Marilyn Writes

Marilyn MacGruder Barnewall began her career as a journalist with the Wyoming Eagle in Cheyenne. During her 20 year banking career, she wrote extensively for The American Banker, Bank Marketing Magazine, Trust Marketing Magazine, and other major industry publications. The American Bankers Association (ABA) published Barnewall’s Profitable Private Banking: the Complete Blueprint, in 1987. She taught private banking at Colorado University for the ABA and trained private bankers in Singapore.

Saturday, March 12, 2016

WHAT IS A STATE BANK?



WRITTEN EXPERT TESTIMONY FOR
BANKING/FINANCE COMMITTEES
CONSIDERING STATE BANK LEGISLATION
By Marilyn MacGruder Barnewall
President, The MacGruder Agency, Inc. (Retired)


WHAT IS A STATE BANK?

A state bank is owned by the public and is not a private corporation.  It is, thus, a public bank. There is only one state bank in the United States, the Bank of North Dakota.  A state bank is quite different from state-chartered banks which are present in most of the other 49 states.

The banks on the street that do business with the public are owned by private investors, just as they are now.  They are not owned by the state.  A system of state-owned banks on Main Street would be a socialist or communist system and state banks represent quite the opposite.

A state bank is an administrator.  It grants charters to banks and acts as a correspondent bank for them.

At the current time, money center banks act as correspondent banks for the independently owned banks on Main Street.  A correspondent bank receives loan requests from smaller banks – banks too small to make a large loan when a client or prospective client requests one.  This “loan sharing” concept is good… until the large banks become endangered by marketplace forces and their own greed or stupidity.   

Under the current correspondent banking system, if one bank at the top fails, it has a spin-off effect on all of those banks for which it has acted as a correspondent bank and participated in loans with independent banks.  In a failure situation, the big bank must call its loans… including those loan participations it has made jointly with smaller banks while acting in a correspondent – or, a joint lending – capacity. Thus, it puts the smaller banks at risk of failure too… it puts the entire system at risk of failure.  That is why such banks are called “too big to fail” – or, “too big to jail.”

In a state that has its own state bank, nationally-chartered banks (banks chartered by the Comptroller of the Currency) are still invited to do business.  The primary difference for them in the new environment is that the state bank now acts as the correspondent bank, not the nationally-chartered bank... not Chase Manhattan or Wells Fargo or Bank of America, etc.

TO TURN A STATE ECONOMY AROUND AND ACHIEVE POSITIVE FINANCIAL GROWTH:

1.               Implement a state bank similar to the system in place for 93 years in the State of North Dakota.

2.               The State of North Dakota:

A.         Has enjoyed an unemployment rate as of July 2011 of 3.3%.

National                                  9.1%
North Dakota                         3.1%
 
B.         With a population of about 650,000, the Bank of North Dakota has, during the past ten years, paid the State Treasurer more than $325 million from bank profits.

C.         In 2010, the worse economy in recent history, North Dakota had its largest financial surplus in history.

D.         North Dakota tops the list of state economies, year after year.

E.         In 2011, North Dakotans will see almost $500 million of their money returned to them in the form of income and property tax cuts.  Combined 2009 and 2011 tax reductions, the average North Dakotan will enjoy a 30 drop in percent tax liability.  The Legislature also funded $342 million in property tax relief.  The owner of a $150,000 home will enjoy a tax reduction of $506.

             $341.79 million in property tax relief;
             $120 million reduction in income tax rates (17.9%)
             $25 million reduction, corporation taxes (19.5%)
             $2.125 million tax reduction, financial institutions (a drop from 7              percent to 6.5 percent).

F.         Enjoys population growth of 6% per year;

G.        No bank failures during the past ten years; the lowest home foreclosure rate in the nation; the lowest credit card default rate, too.
                   
Specifically, what does a state bank do that causes such immediate and positive results for a state’s economy?

In states other than North Dakota, the billions of dollars received from taxes and fees are deposited in large commercial banks – just like those that are borrowing trillions of dollars from the Federal Reserve System… from taxpayers.  In North Dakota, these deposits become “captive.”  They stay in the state.   The corporate headquarters of Chase Manhattan (New York City), Bank of America (Charlotte, NC), Citigroup (New York City), Wells Fargo (San Francisco) decide what they will do with those deposits.  They are famous for… what?  Their history says they invest in mortgage-backed derivatives, for one thing.  Or, the too big to fail/jail banks lend your tax dollars that your state deposits in them to businesses in their home states, not in your state.  Or the Federal Reserve secretly lends the money to Wall Street or foreign banks and businesses.  Your tax dollars leave the state, in other words.  In North Dakota – or in any state with a state bank – the tax dollars paid by the citizens of the state remain in the state.

