112
POSTAL SAVINGS
The tendency of the total number of depository
banks to decline is due to a number of causes
among which may be mentioned : ( 1 ) the plethora
of moneyed capital during the past two years,
which has made deposits of postal savings funds
unattractive to many banks, requiring as they do
the pledge of collateral and the payment of 2¿
per cent interest; (2) the discontinuance of postal
savings banks in many communities; 11 and (3)
the legislation discriminating against banks which
are not members of the Federal reserve system
as depositories. This last item calls for further
discussion.
The Federal Reserve act, as originally enacted,
contained a clause to the effect that no govern
ment funds nor postal savings funds should be
deposited in the continental United States in any
bank not belonging to the Federal reserve sys
tem. 12 This provision was construed by the At
torney- General to permit the continuance in non
member banks of postal savings balances already
on deposit, but to prevent the making of any fur
ther deposits in such banks. 13 The discontinu-
11 Supra, pp. 53-54.
12 Sec. 15 of act.
13 Concerning this subject the Third Assistant Postmaster-
General said in his annual report for 1915 (p. 12): “No
deposits have been made in non-member banks since Novem
ber 16, 1914, the day the [Federal reserve] system went