Abstract
IN MY judgment," maintained William McChesney Martin, Jr., Chairman of the Board of Governors, Federal Reserve System, "we can never under the present margin regulations have the same result that occurred in terms of a financial crash in 1929 through undermargined accounts, low margins resulting in a financial debacle."' A widely used elementary economics textbook claimed, "Margin requirements have exercised an important restrictive influence on security speculation, as contrasted with the uncontrolled period of the late 1920's... Nearly everyone agrees that Federal Reserve margin requirements exercise a healthy restraint on speculative stock purchases in a boom" (Bach, 1963, p. 116). But what evidence is there that margin requirements have the effects claimed? At the December meetings of the American Economic Association, George J. Stigler, in the Presidential address, called on economists to test their assumptions that state regulation of private activity has indeed been successful (Stigler, 1965). This article brings together some data on the efficacy of margin requirements. While the figures can only be considered preliminary, and more data should be collected to test margin requirements, the data that are available and presented here indicate that not one of the aims of the legislation establishing margin requirements has been accomplished.2
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