- Emergency Banking Act
The Emergency Banking Act (also known as the Emergency Banking Relief Act) was an act of the
United States Congress spearheaded by PresidentFranklin D. Roosevelt during theGreat Depression . It was passed onMarch 9 ,1933 . The act allowed a plan that would close down insolvent banks and reorganize and reopen those banks strong enough to survive.On
March 5 ,1933 , the day after Roosevelt's inauguration, he called a special session of Congress which instituted a mandatory four-day bank holiday. This act provided for the reopening of banks after federal inspectors had declared them to be financially secure.The bill also gave the Secretary of the Treasury the authority to confiscate the gold of private citizens, in exchange for an equivalent amount of paper currency which was subject to later devaluation with relation to gold.
Despite the importance of the bill, it was passed in immense haste by Congress. Few, if any, Congressmen had the chance to read the bill; most were only able to hear the clerk read it. Quite a few Congressmen vocally protested the haste in which the bill was considered, but nevertheless it was passed sight unseen.
Within 300 days of the act's passage, 5,000 banks had passed inspection and were reopened. Roughly two-thirds of U.S. banks quickly reopened under this act, and faith in banking institutions was somewhat restored.
This act was a temporary solution to a major problem. The
1933 Banking Act passed later that year presented elements of a more permanent solution, including formation of theFederal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC).External links
* [http://tucnak.fsv.cuni.cz/~calda/Documents/1930s/EmergBank_1933.html Full Text of the Emergency Banking Act]
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