Bank Polski SA explained

Bank Polski SA, full name Bank Polski Spółka Akcyjna, was the central bank of the Second Polish Republic.

On, Bank Polski SA succeeded the Polska Krajowa Kasa Pożyczkowa (German: Polnische Landes-Darlehnskasse) that had been created in late 1916 for the puppet Kingdom of Poland and kept serving as Poland's bank of issue in 1918-1924. It operated until the invasion of Poland in 1939, after which it relocated to London together with the Polish Government in Exile. In liberated Poland, it was replaced in 1945 by the National Bank of Poland, and was eventually liquidated in 1952. It is sometimes referred to as the "Second Bank of Poland" to distinguish it from its 19th-century namesake.

Polish National Loan Bank

The (PKKP) was established in December 1916 by Germany and Austria-Hungary to serve their puppet Kingdom of Poland. When Poland emerged as an independent country in 1918, it combined territories formerly under the central banking jurisdiction of the State Bank of the Russian Empire, Austro-Hungarian Bank, and German Reichsbank as well as the PKKP. The latter took over the role of issuing currency for the new country, but was unable to avert hyperinflation. It opened a branch in Danzig with the intent to establish a currency union with the city-state that would complement its customs union with Poland, but that project was abandoned in September 1923.[1]

Bank Polski SA

Following the State Treasury Repair Act of, Prime minister Władysław Grabski undertook, a key part of which was the establishment of the Bank of Poland, re-using the name of the 19th-century Bank Polski. Simultaneously, the new Polish złoty was introduced at a rate of one złoty for 1.8 million of the PKKP's markas. The new institution, whose establishment was announced on and completed on, was created as a joint stock company whose shares were offered to the Polish public. Its stock was soon raised from the initial 100,000,000 złotych to 150 million, split onto 1.5 million shares, of which the Treasury would hold only one percent.[1] The President of Poland had the right to name the chairman and deputy chairman of the bank's board of trustees, and the Finance Minister had a veto on appointments to the bank's Council.

The 1924 reforms were largely but not entirely successful, as the government kept increasing the money supply by minting coins, triggering so-called "coinage inflation" in 1925-1926. On, the Bank Polski was forced to suspend the free convertibility of złotys into US dollars. Convertibility into gold was re-established on, more than a year after the May 1926 Coup which had brought back Józef Piłsudski to executive power.

At least 30 percent of the bank’s money issuance was to be backed by gold (and a smaller amount by silver) and foreign currencies. After the reform of 1927, this threshold was increased to 40 percent. The dividend paid to shareholders could not exceed 8 percent. When the profit was between 8 and 12 percent, half went to the State Treasury and the other half to shareholders as a superdividend. Above 12 percent, the state collected two thirds.

Unlike in Austria, Hungary, and Danzig, which had similarly experienced postwar hyperinflation, Poland's stabilization was achieved without assistance from the League of Nations through its Economic and Financial Organization. This was partly linked to the lingering territorial disputes between Poland and Germany, and to the fact that Polish authorities feared that the United Kingdom would exercise its leverage at the League of Nations to favor German interests.[1] Indeed, a loan proposal was secretly made by the League to Poland in February 1925, and rejected. Nevertheless, the government took advice from a foreign advisor, Briton E. Hilton Young, for the design of the Bank Polski, and in 1927 it appointed a foreign advisor to be a member of the bank's Council, taking inspiration from the League's stabilization programs. The first such foreign adviser, appointed in November 1927, was Charles S. Dewey, previously United States Assistant Secretary of the Treasury for Fiscal Affairs.

Prior to the invasion of Poland in 1939, at the initiative of Ignacy Matuszewski and Henryk Floyar-Rajchman, the Bank of Poland evacuated all of its gold reserves (105,000 kg) from Poland to the Bank of France in Paris, through Romania, Turkey and Syria, [2] and then most of it to Canada and the Bank of England in London.[3] Following the invasion, the Bank of Poland relocated, first in Paris from to, then in London together with the Polish Government in Exile, and financed most of the latter's military effort. Meanwhile, in occupied Poland, the Third Reich in 1940 created the Bank of Issue in Poland for its General Government, issuing the so-called German "Kraków-złoty". In other parts of the former Polish territory, central banking was taken over respectively by the Nazi German Reichsbank and Soviet Gosbank.

Similarly to other Allied Military Currency bank notes, American "Liberation banknotes" for Poland were printed in 1944. On 15 January 1945, the new communist authorities of Poland founded the National Bank of Poland (NBP).[4]

In 1946, the bank's governor Bohdan Winiarski led the decision to move the institution back to Warsaw. A stock of gold from the bank's deposits in British, French and American banks was returned to Poland, as well as banknotes printed in Great Britain and intended for circulation in the country. However, they notes were not released into circulation because the Polish government, upon establishment of the NBP, had deprived the Bank Polski of its note-issuance privilege. Meanwhile, the stock of gold that backed those banknotes was distributed by the communist authorities for budget expenditure in the years 1946–1958, and was partially allocated to compensation for citizens of foreign countries expropriated as a result of the Polish Act on the Nationalization of Industry. This was done by transferring appropriate deposits to the governments of the US, UK and France through clearing agreements, whereby these governments took over liabilities towards their citizens in respect of property expropriated in Poland. Eventually, the Bank Polski SA was liquidated, starting in 1951 and ending on .

Leadership

Buildings

The PKKP and Bank Polski SA both operated in Warsaw from the former branch building of the State Bank of the Russian Empire, erected in 1908–1911 on a design by architect Leon Benois on the site of the former Polish mint.[5] During Nazi occupation, it was used by the Bank of Issue. It was not reconstructed following the destructions of World War II. In the 2010s, the Senator office complex was built on the footprint of the former Bank of Poland building and incorporated some of its surviving architectonic elements. It hosts the Warsaw office of Polish petrochemical company Orlen, which is headquartered in nearby Płock.

In Kraków, the PKKP in 1921 commissioned a from architect Kazimierz Wyczyński, who died in 1923 and was replaced by . That building, completed in 1925, was used in 1940–1945 as head office of the Bank of Issue in Poland. The In Siedlce was similarly commissioned by the PKKP and completed in 1924.

In other localities, the PKKP and Bank of Poland repurposed former branches of the Reichsbank, as in Bydgoszcz, Katowice or Toruń, or of the Russian State Bank, as in Łódź or Lublin.

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: The mark, the lech and the zloty, or how Poland's currency was born . Andrzej Zawistowski . Polish History . 2024.
  2. Web site: The way of polish banks gold 1939-1942, see "1.2.3. Das belgische Gold. fhi.rg.mpg.de. 2024-03-26.
  3. Book: Kredite für NS-Verbrechen: die deutschen Kreditinstitute in Polen und die Ausraubung der polnischen und jüdischen Bevölkerung 1939-1945. Loose, I.. 2007. Oldenbourg. 9783486583311. 64. 2024-03-26.
  4. Web site: Foundation of the polish National Bank Narodowy Bank Polski, Warschau, in 1945 . 2012-08-05 . https://web.archive.org/web/20130210004159/http://www.berlin.trade.gov.pl/de/polska/article/detail,658,Standort_Polen.html . 2013-02-10 . dead .
  5. Web site: Reduta Bank Polski - ul. Bielańska 10, Old Town . In your pocket - Warsaw.