Every state takes in taxes and fees every year.  In North Dakota, these revenues are deposited in the state bank which, in turn, makes sure a large percentage of the money gets invested in the state’s economy.  And, the state bank gives a portion of its earnings back to the State Treasury. 

North Dakota is the only state that has had a continuous budget surplus since before the financial crisis.  They have had no bank failures in the past ten years.  Their mortgage foreclosure rate and credit card default is the lowest in the country.

A July 18, 2011 Associated Press newspaper article reports jobs in North Dakota increased by 61,000 since 2000.  That doesn’t sound like a lot of jobs, but remember, this state has a population of less than 700,000.   Of those jobs, 17,000 were created between 2008 and 2010 – a time when most states were bleeding jobs. 

REASONS FOR SEEKING POTENTIAL ALTERNATIVE PATHS TO THE CURRENT BANKING SYSTEM: 

The Federal Reserve System, a non-government private corporation has since 1913 been determining monetary policy for the United States.  A good case has been made by highly recognized, eminent economists around the world who say America’s monetary policy is destroying our economy.  A recent partial audit of the Federal Reserve shows this private corporation loaned $16 trillion in near zero interest secret loans to American and foreign banks AND businesses.

The usual culprits – Citigroup received $2.5 trillion; Morgan Stanley received $2.04 trillion, Merrill Lynch got $1.9 trillion and Bank of America got $1.3 trillion (since Bank of America and Merrill Lynch are the same corporation, B of A Inc. got the most money:  $3.2 trillion).

But it wasn’t just American bankers that got nearly interest-free loans.  About $3.08 trillion went to foreign financial institutions all over Europe and Asia.

The point is, while the Fed was making the low interest rate secret loans (for which U.S. taxpayers are on the line), 6.5 million American homeowners were suffering through delinquent and foreclosed mortgages.  Why are they in foreclosure?  Because the monetary policies of the Federal Reserve System caused a real estate bubble that resulted in the loss of hundreds of billions – perhaps more than a trillion – dollars in primary residential real estate values.  They are in foreclosure or behind in house payments because Federal Reserve monetary policies have resulted in a rotten economy.

Citizens in all states question the wisdom of the Fed’s monetary policies and the taxation of future generations of American children required to pay for the monetization of United States debt.  Citizens of the states have expressed concern that the Federal Reserve System is using their tax dollars to prevent the failure of banks in foreign countries while their American financial services system is being compromised by what Congress has chosen to call “too big to fail” banks.  They complain that they are being “fed to the wolves” or “thrown to the four winds of fate” by the policies of the Federal Reserve System.

Because the Federal Reserve System refuses to allow a complete audit of the trillions of American taxpayer dollars it uses for debt monetization purposes, it is impossible to evaluate precisely how that private corporation is spending America into debt.  The Federal Reserve System is a private corporation, not a part of the United States Government, and is referred to by many banking experts as a “cartel,” (as OPEC is a cartel).  The Federal Reserve System generates private corporate profits by collecting interest on the debt it is also responsible for generating… a clear “conflict of interest” because when the nation is in debt, the Federal Reserve earns profits on the interest paid on that debt.  The Federal Reserve System profits when America’s debt is high.  When debt is low, it does not.

In response to citizen concerns about what the people perceive as a federal financial system run amok, the State of Texas has approved that state’s right to print its own currency.  The State of Utah has approved the use of gold and silver coins in everyday commerce and business.  The State of Georgia has approved the right of bank clients to open deposit accounts using gold and silver coins.  In South Carolina, State Senator Lee Bright has introduced legislation that backs the creation of a new state currency to “protect the financial stability of the Palmetto State in the event of a breakdown of the Federal Reserve System.”

"If folks lose faith in the dollar, we need to have some kind of backup," North Carolina State Sen. Bright told the Spartanburg Herald Journal's Stephen Largen.

