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instead of their own. The operations of such a bank, it will be perceived, are different from those of the two preceding ones, inasmuch as the currency by the introduction into it of paper money and paper credits, createable at will, in addition to the coin which before constituted the entire currency of the country, admits of expansion and contraction, and consesequently of fluctuations such as are unknown under a metallic currency.

In the nine hundred banks and branches which now exist in the United States,* all the operations of these three distinct institutions are combined; and it is owing to this combination, by which dissimilar things are confusedly mixed together, that the public mind has been led into so much error upon the subject of banking. An analytical examination can alone enable any one to understand the true merits of this important subject.

From the foregoing definitions it will be seen that banks of deposit and banks of discount are of positive advantage to every country in which they are estabblished. The former protects the gold and silver of the community from the danger of robbery and fire, as well as from loss by abrasion, as has already been remarked, and at the same time greatly facilitates the operations of commerce by the convenience of payments in checks instead of payments in coin. The latter keeps the money of the community in constant employment by lending it to one borrower, as fast as it is paid back by another. But it will be readily seen, that such institutions do not hold out sufficient temptations for their frequent establishment, as corporations. To maintain a bank of deposite, a fund must be provided by government or individuals to defray its expenses, inasmuch as no number of

* According to the report of the secretary of the treasury of April, 1840, the number was 901, with a paid up capital of near $360,000,000. See Appendix C.

persons would assume the responsibility of taking care of other people's money, and of keeping their cash accounts, without compensation, and in regard to a bank of discount, it would scarcely be worth while for a company to become incorporated or to pay the rent of a banking house, and the salaries of a number of officers, to do that which the individuals could do themselves or by the employment of brokers at a much less expense, or, indeed, at no expense at all, as the brokerage is usually paid by the borrowers, unless a comparatively large amount of deposites could be relied on, at a low interest or at no interest at all. Banks of circulation have, therefore, been resorted to, as presenting the only certain, or apparently certain, prospects of emolument; and as the credit requisite to give confidence to the paper could not be established without having for its basis a capital, more or less extensive, they have in every case been consolidated with a bank of discount. To secure the popular favor too, as well as to derive a profit from the lending of the money of others, they have also taken upon themselves, without charge to the public, that part of the duties of banks of deposite which relates to the keeping of cash accounts with individuals, and transfers of credits on their books, but not that part which guarantees the safe keeping of the coin and bullion of depositors, except in the few cases where an agreement for special deposites is made.

But banks of circulation are themselves, when properly conducted, and when their operations are confined to the legitimate objects of banking, and when their liability to comply with their contracts is strictly enforced by the public, capable of conferring benefits upon a country. By the creation of paper money they enable the merchants to export a part of the metallic money which was previously required to circulate its commodities, and thereby convert it into active capital, yielding an annual income equal

to the average profits of trade. The mode in which this is effected, I will endeavor to illustrate in detail in the succeeding chapter.

CHAPTER II.

OF THE OPERATIONS OF BANKS OF CIRCULATION.

In a former part of this treatise it was shown, that under a metallic currency, it is not possible to retain in any country, for any length of time together, a larger amount of coin than that which is requisite to place its currency upon a level with the currencies of other countries; and it was also shown, that if by any extraordinary cause a greater amount should at any time be brought into any country, it would continue but for a short time, and would gradually disappear by exportation, in the manner there described, until the equilibrium should be restored.

What is true of a metallic currency, is equally true of a mixed currency, consisting of coin and paper exchangeable for coin on demand. The aggregate amount of the two component parts cannot exceed for any great length of time, the amount of coin which would circulate if there was no paper, as I shall now proceed to show.t

Let us suppose that, in a particular country, enjoy

* Book I. Chap. 4.

This expression must be qualified thus. Every emission of a paper currency in any country drives out a portion of its coin, and auginents the total amount of the currency of the world, in the same manner that an additional quantity of gold and silver from the mines would do it; and hence an emission of paper money any where must augment the currency every where, after time has been afforded for the distribution.

ing a metallic currency, the quantity of coin requisite to circulate its products and commodities, and to maintain its currency upon a level with the currencies of other countries, is ten millions of dollars, and that the balance of trade and payments is such at the time of our supposition, that the exchange is at par. A bank of deposit, discount and circulation is established upon the corporate or joint-stock principle, with a capital of one million of dollars in coin, which amount is of course to be taken from the ten millions in circulation. We will suppose this capital all to be paid in before the bank commences its operations. The effect of this would be a temporary pressure for money, by withdrawing one million of dollars from circulation. This pressure, however, would be gradually relieved, as the bank commenced discounting, and would wholly disappear after it had loaned out a million of dollars.* Now it is manifest, that up to the period at which the loans of the bank do not exceed one million of dollars, its operations have been simply those of a bank of discount, for it has only loaned the amount of its capital, that is, of money previously existing. It may indeed, have issued notes, or given credits on its books for loans made, instead of paying out the identical gold and silver received from the stockholders; or, it may have given notes, or credits, on a deposit of coin for the convenience of the public; but such notes and credits in such cases would be mere certificates that corresponding amounts of gold and silver were lying in the vaults of the bank, belonging to the owners of such notes or credits, held subject to their order, precisely as in the case of special deposites. It might even happen, that millions of dollars in the form of notes and credits

*I am aware that the usual practice of banks is to call in their capitals by instalments, and to lend out those instalments as fast as received, which is undoubtedly the best mode, if the loans were not so apt to be made to needy or speculating stockholders, to enable them to pay up the subsequent instalments.

might be issued by the bank in exchange for specie, without thus far exercising one single prerogative of a bank of circulation, or influencing in the slightest degree the state of the currency, any more than the Bank of Hamburgh, already described, influences the currency of that city.

From this view of the subject, how clear is to be seen that what the bank has thus far performed, is nothing more than what the individuals who own the capital of the bank, could themselves have performed more cheaply, quite as securely, and perhaps more advantageously to the public, seeing that loans to unskilful and imprudent borrowers, of which individuals are not so apt to be guilty as corporations, lead to a diminution of the wealth of a country, whether it result from injudicious voyages, or from any species of enterprise which converts productive capital into property which is not equally productive, or, from improvident sales of merchandise to persons not entitled to credit. Incorporated or joint stock banks, it is thought, owing to their directors not having a deep personal interest at stake, and owing to their liability to be influenced as a board, by considerations which do not operate upon individuals, and especially owing to the absolute impossibility of their devoting any large share of their time to the investigation of the characters of all applicants for loans, cannot, in the nature of things, exercise the same discrimination in the choice of its borrowers, as individual capitalists do.*

The circulating principle is now put into opera

*If it be objected to this proposition, that the losses of the banks in the United States are comparatively few, I would reply, that this result is to be ascribed to the absence of a general bankrupt law, which would prevent those partial assignments for the benefit of endorsers at bank, by which banks become preferred creditors in most cases of insolvency, and thereby get a larger share of the assets of their debtors, than other creditors.

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