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  • 1
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Cham : Springer Nature Switzerland | Cham : Imprint: Palgrave Macmillan
    ISBN: 9783031438318
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (XI, 155 p. 5 illus.)
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als
    Keywords: Finance. ; History. ; Economic history. ; Law ; Economic policy. ; Kansas ; Blue Sky Act ; 1911 ; paternalism ; regulation ; state securities regulation ; American financial history ; federal regulation ; stocks and bonds ; Joseph N. Dolley
    Abstract: 1. The dynamics of paternalism: The Naïf, The Slicker and The Busybody -- 2. A Country Banker -- 3. Mr. Thompkins Comes to Town: Buyer Beware -- 4. After the Fakirs -- 5. A Wise Man to Look Out for you -- 6. The Busybody’s Heavy Hand -- 7. The Banker Shunned -- 8. "You Can Fool Some of the People All of the Time”: Still Falling for Dreams of Wealth -- 9. The Ticker’s Siren Song -- 10. Not quite a Naïf, Not quite a Con Man: paternalism and liberty in the market.
    Abstract: This Palgrave Pivot presents the first in-depth study of the pioneering Kansas Blue Sky Act of 1911, the first effort in American financial history to regulate the sale of securities in the US. Though offering a balanced examination of critiques of the legislation as a barrier to individual liberty, interstate commerce, and economic growth, the author challenges the prevailing view of the Kansas Act as a complete anomaly, instead exploring sensitively what ‘blue sky laws’ can tell us about small-town market values during the nineteenth-century. Drawing on contemporary accounts of rural commerce and popular stereotypes about rural society, the author takes a cultural-historical approach to the politics of regulation and government intervention in the economy. Situating the Blue Sky Act in the broader context of Progressive Era reforms, the author demonstrates how distinctive patterns of commerce and finance in the self-contained, miniature economies of mid-continental rural communities were often at odds with the “caveat emptor” (buyer beware) standard of American law and commerce in larger markets. Instead the author explores how paternalistic assumptions about individual investment decisions led to the creation of the Act, yet how it was doomed to failure in the context of emerging national stock markets, changing attitudes that regarded stock primarily as a vehicle for trade and the market boom of the 1920s. The book also explores how the initial acceptance of the Kansas model in other states and its later rejection provides a lens through which to examine the fluidity of notions of individual liberty during this period of fast economic and social change. This book will be of interest to researchers working in American financial history, as well as legal history and securities law. David Ress is a journalist and honorary research associate at the University of New England, Australia. He is the author of Municipal Accountability in the American Age of Reform (Palgrave, 2018) and The Half Breed Tracts in Early National America (Palgrave, 2020).
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