speeches · December 9, 1948
Regional President Speech
Karl R. Bopp · President
F.R.B. CHAIRMEN'S CONFERENCE
Washington, D.C.
December 10, 1948
(K.R.B.'s notes)
INTRODUCTION
A. A great pleasure to be here
1. My first assignment in the F.R.S. came from the Chairmen
2. That assignment led me into the System
3. To renew acquaintance with Chairmen then
George Brainard - Frank Neely - Bob Caldwell -
and Russell Dearmont of my old 8th District
4. To meet men who have become Ohaixven in past decade
B. Attraction of F.R.S* is support of strong board of directors;
if my work is any good, it is because of the environment
at the Philadelphia Bank
Feel part of important national public service institution
C. Illustrated last night
Diversity of amateur voices
let the same tune
Over-all harmony
Impact of the Sts tea
I. Principle» of commercial b*«* y— if» requirwaents
A. Why require banks to hold reserve» at all?
1. Analogy with alloy steel
(a) Can control output of alloy steel
only if you control both -
(1) Total amount of alloy available to producers
(2) Percentage of alloy in finished steel
(b) Limitations of the analogy
(1) Do not want centralized control of steel
output, but do want control over supply
of money
2. Summary
"Unless commercial banks are required to maintain at
least reserves against deposits, the country would
be without a mechanism for regulating the supply of money
Digitized for FRASER in the general interest."
http://fraser.stlouisfed.org/
Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis
- 2 -
B. What should total requirements be?
1* If you are to control the volume of deposits, reserve
requirements must be related to the amount of reserves
available.
(a) Present position
Gold *23 bil* Notes %2U bil.
n
Governments 23 Reserve
deposits 20 "
Other dep. 2 "
Change within the past year
Gold / 1^ bil. Notes - è bil.
Governments / 1 n Reserve
deposits / 3 "
2* Can compensate for reduced control over volume of
reserves through greater control over requirements
C. How should each bank's share of the total be determined?
1. Principles
(a) General
Reserve requirements may be thought of as
immobilized assets
Amount a bank must hold is its contribution
to effective national monetary policy
(b) Basic principle is equity
(1) Hornet's nest: the nonmember bank problem
(2) Location vs. character of business
(c) Administratively feasible
(d) Smooth transition
2. A specific plan: five points
(a) Abolish reserve city designations
(b) Classify deposits
(1) Interbank (30%)
(2) Other demand (20%)
(3) Other time ( 6%)
(c) Vault cash as reserves
(d) Due froms as partial reserves
Digitized for FRASER
(e) Authority to change requirements
http://fraser.stlouisfed.org/
Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis
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II. The current problem
A* How to control total volume of reserves
1» Open Market Policy
2. &ebt mangsment policy
(a) Funding - refunding, etc.
B. How best to absorb additional reserves unavoidably created
as result of A.
Answer depends on what aspects are considered most
important - including incidental effects
1. If chief concern is with smooth transition and danger
of very great increase in volume of reserves, then
Ceiling reserve plan - that is, 100% reserves
bonds with against increase in deposits
-reserve money
This solution raises questions about bank earnings
2. If concern is bank earnings, then payment of interest
on all or part of reserves
3. Possible combinations
Digitized for FRASER
http://fraser.stlouisfed.org/
Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis
Cite this document
APA
Karl R. Bopp (1948, December 9). Regional President Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_19481210_karl_r_bopp
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_regional_speeche_19481210_karl_r_bopp,
author = {Karl R. Bopp},
title = {Regional President Speech},
year = {1948},
month = {Dec},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_19481210_karl_r_bopp},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}