SUMMARY 105 error as those who held a similar view while thinking that banks can exercise a considerable influence over the volume of currency and the level of prices. With respect to the lending activities of banks, then, we notice first that there were very few who recognized that anything more was involved than the passing on of what had been received from depositors. The question next arose whether banks committed these funds to the custody of those who would use them to the best interests of the community. In general, the assumption that bank loans are wisely directed underlay the statement that banks bring idle surpluses into active employment. Some expressly stated that banks overcome the difficulty that those with spare cash frequently do not know who is worthy of a loan, and all who advanced this intermediary function of banking as one of its beneficial services implied that the country’s capital was more advantageously used than it would have been in the absence of banks. But there were some, like Gouge and Raguet, who be- lieved that bank loans were detrimental to society. Sometimes it was asserted that the short duration of the loans made them available chiefly for undesirable speculation; in other cases the judgment, if not the impartiality, of bank directors in passing upon prospective borrowers was questioned.