International Finance eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 125 pages of information about International Finance.

International Finance eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 125 pages of information about International Finance.

Notes Issued L56,908,235 Government Debt L11,015,100
                                    Other Securities 7,434,900
                                    Gold Coin and Bullion 38,458,235
                                    Silver Bullion —–­
                        ----------- -----------
                        L56,908,235 L56,908,235
                        ----------- -----------

Banking department.

Proprietors’ Capital L14,553,000 Government Securities L11,005,126
Rest 3,431,484 Other Securities 33,623,288
Public Deposits 13,318,714 Notes 27,592,980
Other Deposits 42,485,605 Gold and Silver Coin 1,596,419
Seven Day and other
  Bills 29,010
                        ----------- -----------
                        L73,817,813 L73,817,813
                        ----------- -----------

With the Bank of England thus acting as a centre to the system, there has grown up around it a circle of the great joint stock banks, which provide credit and currency for commerce and finance by lending money and taking it on deposit, or on current account.  These banks work under practically no legal restrictions of any kind with regard to the amount of cash that they hold, or the use that they make of the money that is entrusted to their keeping.  They are not allowed, if they have an office in London, to issue notes at all, but in all other respects they are left free to conduct their business along the lines that experience has shown them to be most profitable to themselves, and most convenient for their customers.  Being joint stock companies they have to publish periodically, for the information of their shareholders, a balance sheet showing their position.  Before the war most of them published a monthly statement of their position, but this habit has lately been given up.  No legal regulations guide them in the form or extent of the information that they give in their balance sheets, and their great success and solidity is a triumph of unfettered business freedom.  This absence of restriction gives great elasticity and adaptability to the credit machinery of London.  Here is a specimen of one of their balance sheets, slightly simplified, and dating from the days before the war:—­

Liabilities.

Capital (subscribed)   L14,000,000
----------
Paid up                  3,500,000
Reserve                  4,000,000
Deposits                87,000,000
Circular Notes, etc.     3,000,000
Acceptances              6,000,000
Profit and loss            500,000
-----------
L104,000,000
-----------

ASSETS

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International Finance from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.