{"id":4036,"date":"1953-11-01T01:00:00","date_gmt":"1953-11-01T01:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/november-1953-vol-34-no-11-our-banking-system\/"},"modified":"2022-11-28T13:39:00","modified_gmt":"2022-11-28T13:39:00","slug":"november-1953-vol-34-no-11-our-banking-system","status":"publish","type":"rbc_letter","link":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/november-1953-vol-34-no-11-our-banking-system\/","title":{"rendered":"November 1953 &#8211; Vol. 34, No. 11 &#8211; Our Banking System"},"content":{"rendered":"<div id=\"layout-column-main\">\n<p class=\"boldtext\">The primary operations which banks                     perform in the community are the receipt of money, the re-lending                     of it to borrowers, and the facilitating of exchange. Through                     these services the banks assure the profitable use of all                     the purchasing power of the community, and channel into everyday                     use the savings of individuals while safeguarding those savings.<\/p>\n<p> It is with the banks&#8217; functions in present-day life                     that we shall be here concerned, though they represent but                     faintly the long and vital contributions the banks have made                     to Canada&#8217;s growth and to our way of life.<\/p>\n<p>To many persons, banking seems much more complicated than                     it is in reality. A man acquires a claim to cash by selling                     his goods or his services; this is offset against the claims                     which others acquire against him by providing him with things                     he wants: that is the essence of commercial life. Our banking                     system provides a clearing house, through which sales and                     purchases are registered and are cancelled against one another.<\/p>\n<p>Banking is not a fixed thing. It starts with a simple transaction                     between two persons, and it develops as the needs of other                     people and of the community develop. You can trace the evolution                     of our banking system and Canada&#8217;s growth in almost parallel                     lines.<\/p>\n<p>First, we had a local economy, in which little settlements                     needed no banking facilities. Then trade widened, and people                     couldn&#8217;t carry with them the cash needed in their dealings.                     Finally, there came the industrial development in whose service                     the banks expanded from small local concerns to the present                     large institutions with branches throughout Canada and in                     many foreign countries. It has been a rapid and recent thing,                     this growth of banking, but it has been no more spectacular                     than the growth of Canada itself.<\/p>\n<p>So important a thing as money &#8211; the medium of exchange of                     all our services &#8211; could not be left without some regulation,                     and so there has grown up a whole body of legislation to protect                     those whose property it is and those who use it, and, indeed,                     the banks which handle it as intermediaries.<\/p>\n<h3>The Rise of Banking<\/h3>\n<p>Banking as we know it in Canada today had its beginning                     133 years ago when the Bank of New Brunswick was the first                     bank to operate under a charter. The adventures and the development                     through these years are well told by A. B. Jamieson in his                     book published by The Ryerson Press, Toronto, this year. Mr.                     Jamieson, who retired from the Head Office of this bank in                     1946 after 43 years of experience in Canadian Banking, has                     designed his book not only for students of banking but for                     all those who are interested in the vital forces which entered                     into the building of Canada. The first part of <em>Chartered                     Banking in Canada <\/em>deals with the history of our banking                     system, and in the second part the author tells understandably                     about the practice of banking.<\/p>\n<p>Canada has today a banking system which is the envy of many                     other nations. For half a century our banking has been attended                     to by a comparatively small number of banks of substantial                     size. From 1792, when a private concern tried unsuccessfully                     to launch upon banking, we developed through a total of 26                     banks at the time of Confederation to the present eleven chartered                     banks.<\/p>\n<p>Canada is relatively a small country in population, but                     it has two banks with assets of more than two billion dollars                     each. It surprises persons from abroad to learn that we have                     banks ranking with the greatest financial houses of the world.                     A list prepared in October 1953 showed that in terms of total                     assets, The Royal Bank of Canada stands ninth in the world.                     