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The Cotton Kings: Capitalism and Corruption in Turn-of-the-century New York and New Orleans

Lookup NU author(s): Professor Bruce Baker

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Abstract

The Cotton Kings relates a rip-roaring drama of competition in the marketplace and reveals the damage markets can cause when they do not work properly. It also explains how they can be fixed through careful regulation. At the turn of the twentieth century, cotton was still the major agricultural product of the American South and an important commodity for world industry. Key to marketing cotton were futures contracts, traded at exchanges in New York and New Orleans. Futures contracts had the potential to hedge risk and reduce price volatility, but only if the markets in which they were traded worked properly. Increasing corruption on the powerful New York Cotton Exchange pushed prices steadily downwards in the 1890s, impoverishing millions of cotton farmers. The U.S. Department of Agriculture tried to solve the problem with better crop predictions and market information, shared equally and simultaneously with all participants, but these efforts failed.To fight the cotton market's corruption, cotton brokers in New Orleans, led by William P. Brown and Frank Hayne, began quietly to assemble resources. They triumphed in the summer of 1903, when they cornered the world market in cotton and raised its price to reflect the reality of increasing demand and struggling supply. The brokers' success pushed up the price of cotton for the next ten years. However, the structural problems of self-regulation by market participants still threatened the cotton trade. More corruption at the New York Cotton Exchange appeared, until eventually political pressure inspired the Cotton Futures Act of 1914, the federal government's first successful regulation of a financial derivative.


Publication metadata

Author(s): Baker BE, Hahn B

Publication type: Authored Book

Publication status: Published

Year: 2016

Number of Volumes: 1

Number of Pages: 232

Print publication date: 07/01/2016

Online publication date: 01/12/2015

Acceptance date: 01/01/2014

Publisher: Oxford University Press

Place Published: Oxford, UK

Library holdings: Search Newcastle University Library for this item

ISBN: 9780190211653


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