v ir .irjr " ,1 - " t IT 1 " if n i ' vi ' " r The Commoner ,aH DECEMBER, kt't&i t tKT w ' mm - wmwmw i imnnn ii i , M w wmmmtmmmmmmmaummmmmmnmumtMmtt wwww mw ' a ' " ""'" $ out from and imposes no hardship upon the rthblg hank- fears that such a guarantee iw will draw away. Its depositors from the largo nk to the smaller, hank,, th big hank can nilily obtain a similar guarantee by paying precisely the same tax rate that the smaller bank Stents' Favoring Proposed Guarantee Law The main advantage of the bill for the gua rantee of bank deposits may be briefly summar ized as follows: FIRST SUCH AN ABSOLUTE GUARANTEE wv THE GOVERNMENT "WOULD BRING FROM rrq HIDING PLACES MANY MILLIONS OF HOLLARS OF HOARDED MONEY IN ALL PARTS OF THE COUNTRY, SOME OF WHICH tc i BEING KEPT IN STOCKINGS AND CUP BOARDS AND SOME IN SAFE DEPOSIT VAULTS. Thero are thousands of people throughout the country who hold on to their savings and hide them in their homes because thy are afraid to trust ANY bank. Of course, uppn such money they get NO INTEREST that money is simply idle and wholly unproductive. If the government should give its guarantee, this money will come ' out of its hiding places and again become active in the currents of trade, where it Is especially needed in these times of war. These owners will realize that, when GUARANTEED BY THE GOVERNMENT, it is safer .ban it could possibly be however carefully it may be stored away in their homes. In the second place, it will YIELD them 3 per cent interest instead of nothing, and will be helpful to others to whom the bank will then be able to lend it. IT IS INCONTROVERTIBLE THAT 1. Such a law would bring large sums of hoarded money back into circulation. BECAUSE t 1. Such funds aro FAR SAFER in 'banks guaranteed by the government than in any hid ing place. 2. In bank the owner "can get 3 per cent per annum interest; if hid away, he gets nothing., SECOND. THE PASSAGE OF SUCH' A LAW WOULD GIVE AN i ABSOLUTE GUARANTEE TO 15,902,19.4 DEPOSITORS--IN .NATIONAL BANKS, THIS BEING THE NUMBER OF'-DEPOSIT ACCOUNTS ON MARCH' 4, 1918, OF $5,000 OR LESS. That means that this law, if availed of,' Would give a Bense of complete protection and comfort to nearly SIXTEEN MILLION depositors' or owners of deposit accounts, scattered throughout our 48 states and the District of Columbia. The records show that those whose bank balances amounted toinore r', than $5,000 each, and whose ac- ,' l counts would riot be guaran- '. teed, numbered only 3 153,1 3 9 The money to the credit of the ': ' : 15,902,194 depositors was $4,521,027,000 while the large balances "to the credit of the 353,139 large de positors aggregated about.... 8,000,000,000 THHID. THE PASSAGE" OF SUCH A, LAW S5HD PRACTICALLY PREVENT, IN 'THE S2?B RUNS 0N ALL NATIONAL BANKS WHICH MAY ENJOY THE -PROTECTION -OF taxtLA guARANTEE, WITH THE MANY DANGERS AND DISTURBANCES ATTENDANT vt?TTTSUCH RUNS AND THE . FAILURES WHICH SO OFTEN FOLLOW THEM.- aJJad such a law been in operation In times wfci ii S?me of tlle PanIcs and commercial crises nnJ i.Ie disturoed and wrecked -the country rnw i Ich were Precipitated by runs onbanks could have been averted. PaSSS?' THE GUARANTEE OF BANK DE PoSJ a2ULD GIVB PEACE OF MIND, COM 2TlSd CONFIDENCE TO THE POOR MAN ArPTmTT?P00R WOMAN. WHO MAY HAVE TIM? tSL?BD THEm SAVINGS OF A LIFE THESE I BANK3 SAVINGS DEPARTMENTS OF Ba3u???ntal worry and anxiety which thou claiivi eads of families have endured, espe heenrni J 5es, of illneas for fear of what might awav ti ?eIr familles it -they should be taken their up ?i at the same tIm the anlc ln whIcu fail JLif; mv savinSs aave been deposited should safe'tv n?vL comP1etely relieved as far as the and Ln ir savinSs is concerned. This-nxiety unahia i and T0Tt7 whIcb- depositors have been Eood ?nSu?aat asIde' even when banks are in. condition,;is4multiplied a hundredfold when v H riizfe2rrjr'8KS?szA'iJtF?xZ!?&. .'. x.?7zzuuzzrm&mv3r- nw r- ami .jjz t Tm&2r sg5g'?r .--z&i &, - JMmH?-A m : s rss , , mj .'.? Jl: -J ' PRUSSIANISI'S PROGRESS tfjgS Chicago Daily News. the bank fails and closes its doors, as has hap pened with national hanks 451 times since 1890, and when the depositors realize that their sav ings o"f all their earlier years are lost, -or else that it may be months or years before they re cover their money. Depositors sometimes have to wait through long years of misery and priva tion before they get back their deposits. Thoro is one bank still in progress of liquidation which failed over 27 years ago, whose affairs were so hopelessly tangled that it has not yet paid its final dividend to depositors, and there are doubt less many depositors who have died while wait ing to get their money their deaths probably hastened by the tying up of their1 lifetime sav ings. Such harassment and distress not only im pair the efficiency of the depositors as workmen in such times, but have often driven both men and women to desperation and suicide. FIFTH. IT .IS PROBABLE THAT NOTHING WHICH HAS THUS FAR BEEN SUGGESTED WOULD CONTRIBUTE MORE TO- TPIE UNI FICATION AND SOLIDARITY