Inside Canada the rank of our banks as shown by assets is                     revealed by a government return of September 30, 1953 to be:<\/p>\n<table width=\"415\" border=\"1\" cellpadding=\"2\" cellspacing=\"0\" class=\"smltabletxt\">\n<tbody>\n<tr>\n<td valign=\"top\">The Royal Bank of Canada<\/td>\n<td valign=\"top\" align=\"right\">$2,783,235,826<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<tr>\n<td valign=\"top\">Bank of Montreal<\/td>\n<td valign=\"top\" align=\"right\">2,361,090,936<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<tr>\n<td valign=\"top\">The Canadian Bank of Commerce<\/td>\n<td valign=\"top\" align=\"right\">1,894,040,495<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<tr>\n<td valign=\"top\">The Bank of Nova Scotia<\/td>\n<td valign=\"top\" align=\"right\">946,432,863<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<tr>\n<td valign=\"top\">Imperial Bank of Canada<\/td>\n<td valign=\"top\" align=\"right\">604,002,760<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<tr>\n<td valign=\"top\">The Bank of Toronto<\/td>\n<td valign=\"top\" align=\"right\">560,391,918<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<tr>\n<td valign=\"top\">The Dominion Bank<\/td>\n<td valign=\"top\" align=\"right\">514,194,011<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<tr>\n<td valign=\"top\">Banque Canadienne Nationale<\/td>\n<td valign=\"top\" align=\"right\">508,861,522<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<tr>\n<td valign=\"top\">La Banque Provinciale du Canada<\/td>\n<td valign=\"top\" align=\"right\">192,602,090<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<tr>\n<td valign=\"top\">Barclay&#8217;s Bank (Canada)<\/td>\n<td valign=\"top\" align=\"right\">32,868,880<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<\/tbody>\n<\/table>\n<h3>Other Financial Concerns<\/h3>\n<p>While this Monthly Letter is about our banking system, it                     must not be thought that the chartered banks have a monopoly                     of dealing in money and credit. Far from it. They are only                     one element in Canada&#8217;s financial system, which includes the                     Bank of Canada, the chartered banks, the Industrial Development                     Bank, the savings banks, the insurance companies, the trust,                     mortgage and loan companies, the investment dealers, and others.                     The eleven chartered banks are the commercial banking system,                     having the function of acting as depositories for surplus                     funds and to assist in keeping the wheels of production, industry                     and business moving.<\/p>\n<p>These banks supply the short-term working capital,                     payroll accommodation, money for the purchase of materials,                     loans against goods in process of manufacture, and loans to                     farmers, lumbermen, fishermen, marketing agencies, and individuals.                     Others, like the Industrial Development Bank, investment dealers,                     mortgage companies, and insurance companies, furnish long-term                     money for capital investment, &#8220;Adventure money&#8221; is usually                     supplied by the public through purchases of stock. There are                     co-operative organizations which promote thrift and lend                     money in small sums to members.<\/p>\n<p>Added to all this outside competition is the competition                     between the chartered banks. It is stiff and serious. Operating                     as they do under a statutory rate ceiling, every bank tends                     toward the same rate of interest on loans, and competition                     is forced into the realms of quality of service, skill, efficiency,                     and speed of service. In these fields there is even competition                     between branches of the same bank.<\/p>\n<p>Competition is based upon the right, inherent in the Canadian                     way of doing business, to go to any other bank when one fails                     to satisfy. Indeed, if the present banks fail to provide satisfactory                     service, the laws of Canada provide for starting new banks.                     Any group of responsible men who can get together a very modest                     capital, may qualify for a charter and open a bank.<\/p>\n<p>Banking is a business, and like any other business it is                     subject to the vicissitudes of trade and me vagaries of fortune.                     Just to run a bank costs big money. The banks&#8217; payrolls run                     to more than $125 million a year; interest to depositors costs                     $61 million a year; taxes amount to about $33 million a year.                     Adding together salaries, interest, taxes, and other expenses                     including depreciation of premises, gives a sum of $285 million                     paid out by the banks in a year, an average of $15.32 for                     every dollar received by shareholders in dividends.<\/p>\n<h3>Chartered Banks<\/h3>\n<p>Canada&#8217;s banks are called chartered banks because every                     one of them operates under a charter granted by the federal                     government under certain conditions and with certain restrictions.                     