102 BANKING THEORIES IN UNITED STATES power as they receive from stockholders and depositors. If they lend any more monetary units than they have thus taken in, they are returning into circulation more than they withdrew from it, and the sole result (if we neglect the confusion attending the transition) is a depreciation of each unit, which restores the pur- chasing power of the aggregate of media of payment to its former level. Time after time it was reiterated that the only important advantages which banking confers are those of providing a sub- stitute for costly gold and silver currency, and of gathering idle surpluses of cash and placing them at the disposal of those who can give them active employment. That the reasoning underly- ing each of these two views is inconsistent with that of the other has already been suggested.' In reasoning, on the basis of the quantity theory, that banks cannot lend more than they have received from depositors,” the early writers passed incautiously from the way in which banks make loans to individuals to the way in which they provide a general circulating medium. They failed to give adequate atten- tion to the mechanism through which media of payment are furnished. They assumed that the added media of payment brought into existence when the bank expands its loans are dif- fused throughout the channels of circulation, but virtually neg- 1 See Chapter VIII. The alleged advantages and disadvantages of banking might conveniently be divided into two groups according to whether they deal with the influence of banks upon prices, or with their relation to the effective supply of capital in the country. The three major views on the effect of banks upon prices have already been given; namely, that bank currency causes price fluctuations; that either convertibility or the manner in which they are issued prevents bank notes from deviating from the norm of a metallic currency; and, thirdly, that bank notes improve upon a purely metallic medium of payment by introducing a desirable type of elasticity. The ways in which banks were said to increase the effective supply of capital in a country were also three in number. First came the naive notion that confuses an increase in the amount of media of payment with that of wealth itself. This was superseded by the doctrine that banks provide an inexpensive substitute for costly currency of gold and silver, thereby, to all intents and purposes, increasing the nation’s wealth to a like extent. And, finally, banks were said to gather sur- pluses of capital, temporarily idle in the hands of their owners, and place them at the disposition of those who can employ them productively. 2 For simplicity in exposition we may here regard stockholders as permanent depositors.