speeches · June 16, 1959
Regional President Speech
Monroe Kimbrel · President
FROM: P.M. RELEASE
AMERICAN BANKERS ASSOCIATION WEDNESDAY, JUNE 17
NEWS BUREAU
George J. Kelly, Assistant Director
730 15th Street, N.W.
Washington, D. C.
Address by M. Monroe Kimbrel, Executive Vice President,
First National Bank, Thomson, Georgia, at Annual Conven
tion of Wisconsin Bankers Association, Schroeder Hotel,
Milwaukee, Wisconsin, June 17, 1959
Federal Banking Legislation
Reporting on Federal legislation while Congress is in session is
like keeping score in professional basketball. By the time you announce
it, it's changed.
I suggest, therefore, that we recognize this as an interim report
and that we view it in terms of the general pattern of the banker-Government
relationship.
Before turning to the status of specific bills, it may be helpful
to identify the role and procedure of the^Association’s Committee on
Federal Legislation. The Committee recommends policy to the governing
bodies of the Association; in this function it serves as a screen or lens
through which the collective opinion of bankers with respect to pertinent
Federal legislation is brought into focus. Its members frequently testify
in behalf of the Association before Committees of the Congress. Its
mission requires, perhaps to a greater extent than that of other groups,
that we evaluate our objectives in the rather harsh and not always pleasing
light of practicality.
The latter point is worth emphasizing. It accounts for a good
bit of the frustration which we of the Committee and perhaps many of you
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experience from time to time in our approach, to the problem of banking
legislation.
The plain fact is that what is desirable, from our point of view,
is not necessarily obtainable. While we make proposals^the Congress makes
decisions, and the judgment of the Congress is shaped by a great many fac
tors in addition to banking needs and principles.
I mention these things not as handicaps or disadvantages but
because they do play a vital part in Congressional actions.
As a practical matter we ought to acknowledge that what may
appeal to me in Georgia or to you in Wisconsin as absolutely right and
necessary may have very little appeal for a majority of Congressmen and
Senators. In dealing with the Congress we deal with realists of the first
order — with men and women who naturally place great value in compromise
and in their understanding of the public interest.
There are elements of timing, of emotion, of political philosophy
to be reckoned with - apart from the matter of explaining the attitude of
banking to busy and hard-pressed public servants.
Now what does this mean to us? It means that we have a man-sized
job. We can do it. We've made a good start toward doing it. But it
calls for individual effort all along the line. It requires perseverance,
education, and - most important of all in my opinion - cooperation for
the common good of banking itself.
As individual bankers we devote considerable effort to maintain
ing a climate of favorable customer and public relations. This is an integral
part of sound banking; it makes sense from any standpoint. The question
that puzzles me is why - when we come to the national legislative scene -
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we tend to squander the fund of good will that has resulted from that effort
by diyiding and disagreeing among ourselves.
Now I know the problem isn’t that simple. Perhaps the very
nature of the banking industry with its disparity in type and size of insti
tutions precludes real unity on the legislative firing line. Personally,
I don’t accept that idea. If a majority of us ever do accept it, then we
might as well give up any notion of effective industry-wide representation
in Washington.
It stands to reason that we are heard best when we speak with
one voice. We can be heard reasonably well when we speak the same language
with several voices. I submit that we expect to be heard at all when
we carry our intra-banking debates into the halls of Congress.
Sometimes men find in the course of events a cause or challenge
of such obvious importance to the common good that it brings them together
of its own force. We are confronted by that type of challenge now - and
I hope and believe that we will soon see a very significant response on the
part of all commercial banking,
A fair system of Federal taxation of financial institutions is
the Number One legislative goal of the American Bankers Association.
The present system is patently unfair. The degree of unfairness
is reflected by Government totals of Federal income tax actually paid for
the year 1958* savings and loan associations and mutual savings banks for
that year paid approximately $4^- million - or approximately one per cent
of net income; commercial banks paid approximately $950 million - or about
^•0 per cent of net income.
Here are two types of financial institutions, differing in some
important ways in structure and function but occupying common competitive
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ground in the savings and mortgage market, with one contributing substan
tially to the cost of Government and the other contributing little or nothing.
We believe the scales of justice, in this instance, are indefensibly out of
balance. We are confident that the Congress, after examining all of the
facts, will order a fair adjustment.
Again, in the interests of realism, let’s be sure we understand
what’s ahead. The road to a reasonably balanced tax program for the mutual
institutions and commercial banks is neither short nor smooth. Savings and
loan associations are not as concerned about this inequity as we are. They
resent and will resist any change in the preferential status they now enjoy.
We should anticipate vigorous efforts to becloud the issue and
to divert Congressional and public attention from the pertinent facts. The
opposition undoubtedly will explain that under existing law the mutual
institutions at a certain point are subjected to the same taxation at the
same corporate rate that we pay; they may not explain that under existing
law very few of them ever reach that point.
Congressman Curtis of Missouri and Congressman Harrison of Vir
ginia have introduced bills which aim at the objective of more uniform
taxation of mutual institutions and commercial banks. A new bill, which
we believe embodies a more complete solution of the problem, will be intro
duced shortly. It will provide both for substantial taxation of mutual
institutions and for the establishment of an adequate, industry-wide bad
debt reserve for commercial banks.
You will be informed promptly and fully of the provisions of this
latter bill. I ask you to bear in mind that it will represent a sincere
and careful effort to help the Congress resolve the issue fairly and in a
manner which all commercial banks can support.
