From the 15th through the 18th centuries,
banks of deposit flourished in
European cities with heavy traffic in
international trade. Banks of deposit
accepted deposits of domestic and foreign
currency and held them as 100 percent
reserves, as opposed to using the
deposits to finance loans. This policy of
retaining possession of the deposits
maximized the safety of depositors’
money. Records of each merchant’s
deposits were kept in account books,
and funds were shifted from one depositor’s
account to another’s account without
coinage leaving the bank. These
deposits constituted so-called bank
money, which is a form of money that
changes ownership by bookkeeping
entries, without any coinage or receipts
changing hands. This bank money
became the principle circulating
medium in commercial transactions.
When Italian banks of deposit first
emerged in the 14th century, they
required the payer and the payee to
appear in person to transfer money in the
bank’s account books from one account
to another. Later, it became possible for
the payer and payee to meet elsewhere if
a notary was present. In 1494, Fra Luca
Pacioli, a Renaissance mathematician
and friend of Leonardo da Vinci, published
a book famous for including the
first written treatment of double-entry
bookkeeping. In the tract on doubleentry
bookkeeping, he gave the following
description of banks of deposits:
It is common practice to deal
directly with a transfer bank,
where you can deposit your money
for greater security or for the purpose
of making your daily payments
to Piero, Giovanni, and
Maratino through the bank,
because the registration of the
transferred claim is as authoritative
as a notarial instrument since it is
backed by the government . . .
Now suppose you are a banker . . .
performing a transfer: If your creditor,
without withdrawing cash,
orders payment to another party, in
your journal you debit that depositor
and credit the assignee. Thus
you make a transfer from one creditor
to another, while you yourself
remain debtor. Here you function
as an intermediary, a witness and
agent of the parties and you justly
receive a commission.
Adam Smith, in a famous digression in
the Wealth of Nations (1776), described
the class of banks called “banks of
deposit.” He identified the banks of
Venice, Genoa, Amsterdam, Hamburg,
and Nuremberg as institutions founded as
banks of deposit. According to Smith, the
currency of small states was made up
almost exclusively of the coinage of
neighboring states, leaving a small state
virtually no control over the quality of its
circulating medium. These foreign currencies,
becoming worn and clipped,
traded at a discount in foreign exchange
markets, acting as a hindrance to merchants
in the small states. Because small
states could not reform domestic currencies,
which was mostly foreign, they
established public deposit banks as a substitute.
Banks of deposit accepted
deposits of all currency, new and worn,
and exacted a discount of perhaps 5 percent
for currency depreciation from wear and
tear. The government of the state guaranteed
the value of the bank deposits. These
deposits, which changed ownership only
by means of bookkeeping entries in the
bank, represented a uniform quality and,
for that reason, often traded at a premium
over metallic coinage. According to
Smith, the premium on the bank money of
the Bank of Hamburg was 14 percent over
the clipped, worn, and otherwise diminished
currency that poured in from surrounding
states.
Aside from the state’s commitment
to maintain its integrity, bank money
had several advantages over metallic
currencies of varying consistencies.
According to Smith in his Wealth of
Nations:
Bank money, over and above its
intrinsic superiority to currency, and
the additional value which this
demand necessarily gives it, has
likewise some other advantages. It is
secure from fire, robbery, and other
accidents; the city of Amsterdam is
bound for it; it can be paid away by
a simple transfer, without the trouble
of counting, or the risk of transporting
it from one place to another.
(Smith, 1952, 205)
Perhaps the growth of paper money
during the Napoleonic era put an end to
banks of deposit. Unlike coins, paper
money could not be debased by “clipping”
bits off of it. Thus, the problem of
coins with varying degrees of wear and
tear was no longer an issue after the
advent of paper money. The Bank of
Hamburg inherited the precious metal
trade from the Bank of Amsterdam and
remained active in that trade until 1814,
when the Bank of Hamburg was converted
into the Netherlands Bank, a
different type of institution.