The engine of enterprise : credit in America / Rowena Olegario.
2016
HG3754.5.U6 O443 2016 (Map It)
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Author
Title
The engine of enterprise : credit in America / Rowena Olegario.
Published
Cambridge, Massachusetts : Harvard University Press, 2016.
Call Number
HG3754.5.U6 O443 2016
ISBN
9780674051140 (hardcover : alk. paper)
0674051149 (hardcover : alk. paper)
0674051149 (hardcover : alk. paper)
Description
301 pages ; 25 cm
Other Standard Identifiers
40025727968
System Control No.
(OCoLC)908698884
Summary
American households, businesses, and governments have always used intensive amounts of credit. The Engine of Enterprise traces the story of credit from colonial times to the present, highlighting its productive role in building national prosperity. Rowena Olegario probes enduring questions that have divided Americans: Who should have access to credit? How should creditors assess borrowers' creditworthiness? How can people acommodate to, rather than just eliminate, the risks of a credit-dependent economy? In the 1970s Alexander Hamilton saw credit as "the invigorating principle" that would spur the growth of America's young economy. His great rival, Thomas Jefferson, deemed it a grave risk, inviting burdens of debt that would amoung to national self-enslavement. Even today, credit lies at the heart of longstanding debates about opportunity, democracy, individual responsibility, and government's reach. Olegario goes beyond these timeless debates to explain how the institutions and legal frameworks of borrowing and lending evolved and how attitudes about credit both reflected and drove those changes. Properly managed, credit promised to be a powerful tool. Mismanaged, it augured disaster. The Engine of Enterprise demonstrates how this tension led to the creation of bankruptcy laws, credit-reporting agencies, and insurance regimes to harness the power of credit while minimizing its destabilizing effects. -- from dust jacket.
Bibliography, etc. Note
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Record Appears in
Gift
Purchased from the income of the Edith L. Fisch Fund
Gift

The Arthur W. Diamond Law Library
Purchased from the income of the Edith L. Fisch Fund
Table of Contents
Introduction
1
1.
"The Sound of Your Hammer": The Foundations of Credit in the New Republic
13
2.
"To Be a Bankrupt Is Nothing": Credit, Enterprise, and Risk in the Antebellum Era
44
3.
"There Is Considerable Friction": Credit in the Reconstructed Nation
79
4.
"To Open Up Mass Markets": A Nation of Consumers and Home Owners
121
5.
"Children, Dogs, Cats, and Moose Are Getting Credit Cards": The Erosion of Credit Standards
172
Postscript: Creative and Destructive Credit
217
Appendix: An Explanation of Terms
229
Notes
235
Acknowledgments
291
Index
293