A bank&#8217;s charter is issued under authority of The Bank Act,                     passed by the Parliament of Canada, in which are laid down                     the conditions under which the banks must operate. The first                     comprehensive Bank Act was passed in 1871.<\/p>\n<p>Briefly, the Act authorizes a bank to take deposits and                     to deal in, discount, and lend money on commercial paper,                     stocks, bonds and debentures of municipal and other corporations,                     and on federal, provincial, British or foreign public securities.<\/p>\n<p>A distinctive feature of our banking system is the fact                     that bank charters expire and come up for renewal every ten                     years. They are not renewed until Parliament makes a clause-by-clause                     examination of the Bank Act and considers any amendments proposed.<\/p>\n<p>There is no other business in Canada subject to such scrutiny,                     and Mr. Jamieson says: &#8220;In no other country is a similar practice                     followed. He points out that in 1900 the government offered                     to make the bank charters perpetual, but that the banks, after                     full discussion, resolved to ask that charters be renewed                     for ten years only. They made this request because they believed                     that the banking system would be all the better for being                     flexible, able to adjust itself to the needs of the country                     and the people as these changed over the years.<\/p>\n<p>Under the Bank Act, the individual banks are managed and                     supervised in such a way as to command confidence. The public                     is represented by the Minister of Finance, who works through                     the Inspector-General of Banks. This officer of the Department                     of Finance receives monthly statements of bank conditions;                     he is required to examine every bank at least once a year,                     and he may examine the books of any bank at any time.<\/p>\n<p>Every bank has an Inspection Department of its own, whose                     staff makes a thorough examination of every branch at least                     once a year, without notice of when it will be done.<\/p>\n<p>In addition to all this supervision and checking, an independent                     audit of every bank is made yearly by two auditors appointed                     by and responsible to the shareholders. These auditors can                     be selected only from a list approved by the Minister of Finance.                     They must be professionally and legally qualified, and not                     members of the same firm.<\/p>\n<p>All these safeguards &#8211; the decennial revision, inspections,                     examinations, and audits &#8211; are pretty complete in themselves,                     but in addition the Bank of Canada keeps closely in touch                     with all banking developments.<\/p>\n<p>While the aggregate supply of money is determined by the                     central bank, it rests with the chartered banks to provide                     the individual credit requirements of commerce and industry                     and of the public generally. This eliminates all the many                     dangers and abuses inherent in a system which would distribute                     credit through a government monopoly.<\/p>\n<h3>The Banks&#8217; Management<\/h3>\n<p>The chartered banks are owned by some 66,000 shareholders,                     about 75 per cent of them Canadians. They come from every                     walk of life; farmers and ranchers, lumberjacks and miners,                     stenographers and businessmen, teachers and clergymen, forming                     as representative a group of Canadians as can be found anywhere.<\/p>\n<p>The par value of bank shares is fixed by The Bank Act at                     $10, changed from $100 at the 1944 revision to encourage wider                     diffusion of ownership. No shareholder makes a fortune out                     of his investment: the dividends he received in 1952 were                     only 4.96 per cent of his equity. The equity is the total                     of the par value of the stock, the premium the shareholder                     paid over and above the par value of the stock, and some undivided                     profits left in the business over a long period of years.<\/p>\n<p>Directors are representatives of the shareholders, elected                     by ballot at the annual meeting. They appoint the management                     of the bank, and otherwise act as do the directors of any                     commercial company.<\/p>\n<p>Like the bank itself, the directors are limited as to what                     they may and may not do. The majority must be British subjects                     domiciled in Canada; no man may be a director of more than                     one bank; directors are liable in criminal law if they help                     in giving any creditor of the bank an unfair preference over                     other creditors, or if they knowingly or even negligently                     sign any return containing a false or deceptive statement.                     