{"_id":"mFragjLS9CitPmvC7","bibbaseid":"goodman-theformationofthebankofenglandaresponsetochangingpoliticalandeconomicclimate1694-2009","downloads":0,"creationDate":"2016-02-25T15:28:05.405Z","title":"The Formation of the Bank of England : A response to Changing Political and Economic Climate , 1694","author_short":["Goodman, H."],"year":2009,"bibtype":"article","biburl":null,"bibdata":{"title":"The Formation of the Bank of England : A response to Changing Political and Economic Climate , 1694","type":"article","year":"2009","volume":"17","id":"80a829e8-bc73-37e6-a7a6-f7766a32e5f5","created":"2016-02-25T12:04:11.000Z","file_attached":"true","profile_id":"fd1dce25-0f00-3083-b7f7-7990bd48d715","group_id":"dc8089e4-2e43-3d02-8f6a-620c4061781d","last_modified":"2016-02-25T12:33:28.000Z","read":false,"starred":false,"authored":false,"confirmed":"true","hidden":false,"abstract":"Merchants would deposit “their money with the gold-smiths and received from them receipts” that “…were payable on demand, and were transferred from one holder to another in payment of debts.” These receipts or notes from the goldsmith bankers, often in the form of a letter, are some of the earliest surviving cheques in England.................. Paper money could now be issued, not for gold, but for intangibles, such as revenues on land, tax receipts and commercial obligations. This acted to increase the wealth of the nation by recognizing and providing credit for previously unrecognized forms of wealth.","bibtype":"article","author":"Goodman, Halley","number":"1","bibtex":"@article{\n title = {The Formation of the Bank of England : A response to Changing Political and Economic Climate , 1694},\n type = {article},\n year = {2009},\n volume = {17},\n id = {80a829e8-bc73-37e6-a7a6-f7766a32e5f5},\n created = {2016-02-25T12:04:11.000Z},\n file_attached = {true},\n profile_id = {fd1dce25-0f00-3083-b7f7-7990bd48d715},\n group_id = {dc8089e4-2e43-3d02-8f6a-620c4061781d},\n last_modified = {2016-02-25T12:33:28.000Z},\n read = {false},\n starred = {false},\n authored = {false},\n confirmed = {true},\n hidden = {false},\n abstract = {Merchants would deposit “their money with the gold-smiths and received from them receipts” that “…were payable on demand, and were transferred from one holder to another in payment of debts.” These receipts or notes from the goldsmith bankers, often in the form of a letter, are some of the earliest surviving cheques in England.................. Paper money could now be issued, not for gold, but for intangibles, such as revenues on land, tax receipts and commercial obligations. This acted to increase the wealth of the nation by recognizing and providing credit for previously unrecognized forms of wealth.},\n bibtype = {article},\n author = {Goodman, Halley},\n number = {1}\n}","author_short":["Goodman, H."],"urls":{"Paper":"http://bibbase.org/service/mendeley/fd1dce25-0f00-3083-b7f7-7990bd48d715/file/2022d80a-146c-1cb7-6d6f-ceeb880ea0b6/2009-The_Formation_of_the_Bank_of_England__A_response_to_Changing_Political_and_Economic_Climate__1694.pdf.pdf"},"bibbaseid":"goodman-theformationofthebankofenglandaresponsetochangingpoliticalandeconomicclimate1694-2009","role":"author","downloads":0,"html":""},"search_terms":["formation","bank","england","response","changing","political","economic","climate","1694","goodman"],"keywords":[],"authorIDs":[]}