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Report of the British Economic Mission to Australia

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Bibliographic data

fullscreen: Report of the British Economic Mission to Australia

Monograph

Identifikator:
1804119261
URN:
urn:nbn:de:zbw-retromon-188010
Document type:
Monograph
Author:
Moreland, William Harrison http://d-nb.info/gnd/172263670
Title:
The agrarian system of Moslem India
Edition:
2. ed. Reissue (d. Ausg. Cambridge) 1929; [Reprint]
Place of publication:
Delhi
Publisher:
Oriental Books, Munshiram Manoharlal
Year of publication:
1968
Scope:
XVII, 296 S.
Digitisation:
2022
Collection:
Economics Books
Usage license:
Get license information via the feedback formular.

Chapter

Document type:
Monograph
Structure type:
Chapter
Title:
Chapter VI. The last phase in Northern India
Collection:
Economics Books

Contents

Table of contents

  • Report of the British Economic Mission to Australia
  • Title page
  • Contents
  • Part I. Introduction
  • Part II. Main problems
  • Part III. Summary of conclusions and recommendations
  • Part IV. Supplementary memoranda and conclusions
  • Supplementary memoranda

Full text

4. In Australia a much greater pro- 
portion of credit business is done by 
means of overdrafts than is the case in 
(ireat Britain, and the bankers whom 
ve saw were of opinion that it would 
se advisable, if possible, to substitute 
bills of exchange for bank overdrafts, 
especially in connection with the 
supply of credit facilities in the event 
of the setting up of a reserve bank, 
because part of the machinery of a 
central bank is the acceptance and dis- 
counting of trade bills whereby trade 
credits are automatically increased 
when and in proportion as an expan- 
sion of trade may call for such action, 
or automatically decreased when the 
course of business naturally calls for a 
diminution in the available credits. 
The primary difficulty in effecting 
such an alteration is the cost of 
stamping the relative documents (bills 
of exchange). In Victoria this is 4s. 
per cent., and to reduce this (say to 
is.) would greatly encourage the desir- 
able practice of using bills of exchange 
in substitution for overdrafts. 
5. The question of establishing a 
reserve bank was discussed at all our 
meetings, and we found that, generally 
speaking, the banking community is 
in favour of such an establishment, 
though there are some reservations as 
to the expediency of making the Com- 
monwealth Bank that reserve bank, 
hecause the Commonwealth Bank at 
present acts as an ordinary trading 
hank, and, therefore, does not wholly 
fulfil the following conditions of the 
central bank, which, inter alia, Sir 
Ernest Harvey in a recent article laid 
“own as heing essential for such a 
sody : — 
‘ A central bank, in its manage- 
ment and policy, should be free 
from Government control and the 
influence of politics. 
“The assets of the central bank 
should be of the most liguid 
character possible. 
“ A central bank should be the 
hanker of the trading banks. 
‘““ A central bank should not 
ordinarily compete with the 
trading banks for general hanking 
business. 
‘A central bank should quote 
publicly the rate at which it is 
prepared to discount approved 
bills.”’ 
6. A recent author, writing on cen- 
ral banks throughout the world, says: 
‘In the case of Australia, where the 
juestion of establishing a true central 
rank is now under discussion, one of 
ihe issues that will have to be faced is 
‘hat the Commonwealth Bank of Aus- 
ralia is, under the present law, per- 
nitted to engage in general banking 
'usiness to an extent inconsistent with 
‘he responsibilities of such an 
wganization.” He also says: ‘Such 
V vague provision as that in the law 
egulating the Commonwealth Bank of 
\ustralia, namely, that it may make 
wdvances on any security that it thinks 
ufficient, would be out of place 
n the character of a true central 
yank.” 
7. We have no desire to intervene 
n the question which the banks are 
‘ully and scientifically considering, 
yut because we are of opinion that the 
stablishment of a bank of reserve 
which at the same time would facili- 
ate trade and add security) is desir- 
ible, we think it is a matter for con- 
sideration : — 
(a) Whether if the Common- 
wealth Bank is to be (as it 
naturally would be, and, indeed, is 
proposed to be) the reserve bank, 
the directors should not be ap- 
pointed otherwise than by the 
Fovernment. 
(b) Whether its branches, in so 
‘ar as they are ordinary trading 
ranches, should not be entirely 
livorced from the bank acting as 
a reserve bank. 
(¢) Whether in order to afford 
proper opportunities for the issue 
and negotiation of trade bills, 
which facilitate the business of a 
reserve bank, the stamp duties on 
bills of exchange should not be 
very much reduced. 
8. It was suggested to us by the 
vankers themselves that greater use 
night be made of their financial 
-esources if they were fully consulted 
ome time before the issue of Govern- 
nent loans and securities in order that 
they might the better take any neces 
ary action to support such issues.
	        

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