OF OUR EN TIRE BANKING SYSTEM THAN TPIE ENACT MENT OF SUCH A LAW AS THIS. IT IS BELIEVED THAT IT WOULD HAVE A PARA MOUNT AND DETERMINING INFLUENCE WITH THE STATE BANKS IN INDUCING THEM TO NATIONALIZE TO GET THE BENE. FIT OF THE GOVERNMENT GUARANTEE OF BANK DEPOSITS. The desirability of the unification, as far as possible, of the banking system of the country is, I believe, generally admitted by the thinkers and leading men of both political parties especially in these times of war where the closest co-operation and co-ordination on the part of all financial interests Is recognized to bo of such preeminent importance. The records show that the national banks of the country, for several years past, have out stripped the state Institutions in the rate of growth; while at the same time they had made a more creditable exhibit in the matter of losses. Such a guarantee measure may be confidently expected to have an immediate and potent effect in bringing state banks more rapidly into the national system and In strenghtening and solidi fying our whole financial structure. SIXTH. THERE IS NO FORCE IN THE SUGGESTION WHICH "HAS BEEN URGED THAT THE GUARANTEE OF THEIR DE POSITS JBY THE GOVERNMENT WOULD HAVE THE' EFFECT OF MAKING NATIONAL BANK OFFICERS LOOSE, LAX, AND CARE LESS IN THEIR METHODS AND MANAGE- MENT. The supervision by the government would, if there Is any change, be even more thorough and effective. It would be idle and unrea sonable to suggest that, because the money of DEPOSIT ORS is fully protected, the directors of a hank, who are always necessarily STOCKHOLDERS, would be less vigilant, less careful to protect their own personal interest particular y their capital placed in the stock of the bank. The management of the banks would therefore still have thS vast stock investment of OVER TWO BILLION DOLLARS to protect: and further more, they face the danger of the 100 per cent assessment on the stock of any bank if the bank should he so indifferently or loosely managed as to bring insolvency. A guarantoo of DEPOSITS carries no guar antee of STOCK; and the ofllcors of national banks would not be t,omptcd more readily than now to make bad loans or to adopt loose methods when they kiiwW that their losses must fan ex olusively upon themselves and upon their fellow stockholders and on tho government, 'even though tho government should protect the gen eral depositors, ' ' ,?' SEVENTH. UNDER SUCH A 'PLAN AS'tS PROPOSED, ALL BANKS WILL EARNESTLY" STRIVE TO INSPIRE PUBLIC CONFIDENCE AND MAINTAIN A GOOD REPUTATION, 'NOT ONLY FOR THE SAKE OF PROTECTING THEIR STOCK INVESTMENTS BUT . ALSO FOR THE SAKE OF DRAWING TO THE BANK THE LARGER DEPOSITORS THO0E WHOSE DEPOSIT ACCOUNTS AMOUNT TO MORE THAN $5,000. The large depositors will naturally exercise special discrimination in placing their 4undHj" and will endeavor to select for such deposits, which may not have the govornmont guarantee, those banks which have tho best reputation for honesty, fidelity, and Intelligence in management. Tho suggestion that the benefits of tho guar anty law will apply mainly or entirely tov tho smaller banks and their depositors rather than, tho depositors of tho .larger banks is not borne puUby the facts of tho case. The records of this office for the past 36 years show that the total deposits of the smaller banks or, say banks with less than $200,000 capital which failed in this period amounted to $00,788,000, representing the amount of money which was tfed up from time to time during this period In these banks, a portion of which was lost. In the same time, the' amount of deposts tied up in banks with capital of 200, 000 or more amounted to $133,572,000; and of this sum oVor $68,000,000 was tied up in the largest banks ; those with capital of $500,000 and over. The aggregate amount of deposits of national banks which wore tied up by bank failures from 1912 to.1917 was about $30,000,000'-cxcluslve of deposits aggregating approximately $50,000,000 mors in banks which suspended temporarily, but wore subsequently restored to solvency, in tho same five-year period. The tying up of $194,000,000 of deposits In failed banks over this period may not seem large as compared to the total deposits of all banks; but it is of high importance when we consider the untold misery which these failures, brought to tens of thousands of helpless men and women who, under the provisions of such a bill as Is now proposed, could have been spared,and hero after ought to be spared, such loss and suffering. It Is believed, and with much reason, that it this bill should become a law, leaving it discre tionary with national hanks as to whether they accept its provisions or not, the vast majority of these banks wHl come in promptly, and that they will he .followed rapidly by those state banks that are eligible for nationalization, JQHN SKELTON WILLIAMS, ' ' . Comptroller. -: v J . ,.. ,VM " '? ( v , Vv ? , ' r i m ,,& m 1 -hH ' i,' ii , ' 4T m v. iJ ' ,.i i ,& iv.: Ji l a J '? -. a 'K. i W $t A ' i Hm n ' ii . r... v i, '-.. &sk? V J r?. t,jt jog! ait I mw .'. j&