The Soviet Union was the first jurisdiction to implement a single-tier banking system, an experience that was subsequently emulated by a number of Communist states.
The notion of a monopolistic state financial system had longstanding roots in the Russian Empire, where fiat currency had been in use for centuries and dominant public banks were established from the 18th century onwards. [1] Following the disastrous aftermath of the Crimean War, this public banking system had to be entirely rebuilt and expanded to the private sector in the 1860s, with milestones including the establishment of the State Bank of the Russian Empire in 1861 and that of the first private-sector commercial bank in 1866. [1] : 15 In the late 19th century, slavophile journalist S. F. Sharapov advocated the creation of a "universal bank" that would fulfil the need of an autarkic Russian economy without having to abide by the constraints of the gold standard. [1] : 19
On the eve of the Russian Communist Revolution, its leader Vladimir Lenin held similar views. In a later oft-quoted text, he wrote in October 1917 (italics in original): "Without big banks, socialism would be impossible. The big banks are the "state apparatus" which we need to bring about socialism, and which we take ready-made from capitalism. [...] A single State Bank, the biggest of the big, with branches in every rural district, in every factory, will constitute as much as nine-tenths of the socialist apparatus. There will be country-wide bookkeeping, country-wide accounting of the production and distribution of goods; this will be, so to speak, something in the nature of the skeleton of socialist society." [1] : 21
Lenin's vision, which echoed Sharapov's without having apparently being directly influenced by it, was not universally held in the revolutionary movement, and was not immediately implemented. Grigory Sokolnikov, the People's Commissar of Finance in the mid-1920s, was thus quoted as saying that "finance should not exist in a socialist community". [1] : 26 Still, later Marxist-Leninist doctrine held in line with Lenin's writing that the socialist state should use finance "as an instrument of socialist construction" and "as one of the most important instruments in carrying out its function", [2] : 11 with banking forming part of a financial system that also includes the fiscal and budgeting framework of the state, social insurance, and budget control of state and collective enterprises.
Soon after the Bolshevik takeover, the new regime nationalized all land, thus placing mortgage lenders such as the Nobles' Land Bank and Peasants' Land Bank in immediate liquidation. On 14 December 1917, it decreed the immediate nationalization of all commercial banks into the People's Bank, the new name it had given to the State Bank of the Russian Empire. [2] : 76 In January 1920, the People's Bank was in turn abolished, after its regional offices had been merged with those of the state treasury. [2] : 82 During the period of War Communism that followed, the part of the country controlled by the Bolsheviks was reduced to a barter economy with no banking activity whatsoever. The residual monetary means of exchange were notes directly issued by the state treasury, known as Sovznaks (Soviet tokens), which depreciated fast, with hyperinflation peaking in the first half of 1922. [1] : 27
Following the re-establishment of the State Bank of the USSR (Gosbank) in October 1921, [1] : 27 the Soviet banking system again took shape as part of the New Economic Policy (NEP). Following the NEP, the Soviet system relied on several specialized financial institutions, which were reorganized in waves of reform following major leadership transitions in 1928–1932, 1955–1959, and one last time 1987-1988 shortly before the unravelling of the Communist system.
The system made a sharp distinction between, on the one hand, state-funded credit institutions whose purpose was to finance the economy, and on the other hand, deposit-funded institutions aimed at funding the state itself. The first category included the Gosbank and a series of ostensibly more specialized promotional banks. In the second category was the State Labor Savings Banks System of the USSR, which had a monopoly on the collection of household savings.
The Gosbank centralized the deposits of all state entities and was the only provider of short-term credit in the system following a decree of 30 January 1930. [2] : 94 the Gosbank also provided long-term credit, but was not alone in that role which was also supported by the specialized promotional banks. The latter varied over time and included the Prombank (est. 1922) for trade and industry, Tsekombank (est. 1925) for construction, and Selkhozbank (est. 1932) for agriculture, which were eventually merged in 1959 to form the Construction Bank of the USSR or Stroybank.
In addition to the savings banks, a cooperative banking system was established in 1922 as the Bank of Consumer Cooperatives (Russian : Банк потребительской кооперации or Pokobank), reorganized in 1923 as the All-Russian Cooperative Bank (Russian : Всероссийский кооперативный банк or Vsekobank), then replaced in 1936 with the All-Union Bank for Financing the Capital Construction of Trade and Cooperation (Russian : Всесоюзному банку финансирования капитального строительства торговли и кооперации or Torgbank), which was eventually abolished in 1956.
Whereas the Soviet banking system was largely designed for autarkic resilience, it nevertheless included institutions dedicated to promoting foreign trade and to procure hard currency. The Foreign Trade Bank of the USSR (Vneshtorgbank, established 1922 as Russian Trade Bank and renamed 1924) played a major role in trade finance. Separately, the Gosbank created a network of foreign subsidiaries including Moscow Narodny Bank Limited (est. 1919 in London from an earlier affiliate of a Russian state-owned bank), BCEN-Eurobank (est. 1921 in Paris as Banque Commerciale pour l'Europe du Nord), Ost-West Handelsbank (est. 1971 in Frankfurt), Donau Bank (est. 1974 in Vienna), and East-West United Bank (est. 1974 in Luxembourg). [3]
Under Perestroika in 1988, the Soviet Union initiated a transition towards a two-tiered system, with a number of new cooperative banks licensed starting from August 1988, the first being Soyuz-Bank in Shymkent (now in Kazakhstan) followed by Patent Bank in Leningrad. The Stroybank was reorganized in 1988 as the State Commercial Industrial and Construction Bank of the USSR (Russian : Государственный коммерческий Промышленно-строительный банк СССР or Promstroybank), with some operations spun off as Agro-Industrial Bank (Russian : Агропромышленный банк СССР or Agroprombank) and Bank of Housing, Communal Services and Social Development (Russian : Банк жилищно-коммунального хозяйства и социального развития СССР or Zhilsotsbank).