Directors have no &#8220;edge&#8221; on the general public in the way                     of obtaining credit. No director may be present at a board                     meeting when an advance in which he is interested is being                     discussed and decided. The published return of the Minister                     of Finance for September 30, 1953 shows that out of total                     loans aggregating $4,306,685,687, loans to bank directors                     or firms in which they were partners, or loans for which they                     were guarantors, amounted to only $15,850,557, equal to&nbsp;.37                     per cent.<\/p>\n<h3>Executive and Staff<\/h3>\n<p>Responsible to the Board of Directors for management of                     the bank is the President. Mr. Jamieson says in Chartered                     Banking in Canada: &#8220;In the earlier days of chartered banking                     the presidency was seldom regarded as a full-time position,                     and usually, although not always, was held by someone other                     than a trained banker.&nbsp;&#8230;With the tremendous growth                     of business in Canada during the last quarter century has                     come a corresponding expansion in the resources and liabilities                     of the banks, greatly increasing the responsibility placed                     upon the heads of these institutions. In consequence, during                     this period the tendency among bank directors has been more                     and more to look upon the presidency as a full-time position                     and to elect a trained banker to fill it.<\/p>\n<p>This policy of promotion within the bank, even to the topmost                     position, means the opening up of wide opportunity for young                     men in banking. Practically all general managers and presidents                     started as juniors in small branches. By the time they reach                     maturity they are well equipped with human and business understanding.<\/p>\n<p>Banks provide a good deal of money, in addition to the contributions                     of the staff themselves, to remove from employees the fear                     of unemployment, of sickness, and of a penniless old age.                     They contribute heavily to pension, life insurance, health                     insurance, and other plans.<\/p>\n<p>The manager for whom an employee works reports regularly                     on his qualifications, and supplementary reports are made                     by the inspectors in the course of their annual visits. These                     are reviewed and weighed by supervisors and by the staff department                     at Head Office, so that they may promote persons of ability,                     and move them into departments where they can do their best                     work most happily.<\/p>\n<h3>Strength of the Banks<\/h3>\n<p>The chartered banks have been put to an acid test at least                     five times within recent memory: the crash of world markets                     in 1929; Britain&#8217;s going off the gold standard in 1931; the                     closing of every bank in the United States in 1933; the outbreak                     of war in 1939; and reconstruction following 1945. During                     all these upheavals no Canadian has had to fear for the loss                     of a single dollar of his bank deposit.<\/p>\n<p>The public has justified confidence that the banks will                     honour their obligation to repay their deposits, and this                     confidence is the key-stone of our banking system. It                     is soundly based upon a number of factors: the past record                     of the banks, the legislative provisions concerning them,                     and the principles under which they are managed.<\/p>\n<p>One of these principles is that the banks always maintain                     in cash and in readily realizable form a certain proportion                     of the assets which are the counterpart of the deposits, and                     they keep the balance in certain types of assets of varying                     degrees of liquidity. &#8220;Cash reserves&#8221; or &#8220;bank cash&#8221; are the                     terms used to describe assets which are absolutely liquid,                     and first thing every morning there is laid on the desk of                     the chief executive officer of the bank a report of this figure                     at that moment.<\/p>\n<p>Cash reserves over the banking system average ten per cent                     of all deposits, in the form of notes of and deposits with                     the Bank of Canada. The Bank Act stipulates only five per                     cent, but the banks keep twice that amount.<\/p>\n<p>After setting aside this ten per cent, earning nothing at                     all for the bank, a further percentage of depositors&#8217; funds                     is kept in short-term investments, upon which the yield                     is low. After that comes investment in bonds of medium-term,                     and after that the well-understood business of lending                     to individuals, businesses, industries, municipalities, school                     districts and governments.