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Small, rural banks more crucial than taxes in farm areas

The biggest maker or breaker of business in rural America is not Washington rulemakers, state environmental agencies or local taxing bodies. Instead, it’s usually the local bank. A bank’s collective fairness and wisdom can be seen from Main Street to surrounding farms.

Not so with the money center and Wall Street banks. Citibank, Bank of America and the 17 other financial giants the U.S. Treasury Department has deemed “too big to fail” are more casinos than banks. They use your money to roll their dice in risky games no one fully understands and only few can ever win.
Golly, they don’t even call themselves banks; they’re “financial service providers.” Given how Will Rogers famously explained the service industry (“Service is what the bull did to the heifer behind the barn.”) little wonder you and I got stuck holding their empty bag.

Other American banks, however, are going broke. So far this year, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. (FDIC) has closed 29 banks.
Most were immediately sold to nearby institutions to instill confidence and ensure continuity. A handful were small, rural banks like Sherman County Bank in Loup City, Neb. and Corn Belt Bank of Pittsfield, Ill.

“I call these banks ‘too small to save,’” said Mark Scanlan, vice president of ag and rural policy at the Washington, D.C.-based Independent Community Bankers of America. “They competed, and 8,400 other community banks still compete, everyday with the big banks and none asked for help.”

Why? Because no bank should be too big to fail, Scanlan suggests.

“If they’re too big to fail then they’re simply too big,” he notes. “Right now, eight banks control 64 percent of all U.S. deposits. No bank should be so big that it can threaten the entire banking system. The large institutions should be broken up.”

His counterpart at the American Banking Assoc.’s Center for Agricultural and Rural Banking, John Blanchfield, concurs.

“The concept of too big to fail is unequal and unfair and is proving too costly to taxpayers as well as banks,” he said.

In fact, if you’re a bank that is making money - and most rural and ag banks fall into that category, say both - the FDIC plans to issue a special assessment on banks (20 basis points for every dollar on deposit) to finance others’ losses.

There’s a better, more equitable plan, explained Blanchfield: a special, 10-basis point assessment and have Congress expand FDIC’s current borrowing authority from $30 billion to $100 billion.

“That would be much fairer for community and rural banks and, at the same time, not threaten their futures by having to pay for others’ past mistakes,” he said.

Also, he added, another helpful tool Congress could give rural banks would make permanent today’s temporary, higher deposit insurance guarantee.

As part of the overall bank bailout plan, FDIC raised its deposit guarantee from $100,000 per account to $250,000. That boost, however, expires Dec. 31.

“It’s very important to all banks, and especially to rural and ag banks, to have that $250,000 guarantee made permanent,” he advised, “because, first, the increase has boosted bank liquidity; it’s made them more safe. That safety has attracted more deposits.”

In turn, Blanchfield explained, more liquidity means more equity and more equity means more loans. “And more local loans mean more local business for the community. Everyone’s a winner.”

5/6/2009