As of March 2010, there were twelve new declarations of State Sovereignty in progress in state legislatures around America.  They include Alabama, Nebraska, Rhode Island, Wyoming, Washington, Indiana, Kentucky, Georgia, Kansas, Missouri, Mississippi and Maryland.  Obviously, state legislators see potential problems.

Legislators responsible for the reforms required to best protect the citizens they are sworn to serve must choose carefully from a broad range of reforms.  Among those reforms must be a means by which bank lending to independent businesses can be stimulated.  A vast majority of taxpayers are employed by independent businesses which have been the hardest hit by the credit freeze caused by the reckless behavior of Wall Street banks and Federal Reserve policies.

As of March 2011, there were state-owned banking bills pending in eight states to either form or do feasibility studies to assist in forming legislation.  This year, bills have been introduced in Oregon, Washington, Massachusetts, and Maryland.  Bills from 2010 are pending in Illinois, Virginia, Hawaii, and Louisiana.  The Center for State Innovation in Madison, Wisconsin, was commissioned by Washington and Oregon to analyze the impact of a state bank in those two states.  The conclusion:  State-owned banks in Washington and Oregon would, CSI said, have a positive impact of substance on employment, new lending, and state and local government revenues.  In September 2011, the California State legislature passed state banking legislation and it is awaiting Governor Brown’s signature.

I began writing in my columns two years ago about how a simpler, more direct and less confrontational alternative than declaring sovereignty or legislating the state’s right to create its own currency exists for state legislators to take appropriate and immediate action to protect the citizens of their state from the clearly potential failure of the federal monetary system. 

I was the first banker and journalist to write about the need for state banks.  When I was a consultant (1979-1993), my daily rate was $2,000.  I was paid for my opinion.  In 2011 dollars, that amount would probably have increased to somewhere between $5,000 and $10,000 per day.  This is a no cost opinion:  I believe the establishment of a state bank offers the most important alternative state legislators can find.  It is a way to protect a state’s sovereignty without declaring it, and a state bank makes it possible for a state to issue its own currency (should it become necessary) without actually issuing it.  A state currency without a state monetary distribution system (state bank) is like an impotent bull:  Unable to perform.  More important, legislation declaring state sovereignty or the need for a state currency may further debilitate what little confidence remains in the federal system whereas the establishment of a state bank does not.

For example, currently the only way to clear checks written on deposits in federally-chartered (or state-chartered) banks is to utilize the check clearing system at the Federal Reserve System.  The Bank of North Dakota clears its own checks.  If a state declares sovereignty (as several have said is their right), it must be done both de jure ("according to law") and de facto – or, "in reality."  A state may say it is sovereign, but sovereignty must also be accepted by other nations and states.  For said declarations to hold legal weight and to be taken seriously nationally and internationally, the declaring (de jure) state must, according to international law, have a definable territory, it must have a governing body, and it must be able to exercise and control its own monetary power (de facto).  Any state can comply with the first two requirements (definable territory and and governing body).  Logic dictates that no state can exercise monetary power when tied to a failing federal system of finance and Federal Reserve Notes that may – or may not – maintain value.

That is the basis of the people’s concern for their economic well being.

One thing is absolutely certain.  Without a state bank, states have no alternatives should the federal system collapse.  The state system will collapse with the federal system.  We all hope that doesn’t happen, but the economy is not improving.  It gets consistently worse.  With a state bank, both state sovereignty and currency creation are possible.  What legislators need to think about is this:  Without a currency distribution system independent of the federal system currently in place, states have no alternatives but financial chaos available to them – and that is what they will get should the system fail.

In one of my editorials in News With Views (an Internet news service with a million weekly readers), I said:  “As of June 30, 2009, the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis said there were 6,898 commercial banks in the United States – but as of June 30, 1984, there were 14,369 commercial banks? In 1994, that number was pared down to 10,623. Now we have less than 6,898.”

Since local banks are a key to the ongoing economic stability and are often the sole source of independent business growth for communities, statistics indicate it is time for our legislators to look at lawful alternatives available to the state that can stimulate economic growth and taxpayer confidence.  Historic results over a period of 93 years at the Bank of North Dakota proves the value of state banks.

