------------ EH.NET BOOK REVIEW --------------
Published by EH.NET (January 2008)
Stephen Mihm, _A Nation of Counterfeiters: Capitalists, Con Men, and
the Making of the United States_. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University
Press, 2007. ix + 457 pp. $30 (cloth), ISBN: 978-0-674-02657-5.
Reviewed for EH.NET by Jane Knodell, Department of Economics,
University of Vermont.
Stephen Mihm, Assistant Professor of History at the University of
Georgia, has written a fascinating and original history of bank note
counterfeiting in the antebellum U.S. Mihm draws on a wealth of
innovative primary historical materials to identify the names,
locations, and business methods of those who made their livelihood
within the "counterfeit economy." He has also written a cultural
history of money during the "market revolution" of the antebellum
period. Here, Mihm explores contemporary ideas, sharply contested at
the time, about what kind of money was "real." Mihm argues that the
line between lawful and illegal money was wide and blurry, as,
indeed, was that between capitalism and the counterfeit economy
itself. Economic historians are apt to be more satisfied with Mihm's
history of the counterfeit economy than with his interpretation of
its meaning and significance.
Counterfeiting flourished, according to Mihm, at the country's
northern and western geographic and political borders, and during the
years following the closures of the First and Second Banks of the
United States in 1811 and 1836, events which triggered sharp
increases in the number of state-chartered and unincorporated banks.
State-chartered banks, and to a much lesser extent private banks,
issued their own currency; barring the occasional issue of
large-denomination Treasury notes that assumed some of the functions
of money, none of the demand for money was met with fiat money. Mihm
believes that counterfeit notes comprised a "significant" share of
the bank currency in circulation, and that "every bank note had its
counterfeit counterpart," quantitative claims that are hard to
evaluate. The pervasive uncertainty about the value of a stock of
bank currency that was issued by hundreds of different banks made
counterfeiting possible and profitable. Counterfeiting subsided after
the Civil War, stymied by the nationalization of the currency and the
determined prosecution of counterfeiters by a new federal agency, the
U.S. Secret Service.
Mihm shows that counterfeiting was organized along the same
principles as legitimate business, and involved, like the circulation
of legal bank money, networks connecting different cities and
regions. In the 1810s and 1820s, the center of counterfeit production
was the small town of Dunham, Quebec. The technology of bank note
production in this early period allowed counterfeiters to manufacture
their ware deep in the woods using technology accessible to
wheelwrights and blacksmiths. Counterfeit notes were distributed
using a network of couriers to wholesalers and dealers in eastern
cities, with dealers typically paying $10 "real," meaning legal,
money for $100 of counterfeit money. As the notes moved further down
the retail chain, they finally ended up in the hands of "shovers,"
marginalized individuals who were expert in the art of passing
counterfeit notes into the hands of retail merchants, restaurateurs,
and petty entrepreneurs.
Local law enforcement efforts were generally ineffectual at shutting
down the counterfeit economy. However, the theory of free banking as
developed by Laurence White (1984) predicts that in a competitive
money regime, banks will invest in assets that enhance their
reputation, including the production of more intricately designed
bank notes to frustrate counterfeiting. As Mihm carefully details in
one of the book's strongest chapters, bank note production was
mechanized in the 1840s and 1850s, resulting in more elaborate,
finer-detail bank notes. However, the mechanization of bank note
engraving actually facilitated counterfeiting by reducing the number
of dies required to produce very many different varieties of bank
currency. There were various ways that counterfeiters could get hold
of the dies (such as buying them from failed banks' liquidators), and
once they did, they could produce bank notes which were virtually
identical to those commissioned by the banks themselves.
This is all original, well-documented historical research, and it is
the solid core of Mihm's book. But sprinkled throughout Mihm's
history of the counterfeit economy are some claims and
interpretations that go too far, at least for this reviewer. At
times, Mihm seems to agree with Hezekiah Niles,
early-nineteenth-century banking journalist, that there was no "real
difference ... between a set of bank directors ... and a gang of
fair, open, honest counterfeiters" (p. 8). Niles's theses on money
captured the views of many, such as the hard-money Jacksonians, that
bankers' promises to pay "real money" (specie) in exchange for their
bank notes were fraudulent, since they held only a fractional specie
reserve against these notes. In such a world, the value of a bank
note, counterfeit or legitimate, was purportedly nebulous, and
ultimately depended on whether A, to whom a bank note was offered in
exchange, had confidence in B, who offered it in exchange.
Counterfeit detectors, according to Mihm, were not very helpful in
discerning which notes were good and which were not. Mihm concludes
that "at its core, capitalism was little more than a confidence game"
(p. 11) -- hence the title.
This conclusion, that the acceptability of bank notes as "real money"
boiled down to a highly contingent confidence game, places too much
emphasis on the person-to-person circulation of bank notes. The
acceptability of bank notes was also, and more significantly,
established through their circulation in redemption networks
organized by banks, discussed in Redenius (2007). Notes that fell
outside of these networks were bought and sold in bank note markets
organized by dealers, which Gorton (1996) argued were informationally
efficient (work that Mihm cites but does not engage). That
professional "shovers" generally avoided trying to pass counterfeit
notes on banks and bank note dealers suggests that it was possible,
at least for banks and dealers, to make and enforce meaningful
distinctions between good, bad, and unknown bank notes.
Putting aside the analogy between capitalism and a confidence game,
economic historians, particularly financial historians, will find
much to learn from Mihm's beautifully written book. We have always
known that counterfeiting was a problem in the antebellum economy,
but we didn't know very much about who produced the notes, who
circulated the notes, and why law enforcement was relatively
ineffectual in bringing counterfeiters to justice. Mihm's book
contributes significantly to our knowledge, and also challenges us to
think differently about legitimate and illegitimate money issuance in
nineteenth century U.S. economy and society.
References:
Gary Gorton, "Reputation Formation in Early Bank Note Markets,"
_Journal of Political Economy_, vol. 104, no. 2, 1996.
Scott Redenius, "Designing a National Currency: Antebellum Payment
Networks and the Structure of the National Banking System,"
_Financial History Review_, vol. 14, no. 2, October 2007.
Lawrence H. White, _Free Banking in Britain: Theory, Experience, and
Debate, 1800-1845 (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press), 1984.
Jane Knodell is an Associate Professor of Economics at the University
of Vermont. She recently published "Rethinking the Jacksonian
Economy: The Impact of the 1832 Bank Veto on Commercial Banking,"
_Journal of Economic History_, September 2006, pp. 541-74. Her new
research explores the economic factors determining the growth and
location of unincorporated banks in the U.S. between the closure of
the Second Bank and the formation of the national banking system.
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Published by EH.Net (January 2008). All EH.Net reviews are archived
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