NORMS AND TRENDS IN DEPOSITS 45 TABLE 26 PERCENTAGE DIFFERENCE FROM DISTRICT AVERAGE, 1919-1925, OF RATI0S OF DEMAND DEPOSITS TO EARNING ASSETS FOR ALL MeM- BER BANKS, BY YEARS AND FEDERAL RESERVE DistrICTS FEDERAL RESERVE DisTRICTS Boston. . .. New York. Philadelphi Cleveland. Richmond. Atlanta... Chicago. ... St. Louis. . . Minneapolis. Kansas City Dallas. ..... San Francisco. P¥CENTAGE Mrerrerrer yoay Distri— Aves AGE, 1010-1925 vCcay ! 102¢ rv 56 4 ». 82 04 23 +4 0 ad * ag trated in Table 19, in which a similar study is made of the deviations for ratios of total deposits to earning assets. It is apparent, therefore, that the years and districts in which ratios of total deposits to earning assets were high or low are not the same as those in which ratios of demand deposits to earning assets were high or low. It must, of course, be remembered that account is here taken only of the fact (as indicated by plus and minus signs) and not of the percentage amounts of variation from the seven-year level. The latter aspect of the problem is consid- ered later. From the positions which the district percentages hold yearly with respect to the levels fixed by the seven-year period, what are the characteristic directions of change from year to year? These are summarized in Table 28. Between 1919 and 1920, and 1920 and 1921, they fell. The ratios in all of the districts in 1921 as compared with 1919 followed the average trend. By 1922, the direction of change (except for three districts) was upward and continued so for nine districts through 1923, for seven during 1924, and for nine during 1925. The changes in the respective districts, summarized in Table 29, are not of the ran-