Of all the alternatives available, one fact stands out as identifiable truth:  States must be prepared to quickly come to the economic rescue of their citizens should the need arise.  The financial services industry currently creates an unsafe economic environment in which all alternatives must be kept open to states that want to serve the people they represent.  As it relates to the economic well-being of any state’s citizens, a state bank offers the least offensive alternative to the dangers of what may be a failing federal financial system while concurrently supporting all potential alternatives required to save citizens from extremely painful economic failure at the federal level.

As long as a State is tied to the federal system of finance, it is impossible to declare sovereignty or create a state currency because no monetary distribution system is available.

The United States is $15 trillion in debt.  We are spending $1.50 for every $1 in revenue we take in.  That is unsustainable.  Before any new dollar or Federal Reserve Note is printed, it is 46 cents in debt – and thus, it is not “a dollar” nor what the Federal Reserve purports a Federal Reserve Note worth $1.00.   I’m not a lawyer and don’t know the lawful implications of that, but I do know that if I turned a piece of paper into something and represented it has having the value of $1.00 and it was only worth 46 cents, I’d be arrested for counterfeiting.

Our problem in America today is too much centralized power.  The best way to solve that problem in the economic sector is to implement state banks… a system that decentralizes the power of the Federal Reserve System.

In short, without access to a state-owned system of banking similar to the only such system in the country – North Dakota – it is impossible to be properly prepared to protect any state’s citizens against the devastation that can result from a failure of the federal financial system.  Equally, at this time there is no legal reason barring any state from implementing a state bank similar to that 93-year old system in the state of North Dakota.

DEFINITION OF A “STATE BANK”

A state bank is owned by the public and is not a private corporation.  The banks that do business with the public are privately owned, just as they are now.  The state bank acts as an administrator, granting charters to banks and acting as a correspondent bank for them.

Banks doing business with loan, deposit and trust customers in any state would, under a properly-structured state bank system, continue to be privately owned.  The banks are privately owned but are chartered by the state rather than the Comptroller of the Currency in Washington, D.C.  That is the primary change that occurs when a state owns its own banking system:  The state, rather than the federal government, charters the state banks doing business in the state and the state establishes the qualifications private investor banks must meet to provide banking and other financial services to citizens.  The state establishes and/or approves acceptable loan policies at banks it charters.  The state bank becomes the correspondent bank for independently owned banks it charters.

Some states may try to structure a state bank for political or other purposes.  If a state bank is structured like a political toy rather than as a state bank, it will fail.  The mistakes made at the federal level that caused systemic failure must be eliminated from the state system.  They include:

1.           Fractional-reserve banking has played a huge role in creating too much currency from thin air; that, in turn, results in the inflation that has debased our currency. The only logical outcome to fractional-reserve banking is inflation.

              Inflation is not the result of an increase in the cost of good as much as it reflects a decrease in the value of the currency.  

I recommend a return to the lending policies in place during the 1970s and 1980s.  In the good old days, bank growth was dependent on bringing new deposits into the bank.  A bank could lend a percentage of its deposit base.  That percentage was sometimes determined by bank regulators… usually up to 70 percent of the deposit base, depending upon overall bank loan quality.  Banks make money on loans (loan interest) and lose money on deposits (they pay interest to depositors).  Forcing bank growth to occur on the basis of deposit growth is good… it means there is business development and new jobs in the community.  If those things aren’t there, bank growth through new deposits is not possible because new deposit accounts don’t appear when jobs aren’t being created.

Fractional-reserve banking makes bank growth dependent upon the extension of credit.  If a bank makes a million dollar loan, the Federal Reserve System makes it possible for the bank to lend $900,000; ten percent of the million dollar loan goes into the Federal Reserve System.  Thus, the name “fractional-reserve” banking.   In other words, because the bank made a million dollar loan, $900,000 of new currency has been created by the Federal Reserve fractional-reserve policies.  Creating money out of thin air results in reduced currency value and that, in turn, causes prices to rise… purchasing products with a currency that’s losing value requires more of the failing currency to purchase it.

The system of fractional-reserve banking must be kept out of the state bank system.  It is a major reason for the failure of the federal system and should not be brought to the state level.  It will, in the long run, cause them to fail, too.

A state bank administers the granting of state bank charters on the basis of the requirements established by the Advisory Boards created by the state legislature. 

A state bank is not, as many people think when they hear the words “state bank,” equivalent to “state-chartered banks” (which have been in existence for many years in most states but which are tied to the federal system of banking).

