speeches · April 16, 1924
Speech
Edmund Platt · Governor
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the amendments TO the federal reserve act in the mcfadden bill referring to
BRANCH BANKING-*
The McFadden Bill (H. R. 6855) has been announced as a "bill drawn for the
purpose of liberalizing the National Banking Act, so that National banks may no
longer be prevented by law from performing barking functions regarded as useful
and sound in principle which State banks have long been performing. The Comptroller
of the Currency has noted the fact that State banks have steadily gained in numbers
and in resources while National banks have failed to maintain the same rate of
growth. Since January 1 , 1913, he tells us 173 National banks, each with capital
of over $100,000 have given up their National charters and taken out State charters.
These facts are indisputable and in so far as the bill confines itself to its
announced purpose I have no criticism to make of it, further than to state that
some of the departures from commercial banking need very careful consideration.
One of the liberalizing provisions of the bill has to do with branch barking within
city limits, and with this provision the Federal Reserve Board is unanimously in
agreement. I think 1 may fairly add that the members of the Board regret that this
liberalizing feature of the bill does not go to the full limit of permitting the
establishment of branches in all cities large enough to have need for outlyifag
banking facilities, as a matter of right and without regard to the limitations of
State laws. It would seem that the National banks might sometimes be permittedto
take the lead in a matter of sound banking which every competent banker and every
economist approves.
So much for the liberalizing, or modernizing features of the bill, designed
to permit banks to transact legitimate business along sound lines by modern methods.
We can all get behind and support these features, these amendments to the National
Banking Act. But the bill doesn’t stop there. It seeks to amend the Federal Re-s~
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serve Act, and here it becomes repressive and reactionary. Because many banters are
opposed to any further liberalizing of the National Banking Act the bill seeks to
deprive state bank members of the Federal Reserve System of some of their charter
rights guaranteed them under the Act of June 21, 1917, particularly with reference
to branch banking. Certain states permit and even encourage banks of sufficient
capital to establish branches beyond city limits, on the theory that the farmer
is as much entitled to the best and safest banking service as the city dweller is.
Instead of advocating the same privileges for National banks that these states give
their State banks the Comptroller of the Currency has entered into an elaborate
argument against branch banking in general, an argument which would, if sound,
utterly destroy his city branch banking recommendation if it were not for the devel
opment of a very ingenious theory of home rule. The states may, according to this
theory, decide for themselves whether banks shall or shall not have branches within
city limits, but they must not be allowed to decide whether any branch banks shall
exist outside of the large cities - if their banks are to remain in the Federal
Reserve System.
There isn’t an economist in the country who would agree with the arguments of
the Comptroller. Some 322 independent banks have failed in this country since the
1st of January this yearCto April 11th)r more than two-thirds of them banks with a
capit al less than $50,000, and more than seven-eights of them banks with a capi
tal less than $100,000. With failure® still running at the rate of nearly 100 a
month an unprejudiced outsider might be pardoned for thinking that unit banking
rather than branch banking is at present in most need of defense.
The Comptroller bases his arguments on two assumptions, both demonstrably
erroneous. He assumes, first, that branch banking ijfcn this country is wholly a big
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city proposition - that the banks in the big cities will establish branches through
out each state if allowed to do so - and, second, that country branch banking,that
is branch banking outside of the big cities, is "fostered and protected" by the
federal Reserve System,
The first of these assumptions the Comptroller partly discredits himself in
his statement that he has never yet discovered a big banker who wished to extend
his institution beyond city limits. I think that is true of the big bankers in
Chicago and in most of the great cities of the East. They already do a national
business, receiving deposits from and making loans to large commercial and manu
facturing institutions throughout the country, without branches. Furthermore they
receive deposits from, make loans to, and exercise a certain amount of control
over, thousands of small banks all over the country. It is doubtful if they would
gain enough more to compensate them for the added responsibility if they were to
establish branches outside city limits. But the error of the Comptroller's as
sumption is fully demonstrated not by conjectures or by the statements of big
bankers but by the facts of the development of branch banking in the states which
have permitted it. Although the laws of California have provided distinctly for
state-wide branch banking since I9O9 only one institution has really spread its
branches throughout the State, one other has branches covering about one^third of
the State and two others cover territory that is hardly more than suburban or con
tiguous. The overwhelming majority of the institutions engaging in branch banking
in California are country banks not located in any of the large cities. Through
out the Southern states branch barking is a country bank proposition, with head
offices generally not even in towns large enough to be called cities. The bank
having the largest number of branches in Alabama (about 15 branches) is not a
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Birmingham hank, but a bank at Decatur. The largest branch banking system in
Mississippi, with about lU branches, has its headquarters at Grenada, and the
largest branch banking system in Maryland has its head office not in Baltimore or
in Annapolis, or in any town large enough to be called a city, tut in Cambridge.