<\/p>\n<p>Everyone knows the danger of conducting his affairs, either                     in business or in home management, without reserves, and it                     is natural that institutions with so great responsibilities                     to the public as have the chartered banks should be careful                     to provide adequate protection. The constant anticipation                     of the demand for cash, and variation of the reserve in accordance                     with it, is a most important part of the banker&#8217;s work, and                     is given the keenest attention by the chief banking officers.<\/p>\n<h3>Deposits<\/h3>\n<p>It has been pointed out that the Canadian banking system                     stands ready to pay out to every depositor in cash all or                     any part of his deposit.<\/p>\n<p>Ask any banker what is the first and most indispensable                     concern of a bank and he will say there is only one answer:<\/p>\n<p>Take care of the depositors funds&#8217;. All bank lending has                     to be done with an eye first to the safety of the funds of                     the depositors.<\/p>\n<p>Deposits are divided into two classes, current and savings.                     In our chartered banks there were at the end of September,                     1952, individual savings accounts numbering 7,700,214, with                     total deposits of $4,900,880,316 payable in Canada in Canadian                     currency. On the same date there were 1,129,239 current accounts,                     representing a dollar total of $3,025,956,668.<\/p>\n<p>Because current accounts are active and subject to wide                     fluctuations, and because a great deal of work is entailed                     in keeping them up to date, it is not usual to allow interest                     on balances. Some accounts, wherein the balance is not sufficient                     to offset the cost, are subject to a service charge calculated                     to reimburse the bank for the out-of-pocket expense                     involved in operating that account.<\/p>\n<p>Savings accounts represent the accumulations of small savers                     who do not enter the investment market, and they are also                     used by those who are accumulating funds to invest. Canadian                     banks have consistently encouraged savings.<\/p>\n<p>There is little formality about the opening of a savings                     account. No one need hesitate to enter the bank because his                     resources are small. Any member of the staff will gladly help                     to fill out the simple form; the teller will accept the deposit,                     whether of $1 or $100, the ledgerkeeper will ask the new customer                     to supply a sample of his signature, and a pass-book                     will be issued showing the amount of the deposit.<\/p>\n<p>This amount is an obligation of the bank, which it will                     meet by paying the sum either on a withdrawal slip presented                     by the depositor or on the authority of a cheque issued and                     signed by the depositor. By far the largest part of all payments                     in Anglo-Saxon countries is made by cheque, and though                     not required by law to do so the banks in Canada allow chequing                     against savings accounts. A certain chequing privilege is                     allowed without charge for bank book-keeping involved,                     but if the number of cheques issued is excessive in relation                     to the minimum credit balance, a small charge is made.<\/p>\n<h3>Extending Credit<\/h3>\n<p>Banks do not institute loans: the initiative must come from                     the borrower. A bank would not take a million dollars, for                     example, put it into the hands of Mr. John Doe, and say in                     effect: &#8220;Here is a million dollars: go and start a factory.&#8217;<\/p>\n<p>This does not mean that the banks are unwilling to make                     loans. The price that corporations and individuals are willing                     to pay for accommodation provides a big part of the revenue                     the banks need to meet their obligations.<\/p>\n<p>While it is inevitable that bankers are subject to error                     the same as all other humans, it is seldom that a worthy and                     deserving applicant for a loan fails to obtain consideration.                     There is sometimes a person whose ideas about his merits for                     a loan differ from the ideas of his banker. It may be said,                     however, that this does not often happen. The banker knows                     that the prospective borrower is free, under this system of                     ours, to go to any or all of the other chartered banks with                     his application, and if he has judged hastily or turned down                     the loan without reason, his bank loses the business.<\/p>\n<h3>Variety of Loans<\/h3>\n<p>Banks extend credit to producers, to business, to industry,                     to individuals, to municipalities, to institutions and to                     governments for their legitimate needs. Farm co-operatives,                     the wheat pools and dairy pools use the banks&#8217; facilities.                     Countless people and institutions are using bank credit regularly.