The Rural Voice, 1987-05, Page 12c
et
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10 THE RURAL VOICE
AN IDEA WHOSE TIME
HAS COME AGAIN?
There is probably no longer -run-
ning disruptive relationship in society
than the one farmers have with banks.
New chapters are written every day.
The stormy history of farmers and
banks has been in its worst squall
since the dirty depression in the 1980s.
It started with high interest rates, was
exacerbated by low prices for commodi-
ties, and was little less than guerrilla
warfare when banks began foreclosing
to regain huge debts owed by farmers
and farmers started fighting back.
Farmers have won most of the skir-
mishes in the courts. The banks conti-
nue to win the war on a broad front.
New problems have arisen this
spring because some farmers haven't
been able to get the financing to plant
their crops. Banks continue to threat-
en to withdraw from farm lending alto-
gether if they don't get to do business
on their terms, if farmers manage to
persuade government to give farmers
more protection in their uneven deal-
ings with banks.
All of which brings the idea of a
farm bank back into discussions. At
a recent meeting of the Huron County
Federation of Agriculture, Larry Ryder,
the Port Elgin lawyer who has fought
in many of the farm legal battles in
recent years, spoke of a farm bank as
one way to keep other banks in line.
It isn't the money the banks could lose
if they don't have farm loans that
matters; it's the loss of deposits from
farmers and other rural residents that
could do them in.
The reason is that the banks make
money by taking your money and loan-
ing it to other people. Government
regulations say that a bank can only
loan money in proportion to the sum
it has borrowed from customers. Banks
are required to keep 10 per cent of their
borrowings on deposit and can loan
out 90 per cent. The more money
they have on deposit, the more they
can loan, and the more they can make.
Reduce the size of their deposits and
profits fall.
Eugene Whelan, as a farmer and a
farm leader in such things as co-ops
and the Federation of Agriculture, was
an early supporter of a farm bank.
"I'd dreamed about a farmers' bank
ever since I'd first entered politics — a
rural bank that understood rural agricul-
ture," he writes. "As it was, we did
the best we could through the Farm
Credit Corporation."
He goes on to say that the FCC
acted too much like a bank when he
first came to office, bragging that it
had never had a loss, which proved to
Whelan it wasn't taking enough risks.
Mr. Whelan's comment, though,
shows that even if a farmers' bank
were founded, it would likely have
shortcomings. We'd probably see the
same thing happen that has happened
in other farm -owned organizations like
the major co-operatives. After a while
it can be hard to tell the farmer -owned
businesses from the other businesses.
For one thing, the people running
the organization are probably class-
mates from the same business schools
as those running the other companies.
For another, the farmer -owned busi-
ness usually ends up following the
same trends as the other businesses —
such as making its headquarters in
Toronto. Once in the big city, mov-
ing with other big bankers every day,
how long can a farmer -owned bank
keep the ideals it set out with?
Still, the idea of a rurally owned
bank is one whose time may have
come. The gap in reality between
urban -based banks and rural life is
widening daily. As Mr. Whelan says,
it is better for farmers to help
themselves, to grab hold of their
destiny, than to be victims at the
hands of urban financiers. A farmer -
owned bank would be in the tradition
of many other steps farmers have taken
over the years to be self-reliant.0
Keith Roulston, who lives near
Blyth, is the originator and former
publisher of The Rural Voice.