The Limited Partnership in New York, 1822-1853: Partnerships Without Kinship
42 Pages Posted: 23 Oct 2008 Last revised: 19 Nov 2022
Date Written: October 2008
Abstract
In 1822, New York became the first common-law state to authorize the formation of limited partnerships, and over the ensuing decades, many other states followed. Most prior research has suggested that these statutes were utilized only rarely, but little is known about their effects. Using newly collected data, this paper analyzes the use of the limited partnership in nineteenth-century New York City. We find that the limited partnership form was adopted by a surprising number of firms, and that limited partnerships had more capital, failed at lower rates, and were less likely to be formed on the basis of kinship ties, compared to ordinary partnerships. The latter differences were not simply due to selection: even though the merchants who invested in limited partnerships were a wealthy and successful elite, their own ordinary partnerships were quite different from their limited partnerships. The results suggest that the limited partnership facilitated investments outside kinship networks, and into the hands of talented young merchants.
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation
Do you have a job opening that you would like to promote on SSRN?
Recommended Papers
-
Bank Chartering and Political Corruption in Antebellum New York: Free Banking as Reform
-
When Did Ownership Separate from Control? Corporate Governance in the Early Nineteenth Century
By Eric Hilt
-
Debt, Default, and Revenue Structure: The American State Debt Crisis in the Early 1840s
By Arthur Grinath, John Joseph Wallis, ...
-
Wall Street's First Corporate Governance Crisis: The Panic of 1826
By Eric Hilt