Beginning in 1921 in Paris and prior to his death, Leonid Krasin created the first state controlled Soviet overseas bank. It was one of five "daughter" (Russian : "дочек") banks or "motherland bins" or "bins of the motherland" (Russian : Закрома Родины) which were established in Paris (1921) as the Commercial Bank for Northern Europe (French : Banque commerciale pour l'Europe du Nord) BCEN-Eurobank, in London as part of the Moscow Narodny Bank, in Vienna (1974) as the Donau Bank AG, in Frankfurt am Main as the Ost-West Handelsbank (OWH), and in Luxembourg (1974) as the East-West United Bank. In order to financially assist Communist Parties, anti-imperialism, and pro national liberation movements worldwide, these banks acted as subsidiaries or "daughters" to the "mother" bank or Gosbank, which was the central bank of Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic (Russia) from 1921 to 1922 and the Soviet Union from 1923 to 1991. [4] [5] [6] [lower-alpha 1] [lower-alpha 2]
In 1992 after the dissolution of the Soviet Union, the Paris-based subsidiary bank BCEN-Eurobank had bad loans with Cuba, Morocco, and Mauritania and received a "silver plater" infusion of capital from Gosbank through a "participatory credit" (Russian : партисипационный кредит) of $1080.2 billion in various currencies. [4] [lower-alpha 3]
After the collapse of the Soviet Union, these daughter banks were absorbed into the VTB network and are very closely associated with the Bank of Russia (Russian : Банк России) which was the successor to Gosbank. [4] [10]
The Central Bank of the Russian Federation, which brands itself as Bank of Russia and is also commonly referred to in English as the Central Bank of Russia (CBR), is the central bank of the Russian Federation. The bank was established on July 13, 1990. It claims the legacy of the State Bank of the Russian Empire (1860-1920) and of the Soviet Gosbank (1921-1991), even though both institutions covered a significant larger territorial scope.
The State Bank of the USSR, from 1921 to 1923 State Bank of the RSFSR and commonly referred to as Gosbank, was the central bank and main component of the single-tier banking system of the Soviet Union from 1922 to 1991. After an extended gap in 1920–1921, it took over the legacy of the State Bank of the Russian Empire. With the dissolution of the Soviet Union, it was terminated on 1 March 1992 and its local operations were taken over by the newly formed central banks of the post-Soviet states such as the National Bank of Kazakhstan, Central Bank of Russia (CBR), or National Bank of Ukraine, while the CBR inherited its central operations.
Leonid Borisovich Krasin was a Russian Soviet politician, engineer, social entrepreneur, Bolshevik revolutionary and a Soviet diplomat. In 1924 he became the first Soviet ambassador to France. A year later, he left Paris to become ambassador to London, where he remained until his death. He was an early and close associate of Vladimir Lenin and his financier and the first finance wizard of the Communist Party.
VTB Bank is a Russian majority state-owned bank headquartered in various federal districts of Russia; its legal address is registered in St. Petersburg. As of 2022, the company's capital stock was mostly owned by three Russian agencies.
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Banque Commerciale pour l’Europe du Nord (BCEN) or Banque Commerciale pour l'Europe du Nord – Eurobank (BCEN-Eurobank) was a Soviet-controlled bank in Paris, founded in 1921 by wealthy Russian emigres and supported by the Council of People's Commissars (SovNarKom) through Leonid Krasin who, in 1925, sold their stakes to the Soviet Union. It maintained correspondent accounts with Western banks to secure lines of credit for facilitating Soviet imports into that country in which the correspondent account is located. Also, these correspondent accounts performed foreign currency exchange for the Kremlin.
Ost-West Handelsbank AG (OWH) was a Soviet-controlled bank in Frankfurt established in 1971. It was acquired by VTB Bank and changed its name to VTB Bank Deutschland on 30 September 2006.
Moscow Narodny Bank Limited (MNB), London was created as an independent bank in October 1919 on the basis of the London branch or Mosnarbank (London) of the Moscow Narodny Bank, which had operated in London since 1915.
The Ministry of Finance of the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic, known prior to 1946 as the People's Commissariat for Finance, or shortened to Narkomfin, was part of the government of the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic from 1918 until the fall of the USSR in 1991. It was subordinate to the Ministry of Finance of the USSR.
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Yury Valentinovich Ponomaryov is a Russian banker, chairman of the board of directors of Moscow Narodny Bank (1998–1999) and president and chairman of Vneshtorgbank (1999–2002).
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A single-tier banking system is a policy framework under which all credit institutions coexist without distinction about the quality of their liabilities, or in other words, there is no distinction between central bank money and broad money. This setting is generally associated with communist economic systems.
The Foreign Trade Bank of the USSR was the monopoly state credit institution for trade finance in the Soviet Union. It was initially established in 1922 as the Russian Commercial Bank and reorganized as Vneshtorgbank in 1924.
The Construction Bank of the USSR, in shorthand Stroybank, was a Soviet development bank that was a significant part of the Soviet banking system. Stroybank was formed in 1959 and took over the operations of several prior specialized development banks, namely Prombank, Tsekombank, and Selkhozbank.
Prombank was the shorthand name for a series of significant institutions within the Soviet banking system between 1922 and 1959, when Prombank was merged with Selkhozbank and Tsekombank to form the Construction Bank of the USSR, or Stroybank.
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