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Among other current proposals of "broad interest to hanking, three
have made significant progress in the Congress this Session, They involve
revision of Federal Reserve member banks' reserve requirements, Federal
supervision over bank mergers, and amendments to national bank laws.
The Association for a number of years has advocated adjustments
in the Federal Reserve Board’s authority over reserve requirements, parties
larly with respect to the counting of vault cash as part of the required
reserves. A Bill incorporating the essentials of our recommendation, in
cluding the vault cash provision, has been passed by the Senate and is
expected to be voted on in the House this1 wepc. We testified in favor of
it before Committees of the Senate and House, and bankers throughout the
country have given the Bill their vigorous support. Congressional handling
of this legislation serves to illustrate the value of affirmative and co
ordinated action by the banking industry.
The immediate future of bank merger legislation, on the other
hand, is far from certain. The Association again this year is supporting
Senator Robertson’s proposal to place final authority over bank mergers
in the Federal bank supervisory agencies under conditions that would have
the effect of tightening the procedure to which merger requests are sub
jected, The Bill, S, 1062, as approved last month by the Senate, provides
that in acting on a merger request the Federal supervisory agency must take
into account the competitive factors as well as the banking factors in
volved and also must request a report from the Justice Department as to the
competitive factors, Furthermore, each supervisory agency must consult
the others in order to develop uniform standards. In our judgment, the
Bill offers a workable formula for responsible control of bank mergers at
the Federal level.
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Certainly, "banking factors should be weighed in decisions of this
kind - and by agencies that understand and bear some responsibility for
banking activity. By the same token, it seems right that the law should
require consideration of the competitive impact of proposed mergers. The
Robertson Bill meets both objectives. We are hopeful that these features
of the Bill, which perhaps are not widely understood, will attract the sup
port needed to insure favorable House action on S0 1062.
Important amendments to the National Bank Act are contained in
two bills introduced by Representative Paul Brown of Georgia. These
measures are comprised, for the most part, of provisions which were included
in last year’s Financial Institutions Bill.
One of the Brown bills would revise the lending powers of national
banks in a number of respects, including authorization for an increased
dollar volume of construction loans and new authority for financing the
construction of industrial or commercial buildings without being subject to
the real estate loan limitation. It also provides for an increase in the
limitation on certain loans secured by frozen foods and dairy cattle, some
modification of the limitation on certain types of consumer instalment
loans, and an increased borrowing authority. It also would raise to 75 per
cent the maximum loan-to-value ratio of 20-year amortized real estate loans„
The other bill would clarify the National Bank Act by eliminating
obsolete provisions and would make a number of helpful changes of relatively
minor substance.
h), flnOr'TAQl iiiJU.
t r v!«- These bills Timm 1111111 reported to the House Banking and Currency
Committee by the Subcommittee of which Representative Brown is Chairman.
During public hearings they received the endorsement of the Comptroller of
the Currency and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, as well as that
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of the A.B.A. If approved "by the Banking and Currency Committee and the
membership of the House, they will have a very good chance of passage in
the Senate.
The matters I have summarized so far involve affirmative steps
to improve and strengthen Federal laws affecting banking - and our object,
of course, is to encourage our friends in the Congress who have seen fit
to propose them. There are some current proposals affecting banking that
fall into a different category.
Representative Patman of Texas, for example, introduced again this
year a House Resolution calling for the establishment of a select House
Committee to investigate just about everything from A to Z in the field of
monetary and fiscal policy. The Resolution, to date, has made no progress.
A good many people who would welcome a broad study along these lines pro
vided it promised any real hope of objective approach and useful results,
are of the opinion that our economy can get along very well without this
particular project of Mr. Patman.
The omnibus housing bill which the Senate passed back in January
appears finally to be headed for a showdown. The House amended the bill
substantially and a conference committee of the two bodies is at work now
ironing out the differences. One provision of the House version would
authorize the Federal National Mortgage Association to make short-term
loans secured by government insured or guaranteed mortgages up to 90cjo of
the unpaid balances of such collateral mortgages. Although this is a very
small part of the overall bill, I mention it because it would have a direct
and, we feel, destructive effect upon the operations of many banks. If
enacted, this would place Fannie Mae in a position to compete with banks in
the provision of interim mortgage credit - a function which banks are
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performing adequately under present conditions and which Fannie Mae was
never intended to encompass.
In these and other issues presently before the Congress you and
I as individual hankers have a valid interest. Our trade associations
furnish us with information, forums for self-expression, and other helpful
aids. In the last analysis, however, we must supply our own initiative
and our own enthusiasm for effective participation in banking’s legislative
endeavors. We can afford to he wrong. We can afford to have decisions go
against us. But we cannot afford to lose hy default.
Initiative, information and teamwork are tools we use at the
office every day. Self-interest alone, it seems to me, requires that we
use these same tools in relation to our broader responsibilities as members
of the banking family.
Let me repeat that this is necessarily an interim report on our
legislative program. The final results when the Congress recesses several
months hence may add up to more or less than has been indicated here today.
I believe sincerely, however, that whatever the box score shows we will
have clarified and improved Congressional understanding of banking’s place
in our competitive economy.
In the long run, that is the goal we aieed-^to strive for. t^gesfeher
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Cite this document
APA
Monroe Kimbrel (1959, June 16). Regional President Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_19590617_monroe_kimbrel
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_regional_speeche_19590617_monroe_kimbrel,
author = {Monroe Kimbrel},
title = {Regional President Speech},
year = {1959},
month = {Jun},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_19590617_monroe_kimbrel},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}