A state owned bank operates its own system of banking.  It grants member charters to independent banks (much like the Comptroller of the Currency grants national banking charters to national banks).  Though a state bank must comply with federal banking laws, the state bank, not the Federal Reserve System, establishes monetary policy for the financial institutions it charters.  A state bank may perform all functions currently performed for member banks of the Federal Reserve (such as check clearing) and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (such as insuring customer deposits).  The Bank of North Dakota does both things for the state bank but its member banks must currently clear checks through the Federal Reserve Banks and deposits must be insured by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC).  Should the federal system fail, both check clearing and deposit insurance could be included in the state system. 

A state bank can (and does, in North Dakota) function as a correspondent bank for its member banks.  It can write mortgages… and, in the current real estate market, a state bank can help establish a floor under the ongoing, downward spiral of real estate values.  There have been no bank foreclosures in North Dakota for the past ten years.  I recommend that state banks be prevented from selling real estate mortgages to Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae both of which sell mortgages to Wall Street banks where they are still, even after all of the trouble, included in mortgage-backed derivatives (which I term “worthless pieces of paper”).

WHAT A STATE BANK IS NOT:

A state bank is NOT the owner of state-chartered banks.  If it were, such a system of state-owned banks could be accurately called a “socialist banking system.” 

Properly structured state banks are not operated by politicians.  Rather, with a well-written legislative Act, the state requires the bank to be run by professional bankers under a well-controlled environment of positive regulation.  Since state bank employees are public servants, and since they are not directly involved in making loans to the public – that is done by the privately-owned independent banks serving the public – no bonuses, commissions or fees for loan generation are paid to state bank employees – or, to executive management of the bank.

State-owned banks, properly structured, do not compete with community banks.  Rather, they support them.  A state bank uses state funds (now kept in the state rather than being sent out-of-state to a “too big to fail” bank) to provide credit for local growth-based projects.  Currently, funds from state taxpayers leave the state and are leveraged for international investments.  This creates no jobs for state residents.

Neither does a properly structured state bank compete for consumer or commercial deposits.  The independently-owned banks chartered by the state handle those items – as they do now.  In North Dakota, less than 2 percent of BND deposits come from consumers.  Community banks have available to them municipal government deposits and can use the funds to create jobs locally because the BND provides letters of credit guaranteeing such loans.  As a properly-stated state bank Act reads:  “All state revenues must be deposited in the state bank.”

The Bank of North Dakota is a member of the Federal Reserve System.  It is a member because it chooses to use the convenience of Federal Reserve services available to it… not because it has no other alternative (like the other 49 states).  A state bank Act insures state bank deposits – the tax and fee dollars of the state’s taxpayers.

The Bank of North Dakota is run in a very fiscally conservative manner… it is not subject to outside interference by politicians with a special project they want to fund.  Credit policies chartered by state banks must be approved by a state bank advisory board.  Bank of North Dakota is not involved in speculative loans or derivatives and other risky ventures… nor should any state bank be.

State funds and tax monies are kept safe by a well-structured state bank.  Such banks should be self-funded.  Bank of North Dakota manages VA, FHA, and other federally-guaranteed loans that would otherwise go to large, out-of-state banks.

When local communities partner with a state bank, it allows independent banks to fund local projects which sustain economic development within the community.  The “too big to fail” banks have no interest in local communities.  Studies show that from 30 to 50 percent of public project costs are composed of loan interest paid.  Thus, the reduced cost of borrowing from a state bank can help fund infrastructure projects.

An interesting article from the Honolulu newspaper appeared on June 27, 2011.  It was a story about how the Hawaiian Bankers Association (the state association) opposes legislation being considered by that state’s legislature to implement a state bank.  The new banking system does bring down certain power structures – like the ties that exist between state banking associations and the American Bankers Association – and legislators need to be prepared for such resistance.  In North Dakota, their Bankers Association endorses the Bank of North Dakota.

It should be noted that North Dakota has the most local banks per capita and enjoys the lowest default rate on loans of any state in the nation.  Of the 93 banks doing business in North Dakota, 87 are state-chartered banks who have opted to become part of the new system – and who have prospered while other banks around the nation suffer lost profits of substance.  The other six banks are nationally chartered.

That is the ball on which everyone needs to stay focused:  The win-win situation that results from implementing a state bank – which is well worth the headaches of getting the job done (and done right).