Banking
In Europe the average man looks upon the bank as a benefactor. Through its agency he secures capital at low rates for his business. In America the bank is too often regarded as a necessary evil, certainly not with affection. Yet it plays a most important rôle in the nation's economy. Our banking laws are obsolete, unsatisfactory, and actually in some instances detrimental to the best and widest use of the nation's resources. Europe has many lessons for us in the problem of how best to use our accumulations. With agriculture demanding and the railroads calling for more capital, the question of scientific banking assumes new proportions. This book, with its chapters on commercial and investment banking, will help to a better knowledge.
F. L. M.
The purpose of this book is to supply the general reader with a simple statement of the principles and problems of banking. Since it is designed primarily for American readers, special attention has been given to conditions in this country. An effort has been made clearly to draw the line between commercial and investment banking and to indicate the problems peculiar to each. That it may assist the average person in understanding present-day banking problems and thus contribute towards the formation of a sound public opinion regarding them, is the author's hope and desire.
Wm. A. Scott.
University of Wisconsin.
The terms, bank and banking, are applied to institutions and to businesses which differ considerably in character, functions, and methods, but which nevertheless have certain common features which justify their being grouped together. We can best prepare the way for a discussion of these differences and common features by a description of the services which these institutions perform in modern society.
From the point of view of their customers these services may be grouped under the following heads: The safekeeping of money and other valuables; the making of payments; the making of loans; and the making of invest ments. It is a common practice everywhere, and in some countries, notably the United States, almost a universal practice for people to intrust their money to banks for safekeeping. To a degree, hoarding, in the sense of locking up money in private vaults and other receptacles and keeping it under the eye and in the personal care of the owner, is still practiced, but it is doubtless on the wane in all civilized countries. The practice of intrusting to banks the safekeeping of other valuables, such as important documents, jewelry, plate, etc., is also widespread and growing.