<\/p>\n<p>The scope and intensity of the banks&#8217; lending for constructive                     purposes is shown in a return made to Parliament, dated September                     1952. It dealt with loans of all sorts in Canada. Loans to                     farmers amounted to 10.3 per cent of the total. Loans to grain                     dealers and grain exporters came to 5.8 per cent. Loans to                     municipal governments and school districts represented 3.2                     per cent, and to provincial governments&nbsp;.2 per cent.                     Loans to wholesale and retail merchandisers were 15 per cent                     of the total. Loans to the forest industries were 4.2 per                     cent; loans to construction contractors 4.9 per cent. There                     were other loans to mining, fishing, fish-packing and                     curing, public utilities, churches, hospitals, charitable,                     religious and educational institutions, and so forth. These                     figures show that loans to help primary production, manufacturing                     and distribution form an important part of the credit service                     which banks provide to the people of this country.<\/p>\n<p>Current loans are usually made under a &#8220;line of credit&#8221;,                     which means that the borrower estimates his probable credit                     requirements for the ensuing year and then obtains approval                     from his bank for a &#8220;line&#8221; of that amount. As need arises                     throughout the year, advances within the authorized credit                     are made by the bank.<\/p>\n<p>Commercial &#8220;letters of credit&#8221; provide a different medium,                     one through which a substantial part of Canada&#8217;s import trade                     is financed. Through their foreign branches and their close                     connections with foreign banks, the Canadian banks are in                     position to issue letters of credit for use in practically                     every country in the world with which normal trade is carried                     on.<\/p>\n<h3>Facilitating Trade<\/h3>\n<p>In these and other ways of making loans the banks satisfy                     a great variety of credit requirements and facilitate the                     trade of the country. They lend to an individual to buy his                     coal or to pay his doctor&#8217;s bills; to a farmer to put in his                     crop, to buy binder twine, and to pay the labour to harvest                     his crop; to the grain dealer so that he may buy the farmer&#8217;s                     grain at the elevator; to insure the transportation and marketing                     of the crop. In much the same way the banks lend to every                     other form of primary production and to the agencies which                     transport, process and market the commodities produced.<\/p>\n<p>Small personal loans are made salaried people and wage-earners                     for many purposes. Some people use them to make house or property                     improvements, to buy equipment and appliances, to pay medical                     and other professional accounts, to pay taxes, for travel                     and recreation, to buy clothing and motor cars. Loans are                     seldom below $50, rarely exceed $1,000, and the average runs                     between $100 and $500. More than half the total number of                     bank loans in Canada are for amounts of $500 or less.<\/p>\n<p>The banks&#8217; facilities in extending credit are available                     to every worthy citizen, regardless of his monetary worth                     or the size of his business. Our banking service is rendered                     impartially. It takes no cognizance of a man&#8217;s politics.<\/p>\n<p>Every application for credit is considered on its merits.                     The most important question a bank manager asks is this: &#8220;Can                     and will the applicant repay this amount in accordance with                     the terms of the loan?&#8221; Character is of considerable weight                     in arriving at the answer.<\/p>\n<p>Next comes an appreciation of the borrower&#8217;s management                     ability. As Mr. Jamieson points out, a man may be absolutely                     honest and have the best of intentions but if he is unable                     to manage a business capably he is usually a poor credit risk.<\/p>\n<p>Every branch manager has authority to make loans up to a                     certain maximum without the need for reference to higher authority.                     There are no set rules about the maximum, which is fixed for                     the branch manager individually on the basis of his experience                     and judgment.<\/p>\n<p>Above the maximum, a manager must refer the application                     to his district supervisor, who, too, has a discretionary                     limit. More than ninety per cent of all bank loans in Canada                     are made by the men in the field without any reference to                     higher authority.