In Alabama, Georgia, Louisiana, Maryland, Virginia, Forth Carolina and South
Carolina there are 13*+ banks operating 319 tranches, less than three branches to
a bank, and less than a dozen of these banks are domiciled in the larger cities.
Further positive proof of the error of the assumption that branch banking is
a city monster which must be chained up lest it spread its tentacles over the
whole country is found in connection with the facts which disprove the Comptroller’s
second assumption, viz: that branch banking is "festered and protected" by the
‘Federal Reserve System. Of the 13*+ banks which operate branches in the Southern
states mentioned only 20 are member banks, leaving llU non-members, and these llU
non-members are operating 233 branches, or about 2 branches to each bank. In Vir
ginia there are 2 members operating 3 branches and 22 non-members with 29 branches.
The "head offices" are located in such towns as Clintwood, Columbia, Gloucester,
Feller, Keysville, Louisa, Staunton, Tappahannock, Urbanna, wakefield and Williams
burg. Six banks in Richmond maintain branches, but not one of them has more than 2
branches and only one of them, the Richmond Trust Company, of which Mr. John Skelton
williams is president, has a branch outside of the city. One bank in Norfolk has 2
branches both outside the city and one bank in Lynchburg has a branch at Bedford.
Exactly the same conditions prevail in North Carolina and in Georgia, with the
single exception of the Citizens and Southern of Savannah, which has branches in
In the section of Tennessee within the Atlanta Federal Reserve
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District there are 12 non-member banks operating 33 branches, and no member banks
with branches. In the other end of the district one member bank in Memphis has
branches, but they are inside the city.
Certainly this Southern development of branch banking is not "fostered and
protected" by the Federal Reserve System, since it is nearly all outside the Sys
tem. But even in California, the great branch banking state, the same thing is
true. There are SS state banks in that state maintaining branches, but only 19 of
them are members of the System, leaving 69 outside, and the outsiders are almost
all country banks. It is true of course that the member banks maintain the most
branches, but when it comes to the question of being "fostered and protected" it
should be said that the large branch banking systems, the Bank of Italy, the Pa
cific Southwest Trust and Savings, and the Security Trust and Savings, have none of
them ever been large borrowers from the Federal Reserve System. One of them never
has borrowed and the other two only to carry Liberty bonds. .During the strenuous
months of 1920 and 1921 it may fairly be said that these large branch banking in
stitutions furnished a large share of the reserve funds which were loaned by the
Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco to the independent unit banks.
The restrictive amendments to the Federal Reserve let are, it seems to me,
■unfair, as they overthrow the guarantees under which the larger California State
banks, and many State hanks elsewhere were persuaded to join the Reserve System.
We were willing enough to invite them in and offer them the guarantee of their char
ter rights when their funds were sorely needed, but now that the seas are smooth
we propose to repeal the guarantees so far as branch banking is concerned.
It hot only seems to me unfair but from every point of view unwise. Every
economist favors branch banking as affording the best and safest means of extending
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banting accommodations to agricultural sections and small communities. Professor
0. M. W. Sprague begins an atticle on branch banking in the Quarterly Journal of
Economics with these words; "Upon few subjects has the consensus of opinion of
both economists and financial writers been more general than upon the advantages
of branch banking over a system cf separate local bants. Its superiority in respect
to safety, economy, the equalization of rates for loans, and the diffusion of
banking facilities cannot be questioned."
The economists generally agree that branch banking is a matter of most concern
not to the big cities or their big banks, but to thinly settled agricultural
communities. They believe that our present scheme of extending banking facilities
to such communities by means of small weak independent banks, banks with a capital
of J5>000, $10,000, or even $25,000, is unsafe for depositors and uneconomical,
making interest rates to the farmers higher than necessary. Professor J. Laurence
Laughlin of Chicago University, one of the men who had a prominent part in the pre
liminary work leading to the establishment of the Federal Reserve Act, declared in •
1912 that "the maintenance of such conditions necessarily involves some rather
serious suffering." Hasn’t this prediction been rather strikingly and painfully
verified by the great number of bank failures in the Northwest?
