Bank
Accounts UK
The
Site Bank Accounts UK History of Banking in the UK
A
bank account is an account with a bank; via which, an individual's (or organization's)
deposited assets are kept track of. There are many in the UK, with 1000s of high
streets banks, to go onto and open account, and the online method. The United
Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, commonly known as the United Kingdom,
the UK, or Britain, is a sovereign island country located off the northwestern
coast of continental Europe. The UK includes the island of Great Britain, the
northeast part of the island of Ireland, and many small islands. Northern Ireland
is the only part of the UK with a land border, sharing it with the Republic of
Ireland. Apart from this land border, the UK is surrounded by the Atlantic Ocean,
the North Sea, the English Channel and the Irish Sea. The largest island, Great
Britain, is linked to France by the Channel Tunnel. Banks in the UK need to obey
regulations. This is my Banks Dictionary of terms. Banking in the United Kingdom
can be considered to have started in the 17th century. The industry grew out of
the profession of goldsmiths, who after the dissolution of monasteries and makers
of gold and silver plate started to have significant stocks of gold. 17th Century Many
goldsmiths were associated with The Crown and following seizure of gold held in
the Royal Mint, Tower Hill by Charles I they extended their services to gentry
and aristocracy as the Royal Mint was no longer considered a safe place to keep
gold. Goldsmiths came to be known as keepers of running cash
and they accepted gold in exchange for a receipt as well as accepting written
instructions to pay back, even to third parties. This instruction was the forerunner
to the modern banknote or cheque. Around 1650, a cloth merchant, Thomas
Smith opened the first provincial bank in Nottingham. The Bank of England
was created in 1694 18th century The Industrial Revolution and growing
trade increased the number of banks, especially in London. However there are many
examples of other merchants setting up banks outside of London and by 1784 there
were around 100+ provincial banks. An act of parliament in 1708 restricted
banks with more than six partners from issuing bank notes and this had the effect
of keeping banks as small partnerships. In addition the services offered by the
banks increased and clearing facilities, security investments and overdraft facilities
were introduced. After the South Sea Bubble, the "Bubble" Act
of 1719 was passed to the effect that the formation of joint-stock banks could
only occur by Royal Charter. A great impetus for country banking came in
1797, when the Bank of England suspended cash payments; England being threatened
by war. A handful of Frenchmen landed in Pembrokeshire, setting the country in
panic. Shortly after this incident Parliament authorised the Bank of England and
country bankers to issue notes of low denomination. The industrialist turned
banker could assist his own industry since he did not only provide a local means
of payment but accepted deposits. Here we have a parallel with the early goldsmith
banking. 19th century On October 23, 1826 a new joint stock bank,
Lancaster Banking Company, was formed. However earlier that year the Bristol Old
bank had converted from a private to a joint stock bank, making it the first joint
stock bank This was quickly followed by other institutions such as the Manchester
& Liverpool District Banking Company, National Provincial Bank. The National
Provincial bank was the first bank to be considered a truly national bank with
twenty branches across England and Wales. In 1844 the government introduced
the Bank Charter Act to regulate the issuing of bank notes. Two banking collapses,
one in 1866 and another in 1878 caused significant reputation damage but in consequence
record keeping and accounting improved. The resulting new organisations became
huge bureaucracies with a board of directors, general manager, secretary and an
army of accounting clerks. In 1896 20 smaller private banks formed a new
joint-stock bank. The leading partners of the new bank, which was named Barclay
and Company, were already connected by a web of family, business and religious
relationships. The company became known as the Quaker Bank, because this was the
family tradition of the founding families. This bank eventually became Barclays
plc. 20th century With the outbreak of war banking flourished and
the so called Big Five commenced a series of takeovers
and mergers. These banks, Westminster, National Provincial, Barclays, Lloyds and
Midland were eventually reined in by government control. Between the wars,
there was a decline to match the general depression of the time. But the banks
fought back by taking action to recruit less wealthy customers and by introducing
small saving schemes. It would take until 1950 for real recovery where there
was a huge increase in provincial branch offices and the emergence of the high
street bank. Relaxation of some controls over mergers and acquisitions and in
1976 the Banking Act increased the supervisory role of the Bank of England. Introduction
of computing, credit cards and many new services continued to drive the expansion
of banks and as deregulation was introduced competitiveness increased. Banks improved
services, refurbished antiquated premises and brought in further technology such
as ATM. 21st century Currently banks in the United Kingdom have refined
their services with most offering very similar services being distinguished only
by offering different interest rates. Indeed a very recent trend has been to not
advertise interest rates as this avoids the banks having to offer such advertised
rates to at least 60% of their customers. In 2006 the Office of Fair Trading
found that the banks were exploiting penalty bank charges on credit cards and
has suggested that banks restrict such penalty to a maximum of 12 UK pounds. Penalty
charges or Liquidated damages are illegal in UK contract law unless they represent
the real cost of a breach of contract incurred through an unauthorised overdraft
level or bounced cheque. This ruling by the OFT has been extended by many
customers to their personal bank accounts and currently the UK small claims court
system is flooded with cases of customers reclaiming these illegal
penalties. It has been reported [1] that nearly 1.8 million template letters to
take the banks to court have been downloaded from the website MoneySavingExpert.com[2].
To date no bank has appeared in court to justify its penalty charges and most
customers have recovered such charges in full. Heads of major British banks
met with the governor of the Bank of England following days of market pressure
on lenders' stocks. The Bank of England told after the March 20, 2008-meeting
that participants had "agreed to continue their close dialogue with the objective
of restoring more orderly market conditions. |