<\/p>\n<p>Managers and supervisors try to be helpful to the borrowers                     as well as businesslike for their bank. Many cases are on                     record of applicants for credit expressing their gratitude                     for having been refused a loan. Events had convinced them                     of the soundness of the bank manager&#8217;s judgment.<\/p>\n<h3>Section 88<\/h3>\n<p>Looking backward, it is apparent that it would have been                     quite impossible for Canada to have developed in the way Canada                     has developed without Section 88 of the Bank Act.<\/p>\n<p>This is a distinctive feature of Canadian banking, foreshadowed                     in 1859 by an Act called An Act Granting Additional Facilities                     in Commercial Transactions, the first step toward the &#8220;pledge&#8221;                     section of the Bank Act.<\/p>\n<p>The section permits loans to specified classes of people                     on the security of merchandise in their possession. Loans                     may be made to manufacturers on the security of goods manufactured                     by them or in the process of manufacture or procured as raw                     materials to be manufactured. Wholesalers may obtain loans                     on the security of products of the farm, forest, mine or fishery.                     Farmers put up as security their threshed grain or their livestock                     or they may obtain money for the purchase of seed-grain,                     fertilizer or binder twine on the security of the crop to                     be grown or harvested. At the 1944 revision of the Bank Act                     provision was also made for making advances to farmers for                     the purchase of implements, equipment or a farm electric system                     on the security of the goods purchased, and for loans for                     the alteration, improvement or development of the farm, on                     the security of agricultural implements owned by the farmer,                     or, in certain cases, by way of mortgage or hypothec on the                     property being improved. Fishermen may obtain credit on the                     security of fishing vessels, fishing equipment and the fishermen&#8217;s                     catch.<\/p>\n<p>It will be seen that this feature of Canadian banking, with                     its provision of credit through all stages of production,                     has contributed greatly to the comfort and prosperity of individuals                     as well as to the speedy and sound development of the country.<\/p>\n<h3>Branch Banking<\/h3>\n<p>Another outstanding feature of Canadian banking, specially                     adapted to the nature of our country, is its system of branches.                     Branch banking brings the knowledge, resources and facilities                     of great institutions to remote towns and villages, giving                     their people the same sense of security they would enjoy if                     they dealt with the chief offices of the banks.<\/p>\n<p>The head offices do not accept deposits or make loans. It                     is to a branch that a customer goes to transact banking business.<\/p>\n<p>The eleven chartered banks have more than 4,000 branches.                     Of these 3,923 are spread over Canada from Atlantic to Pacific,                     and as far north as Port Radium, in the Northwest Territories,                     40 miles south of the Arctic Circle, where we opened Canada&#8217;s                     farthest north chartered bank branch in 1952.<\/p>\n<p>The number of branches per bank operated within Canada varies                     from 724 which is the largest number (The Royal Bank of Canada)                     to the single branch of The Mercantile Bank of Canada. In                     branches abroad, The Royal Bank again leads, having 69 branches                     out of a total 115.<\/p>\n<p>The advantages of a branch banking system are many, but                     one in particular is that it permits the use in one branch                     of excess funds from another. If the deposits of one branch                     are in excess of its loan and cash requirements the excess                     is credited to head office, which may then credit it to other                     branches where the loan requirements exceed deposits, or may                     invest it in securities.<\/p>\n<p>The diversity of lending risks provided by the branch system                     relieves the bank of the danger to which unit banks are exposed                     through crop failures and other local disasters.<\/p>\n<p>Foreign branches have an important function in Canada&#8217; import                     and export trade. A country like this, in which the foreign                     trade turnover amounted to $8,386 million in the twelve months                     of 1952, finds it inestimably valuable to have domestic banks                     with foreign branches ready to serve commercial needs of importers                     and exporters.<\/p>\n<p>Besides exporters receiving payment in funds other than                     Canadian, and importers who have to make payment in such funds,                     there are many others who want to sell or buy foreign exchange,                     so specially trained staffs have been set up by tile banks.                     