that functioned as early promissory notes. If you remember back to earlier episodes, these clay tablets were the origins of writing, mathematics, and accounting. Babylonian law, famously codified by Hammurabi around the year 1750 BC, included regulations governing lending practices.

In ancient Egypt, decentralized economy operated with a grain banking system where farmers deposited harvests in state warehouses and received receipts. These receipts circulated as a form of currency, allowing Egyptians to pay taxes and conduct trade without physically moving heavy grain. The ancient world also saw the emergence of private banking.

In Babylon, the Igabi family operated across multiple generations from around 600 to 400 BC, handling activities remarkably similar to modern banking, loans, deposits, investments, and even international trade financing. Ancient Greece introduced several important banking innovations. By the 5th century BC, Greek temples functioned as financial centers, where citizens and foreigners could exchange different currencies, obtain loans, and make deposits.

The term bank itself derives from the Greek trapeza, referring to tables where money changers conducted business. Professional bankers called trapezites emerged, establishing the first private banks that were separate from temples. They took deposits, made loans, and provided letters of credit for merchants traveling between city-states.

Ancient Rome built upon Greek foundations and further formalized banking. Roman banking families operated sophisticated enterprises with multiple branches around the Mediterranean. They included more standardized accounting practices and legal frameworks for banking operations. The Roman Empire saw the development of specialized banking roles, including private bankers, public bankers, and money changers.

After the fall of Rome, banking activity declined in Western Europe, but continued in the Byzantine Empire and the Islamic world. Islamic banking developed distinct practices to comply with religious prohibitions against interest. Financial innovations like partnerships and profit-sharing arrangements help finance trade while still adhering to Islamic religious principles.

By the 12th century, banking began to revive in Europe, particularly in Italian trading cities like Venice, Florence, and Genoa. The Crusades increased trade with the East, creating demand for more sophisticated financial services. Italian merchant families established banks that financed international trade, managed deposits and created credit instruments.

The Medici Bank, founded in 1397, became the largest and most respected banking house in Europe. They pioneered double-entry bookkeeping and operated a network of branches across major European cities. Their innovations in letters of credit and bills of exchange facilitated safer international transactions.

During this period, money changers became increasingly important due to the proliferation of currencies. The Bardi and Peruzzi families in Florence became prominent super companies, handling both banking and trading operations across the continent. Jakob Fuger became one of the richest people in world history during this period due to his banking enterprises throughout Europe.

The age of exploration created new demands for banking services. As European powers established colonial empires, they needed ways to finance voyages, manage trade, and move wealth between continents. The first public banks emerged during this period. The Bank of Amsterdam, established in 1609, was a watershed moment in banking history. Unlike previous private banks, it was backed by the city government, giving it unprecedented stability.

It introduced the concept of a bank gilder, a stable unit of account separate from circulating coins, providing a reliable standard for international trade. In England, goldsmith bankers emerged as an important banking class. Initially storing gold for customers, they began issuing receipts that functioned as an early form of paper money.

When they realized that not all depositors would claim their gold simultaneously, they started lending out portions of deposits, developing the fractional reserve banking model still used today. And fractional reserve banking will definitely be the subject of a future episode. The Bank of England, established in 1694, marked another crucial development. Created to finance a war against France, it soon evolved into something more, the world's first true central bank.

It issued banknotes, managed government accounts, and gradually developed tools to stabilize the financial system. In Sweden, the Riksbank, founded in 1668, claimed the title of the world's oldest central bank, although its modern central banking functions developed later.

This period also witnessed significant theoretical advancements in understanding the role of banking in the economy. Adam Smith's The Wealth of Nations, published in 1776, analyzed how banks create credit and contribute to economic growth. In the young United States, early banking was politically contentious. The first bank of the United States, championed by Alexander Hamilton, and the second bank faced opposition from those who feared centralized financial power.

Following President Andrew Jackson's bank war, the U.S. entered a period of free banking where individual states chartered numerous small banks that issued their own currency. The Industrial Revolution transformed banking by creating unprecedented demand for capital. Commercial banks expanded rapidly to finance factories, railroads, and other industrial ventures.

Investment banking emerged as a specialized field, with firms like J.P. Morgan & Company arranging large-scale financing for corporations and governments. During this period, banking institutions became more standardized and regulated. The U.S. National Banking Acts of the 1860s created a system of federally chartered banks and a uniform national currency. Germany established the Reichsbank in 1876, which played a crucial role in financing the country's rapid industrialization.

The gold standard, which I covered in a previous episode, became the foundation of international finance, linking major currencies to gold and creating a relatively stable international monetary system. This facilitated the first true era of global finance, with unprecedented international capital flow. This era also saw reoccurring financial panics and bank runs, culminating in the Panic of 1907 in the United States.

The severity of this crisis led to the creation of the Federal Reserve System in 1913, establishing a true central bank for the United States. The Great Depression revealed weaknesses in the banking system and prompted major reforms. Thousands of banks failed across America and Europe as depositors rushed to withdraw their money. In response, the United States credited the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, or FDIC, in 1933 to insure deposits and prevent bank runs.

