Charge Account Banking: A Study of Financial Innovation in the 1950s

Enterprise & Society 19, no. 2: 352-390, June 2018

DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/eso.2017.42

Posted: 8 May 2020

See all articles by Sean Vanatta

Sean Vanatta

University of Glasgow - School of Social and Political Sciences

Date Written: March 21, 2018

Abstract

This study takes a step toward re-conceptualizing the process of financialization, the reorientation of the US economy toward financial services that scholars view as a product of the 1970s economic shocks and subsequent regulatory liberalization. Instead, I argue that financialization was equally dependent on the gradual development of new financial technologies and business practices within the political and regulatory environment of the early postwar era. I do so by examining a cohort of small U.S. banks, which in the early 1950s began experimenting with a novel form of consumer credit: the charge account credit service. These plans allowed consumers to shop at a variety of local merchants using a single bank charge card. Bankers, though, developed charge account plans not as a conduit for consumer lending but as a business service, which enabled their small-merchant customers to compete with the credit plans offered by expanding department stores. In this way, charge account banking conformed with the 1950s political economy of finance, in which commercial bankers primarily lent to businesses and were still wary of consumer credit. Although they operated differently than the credit cards consumers know today, charge account banking plans were still a necessary first step toward this later financial technology, paving the way for commercial bankers to invest in unsecured card-based credit in the decades that followed.

Keywords: Credit Cards, Financialization, Banking History, Charge Accounts

JEL Classification: N42

Suggested Citation

Vanatta, Sean H., Charge Account Banking: A Study of Financial Innovation in the 1950s (March 21, 2018). Enterprise & Society 19, no. 2: 352-390, June 2018, DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/eso.2017.42, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=3576207

Sean H. Vanatta (Contact Author)

University of Glasgow - School of Social and Political Sciences ( email )

United Kingdom

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