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credit union idea is a simple one:
People should be able to pool their money
and make loans to each other. It's an idea that evolved from cooperative
activities in 19th century Europe.
Since that time, the idea's guiding principles
have remained the same:
- Only people who are credit union members
should borrow there;
- Loans are made for "prudent and productive"
purposes;
- A person's desire to repay (character)
is considered more important than the ability (income) to repay.
Members are, after all, borrowing their own money and that of
their friends. These principles still govern most of the world's
credit unions.
As the 20th century began, the credit union idea surfaced in
Canada. Canada's successful efforts profoundly influenced two
Americans: Pierre Jay, the Massachusetts banking commissioner,
and Edward A. Filene, a Boston merchant.
The two men helped organize public hearings on credit union
legislation in Massachusetts, leading to passage of the first
state credit union act in 1909. Growth was slow, however. Fewer
than 10 states passed credit union laws, many unworkable. The
Massachusetts Credit Union Association grew slowly.
In 1921, Filene created the Credit Union National Extension
Bureau and hired a Massachusetts attorney, Roy F. Bergengren,
to help him. Bergengren and the Bureau sought effective credit
union laws in all states and at the federal level.
When Bergengren began his efforts, there were only 199 U.S. credit
unions, but during the next 13 years, the credit union movement
grew dramatically.
Filene poured more than $1 million of his own money into the
project. Bergengren appeared before state legislators, laws were
passed, and volunteer organizers were initiated into the "movement."
By 1925, 15 states had passed credit union laws; 419 credit unions
were serving 108,000 members. By 1935, 39 states had credit union
laws and 3,372 credit unions were serving 641,800 members.
Credit unions banded together into leagues on a state-wide basis.
Leagues provided financial and legal advice, organizing know-how,
and an instrument for credit unions to seek favorable state legislation.
But something more was still needed.
By 1934, credit unions and leagues recognized the need for a
national organization. At a meeting at Estes Park, Colorado, the
Credit Union National Association (CUNA) was formed as a confederation
of state leagues.
In the same year, Congress finally passed a federal credit union
act, which permitted credit unions to be organized anywhere in
the United States. The legislation allowed credit unions to incorporate
under either state or federal law, a system of dual chartering
that persists today.
Almost immediately after its organization, CUNA recognized a
need for credit-union-oriented insurance services and standardized
office supplies. So in 1935, CUNA formed the CUNA Mutual Insurance
Society.
World War II halted progress of the U.S. credit union movement,
but the war's end brought renewed credit union growth. In 1945,
there were 8,683 credit unions in the country; by 1955, there
were 16,201; and by 1969, the U.S. movement reached its peak of
23,876 credit unions.
Since then, the number of credit unions has declined, as many
smaller credit unions have merged into larger ones that usually
offer more services.
Credit unions now have expanded around the globe. And their spectacular
growth has made them an important part of the nation's financial
system.
CUNA and Affiliates and the state leagues work to protect the
gains credit unions have made and to prepare them to operate in
the financial world of the future without losing their unique
tradition of service to people.
Through this cooperative effort, credit unions of all sizes can
offer members sophisticated financial services, coordinate their
marketing, upgrade their management and technical skills, and
speak with one powerful voice in Washington, D.C.
The credit union idea has grown to millions of people, but there
is no limit to what the movement can achieve in terms of growth,
service, and most important, as an instrument of cooperation and
harmony between people everywhere.
Membership, however, continues to climb. The number of credit
union members doubled during the 1970s to more than 43 million.
Today, more than 82 million Americans are credit union members.
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