Friday, Dec. 08, 1961
Increasing Interest
Responding to pleas from commercial banks, the Federal Reserve Board and Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. last week authorized their 13,100 member banks to increase their interest rate from 3% to 4% on savings and time deposits left for at least a year. The step was chiefly intended to help the commercial banks compete more successfully with mutual savings banks, whose rates run as high as 3 3/4%. and with savings and loan associations, whose rates run up to 4 1/2%. A secondary purpose: to help the banks hold foreign deposits that might otherwise flee to higher interest havens abroad, thereby increasing the outflow of gold from the U.S.
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