The foreign exchange and banking arrangements departments                     at head office organize the required facilities and control                     the operations. They assemble information on markets, they                     arrange letters of credit, and they expedite in many other                     ways the flow of goods and services that makes Canada the                     world&#8217;s third greatest trading nation.<\/p>\n<h3>Subsidiary Services<\/h3>\n<p>Custody of funds and extension of credit are the great and                     most important functions of the banking system, but the banks                     go farther afield in their service to people.<\/p>\n<p>They cash all federal government cheques &#8211; tens of millions                     of them every year &#8211; without charge at any branch anywhere                     in Canada. They cash all coupons detached from federal government                     bonds, and there are millions of them. They provide safekeeping                     services and facilities for the preservation of valuables                     and important documents. They sell drafts and money orders                     for safe transfer of money payments in Canada and abroad.                     They accept payment of bills for telephone service, electricity                     and gas: issue travellers&#8217; cheques: provide letters of identification                     for customers travelling outside Canada, and letters of introduction                     to banks in the countries being visited. They are bookkeepers                     for their customers. Where so arranged, they will make up                     payrolls in envelopes for their customers, or pay wages for                     customers by crediting the employee&#8217;s account from a list                     supplied them, or even pay a customer firm&#8217;s wages in cash                     in the banking office.<\/p>\n<p>This Monthly Letter tells only a small part of the services                     banks give. Scores of thousands of people have found it worth                     while, before undertaking any material change in their lives,                     to talk it over with their bank manager, who is always ready                     to serve them.<\/p>\n<p>To all this service there is added a priceless benefit:                     the inviolable secrecy with which customers&#8217; affairs are conducted                     in the banks. Every employee on entering the service of the                     bank must sign a declaration of secrecy concerning customers&#8217;                     affairs, and in some banks the importance of this is emphasized                     by requiring staff members to renew the declaration year by                     year.<\/p>\n<p>The confidence of the customer is regarded not only with                     reference to his account, but in other matters. Neither the                     branch manager nor any member of his staff knows, for example,                     the contents of a customer&#8217;s safety deposit box, nor can it                     be learned by outsiders except by due process of law taken                     with the customer&#8217;s knowledge.<\/p>\n<h3>This is Canadian Banking<\/h3>\n<p>The Canadian banking system is a product of evolution, and                     it is still pliable. Day-to-day improvements, conforming                     to the needs and whimsies of customers, and the every-ten-year                     revision of charters, keep the banks moving in tune with the                     development of business and culture in Canada.<\/p>\n<p>A bank is principally a business institution, established                     to give services which people need and are willing to pay                     for, at rates which will yield a modest return to the shareholders                     on the money they have invested.<\/p>\n<p>Canadian bankers know that their banks can prosper only                     in so far as the people of Canada themselves prosper. Their                     dominant interest is in high production, stable and reasonable                     prices, facility of exchange of goods and services, ready                     marketing externally of Canada&#8217;s surpluses, high employment,                     and the preservation of Canada&#8217;s high standard of living.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"author":79,"featured_media":0,"template":"","categories":[1],"rbc_letter_theme":[],"rbc_letter_year":[33],"class_list":["post-4036","rbc_letter","type-rbc_letter","status-publish","hentry","category-uncategorized","rbc_letter_year-33"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO Premium plugin v27.2 (Yoast SEO v27.2) - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-premium-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>November 1953 - Vol. 34, No. 11 - Our Banking System - RBC<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/november-1953-vol-34-no-11-our-banking-system\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"November 1953 - Vol. 34, No. 11 - Our Banking System - RBC\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"The primary operations which banks perform in the community are the receipt of money, the re-lending of it to borrowers, and the facilitating of exchange. 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