Banks and State Public Finance in the New Republic: The United States, 1790-1860
          
                   John B. Legler, Richard Sylla, and John Joseph Wallis
      
  
, 
            2
      (    
                  47
      
  
)
            Journal of Economic History
      
            391-403
      
            June
      
            1987
          
                          
      
  
  Abstract
              The U.S. Constitution, by taking away the power of the states to issue paper money, removed a major source of flexibility in state public finance. In their search for new sources of revenue and fiscal flexibility, the states discovered that the banks they chartered could fill the gap. Investment earnings and tax revenues derived from banks soon became major elements of state public finance. We discuss the nature of these early business-government relationships and provide the first systematic assessment of their relative importance in state finance.