Most of the Comptrollers of the Currency have recommended branch banking in
some form, and nearly all of them have recognized its superiority either as a
general proposition or under certain conditions to unit banking. The first
Comptroller, Hugh McCullough, ^vas himself the President of one of the most notable
branch banking systems in the country, the Bank of Indiana. Mr. Hepburn refers
to this bank as "an exemplary illustration of the efficiency of branch banking as
a system." Comptroller Eckles, whose administration felt the full force of the
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Panic of 1S93 advocated the establishment by national banks of branches in places
not having national banks already established. Comptroller Charles G. Dawes
who succeeded him recommended branch banking in places with a population less than
200C. Mr. Dawes in an address to Pennsylvania, bankers in 1903 spoke against
"general domestic branch banking," but in the course of the address frankly ad
mitted that one of the advantages of branch banking would be lower interest rates
to the farmers who grow crops having a cash value. Recent Comptrollers have re
commended branch banking within city limits as something absolutely necessary in
most of our great cities in order to save the National banks of the cities from
destruction by state bank competition. Branch banking by counties was recommended
by some of them, and was recommended also by the Federal Reserve Board in 19I8. In
its report for 1922 the Board urged that National banks be given the same privileges
with regard to branches that state banks have been given in the branch banking
states.
The last recommendation is the only one that will fully meet the situation, so
far as the competition of state banks is concerned. If this cannot be carried the
Committee might authorize branch banking by national banks in cities where the
states limit branch banking to cities, and in counties where states permit country
banks to establish branches. Such an amendment- would greatly strengthen the country
banks in agricultural sections, and -would enable the Federal reserve banks to deal
with well managed institutions, instead of small banks which often have no fair
chance to survive in times of stress.
The argument that branch banking is monopolistic is unsupported 'by any actual
evidence - the evidence on the other hand is clearly to the effect that branch bank
ing increases competition. It is true that the number of chartered banks in
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Canada, and the number of joint stock banks in England and Scotland, have greatly de
creased, but except in the largest cities there are more banks competing with each
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other than before. A recent Parliamentary investigation (19?3) into the question of
banking in its relation to agriculture in England contains this statementt
"Finally, from the point of view of the agricultural community, it
is important to realize that, notwithstanding the absorption of the
small country Banks, there is, in fact, far keener competition for
rural business than ever before; while, in the matter of security to
depositors, the amalgamation of the Banks has also been of very great
advantage. The old private Banks were always heavily involved in the
fortunes of a restricted area and this was a source of weakness at
times of local crisis. The Joint Stock Banks spread their risks over
a wider area and a greater range of industries, and can better carry
periods of depression." (Report of the Committee on Agricultural
Credit, p. 22),
Similar findings were made by a Canadian committee, which investigated credit
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conditions in the Canadian northwest a year or so ago. Furthermore Mr. Frank W,
Murphy and Mr. Castleman, a committee representing our own northwestern farmers,
testified a few weeks ago that one of the advantages Canadian wheat growers had over
the wheat growers on our side of the line was better treatment from their banks and
lower interest rates.
Why ignore this direct testimony? And why ignore the direct testimony of the
Californians? Can any one maintain that there is less competition among banks in
California today than there was before the development of the branch banking systems
in that state? Can any one deny that agricultural situations as serious as that now
existing in the wheat growing states of the Ninth Federal Reserve District have
been handled in California practically without bank failures?
. Isn’t it rather un-American to express fear of monoply in a field where the
units are so overwhelmingly numerous? "In union there is strength" is an American
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shibboleth:’ Every week brings increased evidence of the lack of strength of the
small unit banks in agricultural sections of our country. The states chiefly con
cerned have tried guaranteeing deposits and every other remedy, except the one
remedy of uniting resources, a remedy which has been successful wherever tried.
In conclusion I wish to say that the Federal Reserve Board has directed its
division of analysis and research to make a complete study and survey of branch
banking in this country, and with some reference also to conditions in other coun
tries. The Board has also recently adopted regulations dealing with branch bank
ing, copy of which I present for the record, I submit that these regulations will
take care of the matter adequately and make unnecessary the amendments to the Fed
eral Reserve Act contained in the bill.
April 17, 192U Edmund Platt.
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Cite this document
APA
Edmund Platt (1924, April 16). Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/speech_19240417_platt
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_speech_19240417_platt,
author = {Edmund Platt},
title = {Speech},
year = {1924},
month = {Apr},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/speech_19240417_platt},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}