Financial History Issue 122 (Summer 2017) | Page 31

By Josh Lauer In late November 1913, a dapper old man stopped into a Cleveland department store to do some shopping. On his way out, he gave a young female clerk his name and instructed her to charge several items to his account. The clerk, who did not know the man, insisted on calling the credit depart- ment to authorize his purchases. Perhaps the stranger’s wig and lack of eyebrows aroused her suspicion. The 74-year-old man suffered from generalized alopecia, a condition that had caused him to lose all of his body hair. After the credit department confirmed the customer’s identity and creditworthiness, of our transaction and instantly updates our status and legitimacy as a paying consumer. All of this happens in the few seconds that it takes to swipe a plastic card — or just as commonly, in the time it takes for an online purchase to be con- firmed. Such speed and ease are hard to argue with. Why fool around with cash when the whole thing can be settled with a signature or code? Rockefeller and many of his fellow Americans would have agreed. For some- one like Rockefeller, a charge account was largely a matter of convenience. He A History of Consumer Surveillance and Financial Identity in America his charged goods were approved, and he left without incident. This exchange would be completely unremarkable except that the stranger was no average consumer. He was John D. Rockefeller, literally the richest man in the world. The multimillionaire oil baron had been denied access to credit, “at least until the clerk learned that he was ‘good.’” One hundred years later this story still resonates. Twenty-first century Ameri- cans are accustomed to having their iden- tities and creditworthiness tested, often multiple times each day, to see if they are “good.” Indeed, whenever we use a bank card to pay for something, we enter into an invisible surveillance network that confirms our identity, records the details Portrait of John D. Rockefeller. Even the world’s richest man was subject to credit checks during his lifetime. had piles of money sitting in the bank. But for many Americans who did not, credit accounts allowed them to walk out of stores with all sorts of things — from furniture and appliances to clothing and food — all on the thin promise of future earnings. Credit was not just a frivo- lous indulgence, as its critics have long insisted. In many cases, it was a necessary bridge between income and paychecks. The absurdity of the Rockefeller incident was comic fodder for newspapers through- out the nation. The retired titan of industry took it in stride and even commended the embarrassed clerk for her “caution.” He had bigger concerns, such as founding some of the nation’s most venerable philanthropic organizations and caring for his ailing wife. Yet the story, for all of its populist mirth, reveals something else: consumer credit surveillance was an established fact of life. It was funny that Rockefeller’s credit stand- ing had been questioned, but it was taken for granted that systems for interrogating one’s identity and creditworthiness already existed. Rockefeller, like millions of Ameri- cans from all walks of life, had a second self, a disembodied financial identity that inhab- ited the vast files of retail credit departments and local credit bureaus. No one, not even the wealthy or famous, could escape the gaze of this unseen surveillance apparatus. How did this happen? How did Ameri- cans become faceless names and numbers in an enigmatic network of credit records, scoring systems and information bro- kers? How did financial identity become such an important marker of our per- sonal trustworthiness and worth? It is easy to mistake consumer credit surveillance and financial identity for new technologi- cal developments, products of late 20th century databases and algorithms. The importance of financial identity and credit risk has become a topic of serious public debate. The scourge of so-called identity theft and the 2008 subprime mortgage crisis illustrate the high stakes of credit information in contemporary life. However, systems for monitoring con- sumer credit identities and for judging one’s creditworthiness are not new at all. They were central to the ascent of con- sumer capitalism in the United States. Long before credit cards filled mailboxes in the 1960s, before Americans bought refrigerators on the installment plan or the first mass-produced and mass-financed Model Ts rolled off assembly lines, con- sumer credit surveillance systems were already in place. This was the surveillance system that Rockefeller stumbled into when his financial identity — his hidden record of prompt payment and trustwor- thiness — temporarily trumped his iden- tity as the world’s richest man in the flesh. At the center of this story is the consumer credit bureau. The modern credit bureau is www.MoAF.org  |  Summer 2017  |  FINANCIAL HISTORY  29