Non­fic­tion

Cred­it to the Nation: East­ern Euro­pean Jew­ish Immi­grant Bankers and the Shap­ing of Amer­i­can Finance, 1873 – 1930

  • From the Publisher
May 4, 2024

From a lead­ing his­to­ri­an, the sto­ry of how entre­pre­neur­ial Jew­ish immi­grants trans­formed com­mer­cial bank­ing and enabled the eco­nom­ic and social advance­ment of Jews in America.

What are immi­grants to do when busi­ness oppor­tu­ni­ties abound in their new home, but banks refuse essen­tial finan­cial sup­port? How could they make the jour­ney in the first place with­out help­ing hands? In this live­ly his­to­ry, Rebec­ca Kobrin chron­i­cles the turn-of-the-twen­ti­eth-cen­tu­ry Jew­ish immi­grants who stepped up by doing the lend­ing them­selves. Arriv­ing from the Russ­ian Empire and set­tling pri­mar­i­ly in New York, they made liveli­hoods by assist­ing fel­low Jews so they could pur­chase pas­sage to the Unit­ed States and, after arriv­ing, obtain cred­it that oth­er lenders would not dare provide.

Cred­it to the Nation traces the nov­el prac­tices of bankers who not only enabled the flour­ish­ing of Amer­i­can Jew­ry but also rev­o­lu­tion­ized the US finan­cial indus­try. Draw­ing on pre­vi­ous­ly unex­am­ined archival mate­ri­als in Russ­ian, Yid­dish, Ger­man, and Eng­lish, Kobrin tells a sto­ry that is also cru­cial to the his­to­ry of New York, as immi­grant bankers’ financ­ing of real estate trans­formed wide swathes of the city. Lenders drove a boom in the prices of ten­e­ment build­ings, but heavy spec­u­la­tion even­tu­al­ly pre­cip­i­tat­ed the down­fall of immi­grant bank­ing. Kobrin notes in par­tic­u­lar the case of the Bank of Unit­ed States – a pri­vate lender cater­ing pri­mar­i­ly to Jew­ish busi­ness­men – which the Fed­er­al Reserve refused to bail out from bank­rupt­cy in 1930.

Immi­grants’ grasp­ing for cred­it, and the rise and fall of immi­grant banks, gave way to a con­tem­po­rary bank­ing indus­try that, iron­i­cal­ly, refus­es cred­it to today’s immi­grants. Kobrin reminds us that now, as before, the denial of cred­it push­es entre­pre­neur­ial Amer­i­cans into unreg­u­lat­ed mon­ey-lend­ing and the trap of end­less debt.

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