The Glass-Steagall Act separated commercial and investment banking to prevent conflicts of interest and excessive risk-taking. Similar regulations were enacted in many other countries, creating a more compartmentalized and regulated banking system. The economic devastation of the Depression and World War II led to a rethinking of the international financial system.

The Bretton Woods Conference in 1944 established a new international monetary system with the U.S. dollar as the world's reserve currency, backed by gold, and then other currencies pegged to the dollar. The post-war decades saw unprecedented economic growth and stability in developed countries. Banking became more accessible to average citizens through expanded branch networks and new consumer-orientated products like credit cards, which were introduced in the 1950s.

International banking expanded dramatically with the growth of multinational corporations. American banks established extensive international operations, and the euro-dollar market emerged. dollar deposits that are held outside the reach of U.S. regulations. And just to clarify, the term euro dollar is kind of a misnomer. A euro dollar is any dollar held outside the United States, not just those in Europe.

In developing countries, government-owned development banks played a crucial role in financing industrialization and infrastructure projects. The World Bank, established by the Bretton Woods Accord, provided loans for development projects globally. Starting in the 1980s, many countries began deregulating their banking sectors. In the U.S., the Depository Institutions Deregulation and Monetary Control Act of 1980 phased out interest rate ceilings and expanded the powers of savings institutions.

The 1999 repeal of Glass-Steagall through the Graham-Leach-Bliley Act removed the barriers between commercial and investment banking. Technology transformed banking operations as well. Automatic teller machines, or ATMs, became widespread in the 1980s, electronic payment systems expanded, and the first online banking services began to appear in the 1990s. These innovations reduced costs and expanded access, but also created new security challenges.

Financial globalization accelerated dramatically, capital flowed more freely across borders, and financial markets became increasingly interconnected. Banks expanded globally, and new financial centers emerged in both Asia and the Middle East. Financial innovation created complex new products like mortgage-backed securities, credit default swaps, and collateralized debt obligations.

These instruments enabled banks to spread risk, but also created opaque interconnections within the financial system that most people weren't aware of. This era saw a series of financial crises, including the Latin American debt crisis of the 1980s, the Asian financial crisis of 1997-98, and the Russian default of 1998. Each of these crises prompted reconsideration of banking regulations, but the general trend towards deregulation continued.

The 2008 financial crisis revealed systemic problems in global banking. The collapse of the U.S. housing bubble triggered a chain reaction throughout the financial system. Major investment banks like Lehman Brothers failed, while others required government bailouts to survive.

In response, governments worldwide implemented new banking regulations. The Dodd-Frank Act in the U.S. and the Basel III Accord internationally imposed stricter capital requirements, stress testing, and oversight of important institutions. The crisis also led to the creation of new regulatory bodies like the Financial Stability Board and the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau.

The 2010 saw the emergence of cryptocurrencies and blockchain technologies beginning with Bitcoin in 2009. These innovations proposed alternative approaches to financial transactions outside the traditional banking system. The Federal Reserve Board recently lifted restrictions on banks using Bitcoin to allow them to make faster, more secure transfers at lower costs around the world, as well as provide services to their clients.

As much as the banking system has evolved over the centuries, banking looks to continue to change into the future. Traditional brick and mortar banks may continue to shrink or disappear altogether, replaced by digital-only institutions. Already, neobanks, which are entirely online banks like Chime, Monzo, and Revolut, have shown that banking services can be delivered efficiently without physical branches.

In a fully digital future, banks could operate primarily through mobile apps and web platforms, offering instantaneous transactions, AI-driven customer service, and seamless integration with people's financial lives. Physical cash would continue to decline in importance, perhaps even disappearing in some countries. Another plausible future involves the deep integration of banking with broader technological ecosystems.

Embedded finance is a concept that's gaining traction where banking functions, such as lending, payments, and insurance, are invisibly woven into non-bank platforms. So imagine getting a loan at the point of sale while shopping online without interacting in a bank at all, or managing investments through your social media app.

In this model, traditional banks might retreat into the background, providing infrastructure while technology companies like Amazon, Apple, and Google become the consumer-facing brands. Decentralized finance, or DeFi, offers a radically different vision of the future of banking, one where trust is no longer placed in centralized institutions, but rather in code and distributed networks.

In a DeFi future, blockchain technologies could allow people to lend, borrow, and transfer money without intermediaries. Smart contracts, which are self-executing agreements coded into a blockchain, could automate many financial services. This possible future of banking could look very different from the world that we're used to today. And that is a very long way from Babylonian farmers who put their grain in a centralized storage facility thousands of years ago.

The executive producer of Everything Everywhere Daily is Charles Daniel. The associate producers are Austin Oakton and Cameron Kiefer. I want to thank everyone who supports the show over on Patreon. Your support helps make this podcast possible. I'd also like to thank all the members of the Everything Everywhere community who are active on the Facebook group and the Discord server. If you'd like to join in the discussion, there are links to both in the show notes.

And as always, if you leave a review or send me a boostagram, you too can have it right on the show.

This transcript was generated by Metacast using AI and may contain inaccuracies. Learn more about transcripts.