The Panic of 1907 by Robert F. Brunner and Sean D, Carr

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The novel “The Panic of 1907: Lessons Learned from the Market's Perfect Storm” is written by Robert F. Bruner and, Sean D. Carr and it pertains to the events leading up to, during, and following the events of the economic panic of 1907. The decades prior to the panic were filled with economic growth, especially in New York City banks and their financial assets in the trusts consolidation many industries like railroad and oil. The panic occurred during a recession and many runs on banks and trust companies happened further crippling the system. The panic started in New York City but spread throughout the United States and many businesses went bankrupt, because of the retraction of market liquidity in the banks in New York City and the loss of confidence.
There were two major events that set up the panic, the first was the when the Bank of England came calling for the financing of the selling and harvesting of cotton in Egypt. The Bank of England wanted gold deposits to be able to give the credit, so it had to increase their interest rates. The next event that helped lead to the panic was the earthquake in April in San Francisco, because of the massive property damage that needed credit to rebuild. The demand by the British and the earthquake caused a shortage in gold, doubling interest rates leading to the panic. However, these two events alone did not cause the panic; there were seven different ideals that also helped cause the panic.
In the book, Bruner and Carr present the forces of complexity, buoyant growth, inadequate safety buffers, adverse leadership, real economic shock, undue fear, greed, and other behavioral aberrations, and finally the failure of collective action. At that time the United States did not have a cent...

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...e that of the panic. Another similar aspect is that of the decline in property price and the collateral, in 2007 it began with the fall of residential property and mortgages while in 1907 the stocks took a hit along with loans. The high level of debt in regards to the income in the economy is repeated itself in 2007 like in 1907. The banks pools relied on credit just like the mortgages, and the debt eventually caught up. The greed took control of the decisions of people in 1907 as in 2007 and the cycles keep repeating itself, unless something is fundamentally changed in the nature of human beings these events will keep happening, essentially this will never end because people are difficult to change.

Works Cited
Bruner, Robert F., and Sean D. Carr. The Panic of 1907: Lessons Learned from the
Market's Perfect Storm. Hoboken, NJ: John Wiley & Sons, 2009. Print.

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