speeches · December 2, 1929

Speech

Edmund Platt · Governor
AdOO OM3X >\Y < t ' 1 i l) <' X-6432v . x l i A./' * , „ ' • V4r,. h / abstract o? V'" , ADDRESS AT VfKARTOU SCHOOL 0? FIMC3 Tuesday, December 3, 1929, , • • by Edmund Piatt / Speaking infernally "before the tanking classes of the Wharton School of Finance, under the auspices of Professor Karr, Tuesday afternoon, December 3rd, on the subject "Banking Legislation Past and Prospective," with some reference to the causes of bank fail- , UreS 1920 t0 illusive, Mr. 3dmnd Piatt, Vice Governor of the ^deral Reserve Board, said that the banking legislation of this country, state and national, might be treated by a satirist or Amorist in such a way as to show that we as a nation have mani- • nested rather less financial common sense than the people of other ^eat commercial nations. Our largest state once had firmly im- bedded in its constitution, where it was doubtless regarded as sacredly fixed for all time, a prohibitory amendment forbidding oreani ation of banks. In those days the good people of the 2 ate of Texas regarded banks as rather worse than saloons, and it mUSt te admitted that some of the banks of the old days of wildcat state banking were pretty bad. !7e made a good early start under abls leadership of Alexander Hamilton towards a national cen- banking system, and it is interesting to note that the First of the United States had to be wound up and liquidated in 1811 lar Sely because of opposition from the city which is today the fl«ancial center of the United States and perhaps of the world. The cnarter bill failed in the United States Senate in 1811 because of th opposition and vote of George Clinton of New York, and Clinton auOO j Od3X IOM3X X-6432 was "backed by cone of the leading barkers and financiers of New York City, including John Jacob Astor. Luring the years that followed we had a second Bank of the United States 1816 - 1835, but until the Civil War brought the National Banking Act busi- ness most of the time was under the tremendous handicap of a fluctuating local state bank note currency, with the notes is- sued in one state or even in one city almost always at a discount if presented elsewhere. In How England, New York and Pennsylvania the state banks were generally pretty strong and reliable and were organized under reasonably sound general acts, while in the older southern states banks continued to be specially chartered by the legislatures and were, therefore, usually large, strong institu- tions. In the newly formed western states the "free barking" idea, which started in New York, ran wild and resulted in every sort of banking experiment, most of them disastrous. In Indiana for some years there was both the best banking system and the worst almost side by side at the same time. A good deal of our tanking legislation has been restrictive rather than constructive, and the great constructive measures that have been passed by the Congress of the United States, such as the National Banking Act and the Federal Reserve Act, were passed for the purpose of correcting the most glaring defects of an individual, local, unit banking system without recognition of the fact that ^ch of the trouble was due to the local unit system itself. Y7hat need no'v is t0 rera°ve some of the restrictions in the present laws so as to allow some development towards a better system.' The OU3X X-6432 -3- McFadden Act of February 1927 went a little way toward removing unnecessary restrictions but the changes were of benefit mostly to city banks. The UcFadden Act prevents country banks even if located in adjoining towns from pooling their resources. Of the 4513 bank failures reported to the Federal Reserve Beard from 1221 to 1927 inclusive, 63 per cent were banks with a capital of $25,000 or less and 61 per cent were of banks located in towns of less thai 1,000 inhabitants, which may be taken, said Mr. Piatt, "as conclusive evidence that the American effort to pro- vide banking facilities in very small places by means of very small unit banks is a failure and cannot be made to succeed ex- cept when all surrounding economic conditions are favorable. Too often economic conditions have been unfavorable - crop fail- les, local industrial failures or merely the failure of the neighborhood itself to grow." Mr. Piatt quoted with approval from the address of Mr. Clyde Hendrix of the Tennessee Valley Bank of Decatur, Alabama, at the meeting of the American Bankers' Association in San Francisco, the following: "Every banker is acquainted with the aopallin,^ mor- tality record of the small unit banks located in purely agricultural territory. 2To doubt, the lack of proper management and dishonesty account for a small percentage of such failures, but in the main the wholesale, colossal number of small bank failures can properly be charged to the system itself." 31118• said Mr- Piatt, is substantially the belief of the present Comptroller of the Currency, "who is recommending as a cure not *ore severe restrictions, or more elaborate supervision, but a rolaxation of some of the present restrictions upon banking so OfcOX 1 ' —— - 1 OM3X. fOil^A X-6432 that a gradual change of the system itself can take place - a change by which some of the small unit hanks may ce merged with "banks in other places so as to provide larger hanks, with funds sufficient to provide good management, and covering a territory wide enough to insure a diversification of loans and invest- ments." "Just what form the Comptroller's recommendations to Congress may take, just what limits he may propose - for he is not in favor of unlimited or nation-wide branch barking - will not be made known until his annual report goes to the'speaker of the House of Representatives about the middle of the present month. He has arrived at his conclusions not only as the re- sult of long experience as a bank examiner and as the head of the supervisory forces of the United States Government, but as the result of careful study. In my opinion he is on the ri^it track and deserves full support not only from economists and students of banking, but from business men and bankers," Mr. Piatt made no reference during the course of his address to the recent stock market panic except to remark that while the year 1929 up to the close of October has recorded 521 bank sus- pensions as compared with only 375 during the sane period of 1928, no suspensions or failures have been attributed to the recent stock market panic up to date. Practically all suspensions have °een in too West and South, and the banks are mostly so small as to have little or no effect upon the general financial condi- tion of the country. . digressed from his main subject long enough to refer to AcJOO AcJOO OM-JX ;OiJ3X. D X-S432 the development of the bill market, or market for bakers' accept- ances during the present year. "For the first time since the Federal Reserve System was established," he said, "the bill market has during this year been standing on its own feet without any nursing by the Federal reserve banks. Early in the year the rate at which Federal reserve banks purchased bills from member banks or from dealers was placed above the Federal reserve rediscount rate, with the result that investors, including banks, institu- tions and individuals began to purchase bills because of the at- tractiveness of the rate. 2,lore recently, investors have been outbidding the Federal reserve banks and have been taking the new bills in spite of very low rates. This may be due to the fact that some of the corporations and individuals who had been loaning money on call in the stock market are now buying bills...
Cite this document
APA
Edmund Platt (1929, December 2). Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/speech_19291203_platt
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_speech_19291203_platt,
  author = {Edmund Platt},
  title = {Speech},
  year = {1929},
  month = {Dec},
  howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
  url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/speech_19291203_platt},
  note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}