3.3 Overview of the Banking System
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Functions of Banks and the Banking System
Depository institutions accept deposits, make loans, and issue checkable deposit accounts. Like
commercial banks, savings and loan associations (also called savings and loans or S&Ls), savings
banks, and credit unions perform these activities. The U.S.
banking system
includes commercial
banks, savings and loans, savings banks, and credit unions. It is common practice today to refer to
all depository institutions as banks. Banks and the banking system perform fi ve functions:
(1) accepting deposits
(2) granting loans
(3) issuing checkable deposit accounts
(4) clearing checks
(5) creating deposit money
To the extent that commercial banks also perform investment banking operations (i.e., are
universal banks), they perform an additional function:
(6) raising fi nancial capital for businesses
In accepting deposits, banks provide a safe place for the public to keep money for future
use. Individuals and businesses seldom wish to spend their money as it becomes available;
without depository facilities such funds may lie idle. The banking system puts the accumu-
lated deposits to use through loans to persons and businesses that have an immediate use for
them. This, of course, is the fi nancial intermediation activity of depository institutions in the
savings-investment process.
Banks play an important role in the payments process or mechanism in place in the U.S.
fi nancial system by creating deposit money. By writing checks against demand and other
checkable deposits, it is easier for individuals and businesses to make purchases and to pay
bills or debts. Of course, it is not enough just to permit check writing; there must also be
an effi
cient mechanism for processing the checks so they can be presented to the bank that
authorized the check for payment.
Let’s take a brief look at how checks are “cleared” or processed in the United States. Let’s
assume that you owe $100 for the purchase of a product on credit from the ABC fi rm. You
write a $100 check against your checkable deposit account, held at First Bank, payable to ABC
and mail the check to ABC. An ABC employee opens the envelope containing your check and
deposits the check in ABC’s deposit account held at Last Bank.
There are three basic ways to clear a check through the U.S. banking system:
• Bank to bank
• Through a bank clearinghouse
• Through a Federal Reserve Bank
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