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SAVINGS See also:BANKS .1
The See also:establishment of See also:post See also:office savings banks was practically suggested in the See also:year 186o by See also: Gladstone's Bill, entitled " An See also:Act to See also: In See also:July 1889 See also:Local Loans 3 % Stock was made available for See also:purchase through the post office savings bank. " In July 1891," says the See also:report of the postmaster-general in 1897, " another Act of Parliament was passed by which the maxi-mum amount which might be deposited was raised from £150 to £200, inclusive of interest. The See also:annual limit remained at £30, but it was provided that, irrespective of that limit, depositors might replace in the bank the amount of any one withdrawal made in the same year. The See also:object of this See also:provision was to avoid curtailing the saving power of a See also:person who might be driven by emergency to make an inroad upon his See also:store, but who might nevertheless, when the emergency had passed, find himself none the poorer and able to replace the money withdrawn. " The act provided also that where on any account the See also:principal and interest together exceeded £200, interest should cease only on the amount in excess of £200, whereas previously interest ceased altogether when it had brought the balance of an account up to £200. " The next striking development of the Savings Bank arose out of the See also:Free See also:Education Act, passed in September 1891. The 1 For a succinct account of the See also:history of the post office savings bank, " so far as depositors and the general public are concerned," see See also:Forty-third Report of Postmaster-General (1897), pp. 32 seq. government of the day desired that See also:advantage should be taken of the opportunity to inculcate upon parents and See also:children alike a See also:lesson of See also:thrift—that they should See also:save the school pence which they were no longer See also:bound to pay. The Education See also:Department and the postmaster-general worked in See also:concert to realize this end. School managers were urged to See also:press the See also:matter upon all concerned, See also:special See also:stamp slips were prepared and issued, managers were supplied on See also:credit with See also:stocks of stamps to be sold to the children, and clerks from the nearest post offices attended at See also:schools to open accounts and receive deposits. The arrangement began in See also:January 1892; about 1400 schools adopted the See also:scheme at once, and three years later this number had risen to 3000. A sum of nearly £14,000 was estimated to have been deposited in schools in 5 months, and about £40,000 in the first year. Concurrently with the spread of the stamp-slip system in the schools, the See also:extension of School See also:Penny Banks, connected intimately with the Savings Bank, was a conspicuous result of the effort to turn into profitable channels the pence which no longer paid school fees. " In December 1893 another Act of Parliament extended the annual limits of deposits from £30 to £50. The maximum of £200 remained unchanged, but it was provided that any accumulations accruing after that amount had been reached should be invested in government stock unless the depositor gave instructions to the contrary. In December 1893 arrangements were made for the use of the See also:telegraph for the withdrawal of money from the savings bank. Postmasters-general had hesitated See also:long before sanctioning this new departure. It was known that the system was in force abroad, and it was recognized that there might be, and doubtless were, cases in the United Kingdom where the possibility of withdrawing money without delay might be all-important, and might save a depositor from See also:debt and See also:distress. But, on the other See also:hand, it was strongly held that the cause of thrift was sometimes served by interposing a delay between a sudden See also:desire to spend and its realization; and it was also held to be essential to maintain a marked distinction between a bank of deposit for savings and a bank for keeping current accounts." On the whole, the balance of See also:opinion was in favour of the change, and two new methods of withdrawal were provided. A depositor might telegraph for his money and have his See also:warrant sent to him by return of post, or he might telegraph for his money and have it paid to him in an See also:hour or two on the authority of a telegram from the savings bank to the postmaster. The first method cost the depositor about 9d., the second cost him about is. 3d. for the transaction. On the 3rd of July 1905 a new system of withdrawal was instituted, under which a depositor, on presentation of his See also:book at any post office open for savings bank business, can withdraw immediately any sum not exceeding D. Depositors have availed themselves extensively of this system. During 1906, 4,758,440 withdrawals, considerably more than one-half of the See also:total number of withdrawals, were made "on demand," and as a consequence the number of withdrawals made by telegraph See also:fell to I22,8oz, against 168,036 in the previous year (during only half of which the " on demand " system was in force). By an act which came into force on the 1st of January 1895 See also:building See also:societies, duly incorporated, were enabled to deposit at any one See also:time a sum not exceeding £300, and to buy government stock up to £50o through the savings bank. Savings Bank See also:Finance.—The increase in the deposits lodged in the post office savings bank must be ascribed to a variety of causes. See also:Numbers of trustee banks have been closed, and have transferred their accounts to the post office bank; greater facilities have been offered by the bank; the limits of deposit in one year, and of total deposit, have been raised; and, since See also:October 1892, deposits may be made by See also:cheque; while the long-continued fall in the See also:rate of interest made the assured 21% of the post office savings bank an increasing temptation to a class of investors previously accustomed to look elsewhere. The high See also:price of See also:consols, due in See also:part to the magnitude of purchases on savings bank account, proved a serious embarrassment to the profitable working of the bank, which had shown a balance of earnings on each year's working until 1896, after paying its expenses and 21% interest to its depositors. Economical working minimized, but did not remove the difficulty. The average cost of each transaction, originally nearly 7d., has been brought down to 54d. Down to the year 1896, £1,598,767 was paid into the exchequer under § 14 of the Act 40 Viet. C. 13, being the excess of interest which had accrued year by year. But since 1895 there have been deficits in each year, and in 1905, owing principally tc the reduced rate on consols, the See also:expenditure exceeded the income by £88,094. The central savings bank having outgrown its See also:accommodation in See also:Queen See also:Victoria See also:Street, London, a new site waspurchased in 1898 for £45,000 at See also:West See also:Kensington, and the See also:foundation-See also: I in 4 Scotland . . . 372,801 122,365,193 15 18 5 I in 12 Ireland . 381,865 5,126,299 13 15 0 I in 12 Totals . 8,058,153 21 2 1 8,439,983 1135,549,645 16 13 I in 5 On the 31st of December 19os. England and Wales . 9,027,112 £ s. d. I in 3.8 135,668,450 15 0 7 Scotland . . . . 451,627 6,205,339 13 14 10 1 in Io.4 Ireland . . . 484,310 10,237,351 21 2 9 1 in 9.1 Totals 9,963,049 152,111,140 15 5 4 I in 4.3 Between the foundation of the bank and the end of 1899, upwards of £648,000,000, inclusive of interest, was credited to depositors, of which £474,000,000 was 'withdrawn. There were 232,634,596 deposits, 81,804.509 withdrawals, 27,071,556 accounts opened, and 18,631,573 accounts closed. The See also:cross-entries, or instances where the account is operated upon at a different office from that at which it was opened, amounted to 33 %. It is chiefly in respect of this facility that the post office savings bank enjoys its advantage over the trustee savings bank. In 1905, 16,320,204 deposits were made, amounting to £42,300,617. In the same year the withdrawals numbered 7,155,283, the total sum withdrawn being £42,096,037. The interest credited to depositors was £3,567,206, and the total sum See also:standing to their credit on the 31st of December 1900 was £152,I II,14o. Additional information and CommentsThere are no comments yet for this article.
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