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WHAT IS A CREDIT UNION?
Members are united by a common bond of association and democratically
operate the credit union under state or federal regulation.
As of December 2008, there are more than 8,000 credit unions in the United States. About 496 of these are in California and 27 in Nevada. Of the more than 90 million credit union members nationwide, more than nine million are in California and more than 473,000 are in Nevada.
Are Credit Unions Safe?
Like other financial institutions, credit unions are closely regulated.
Historically, they have operated in a very prudent manner. The National
Credit Union Share Insurance Fund (NCUSIF), administered by an agency
of the federal government, insures deposits of 80 million credit
union members at all federal and many state credit unions nationwide.
Deposits up to $100,000 per account are insured. Likewise, deposits
are insured for $100,000 or more in state-chartered credit unions
covered by private insurance programs. Of the federal deposit insurance
funds, the NCUSIF has had the strongest equity-to-insured risk ratio
over the last decade. Not one penny of any insured savings has
ever been lost by a member of a federally insured credit union.
What Are The Advantages Of Credit Unions?
Credit unions exist only to serve their member-owners. Surveys repeatedly
show members are more satisfied with the service they receive from
their credit union than customers of banks or savings and loans
are with their institutions. Because credit unions are democratic,
member-owned cooperatives, members have the power to direct credit
union policy. If the majority of members are dissatisfied with the
directors who set the policies of their credit union, they have
the power to replace them. Credit union elections are based on a
one-member, one-vote structure. This structure is in contrast to
for-profit, public companies where stockholders vote according to
the number of shares they own. Their nonprofit status enables credit
unions to operate at a lower cost than many for-profit institutions
and helps them to offer competitive loan and savings rates. For
instance, credit unions usually charge lower interest on credit
cards than most other providers, and many credit unions charge no
annual card fee.
Can Anyone Join A Credit Union?
Members of each credit union must share a "common bond,"
such as the same workplace, church, fraternal organization, or neighborhood.
What Services Are Offered By Credit Unions?
Credit unions offer a large range of services, depending on the
services a particular credit union's members demand. They can
range from a "plain vanilla" credit union that only
offers shares (deposits) and loans, to a full-service credit union
that serves as its members' primary financial institution. Some
credit unions also offer share certificates, financial planning,
individual retirement accounts, mutual funds, auto loans, signature
loans, home equity loans, home mortgage loans, small business
loans, share drafts (checking accounts), credit cards, and ATM
and debit cards.
What Makes Credit Unions Unique?
In credit unions, the members are the owners. They are
treated like owners, and the benefits of ownership flow back to
them, usually in the form of better rates on deposits or loans
and better service. Regardless of their size or their field of
membership, credit unions are different than for-profit financial
institutions. Credit unions exist solely to serve their member-owners,
who are the only depositors. Banks and other financial institutions
exist to make money for their stockholders, not for their depositors.
IRnet — International Remittance Program
Credit union members/potential members can now use their credit unions to send money to family members in 36 different countries around the world and save on fees and exchange rates with the International Remittance Network (IRnet) program. In July 2000, the World Council of Credit Unions, Inc. (WOCCU) announced its expanded IRnet service and new partnership with VIGO (an international money transfer company) at the official opening of the East Los Angeles branch of the SCE Federal Credit Union. Through the combined efforts of the California Credit Union League, WOCCU, Arrowhead Credit Union, and SCE Federal Credit Union the program was successfully piloted in Mexico and has expanded to additional credit unions throughout the nation.
If you are interested in participating in this program or have questions, please contact the CU development department at the California Credit Union League at 800.472.1702.
Visit the World Council of Credit Unions website at: http://www.woccu.org/
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CREDIT UNION HISTORY
History of the Credit Union Movement
Credit Societies: 1852-1864
Two men, Hermann Schulze-Delitzsch and Friedrich Wilhelm Raiffeisen,
were responsible for creating the first true credit unions in Germany
in 1852 and 1864. During 1849, Raiffeisen founded a credit society
in Flammersfeld, Germany, but it depended on the charity of wealthy
men for its support. Raiffeisen remained committed to that concept
until 1864, when he organized a new credit union along principles
still fundamental today.
The credit societies in Germany, and similar institutions founded
by Luigi Luzzatti in Italy, were the forerunners of the large cooperative
"banks" that abound in Europe today. In 1871, credit union
legislation was considered in Massachusetts. This attempt and later
efforts in the 19th century to start U.S. credit unions were not
very successful.
The Idea Goes West
It was a Canadian who transplanted the credit union to the Western
Hemisphere. In 1900, Alphonse Desjardins organized a credit union
(caisse populaire) in Levis, Quebec. The reasons were the same as
those in Germany 50 years before. People were poor, interest rates
were financially crippling, and the credit union offered a way out.
That first Canadian credit union was small by modern standards.
The first savings deposit was only 10 cents; the first collection
from all the members totaled only $26. Even today, in some countries,
credit unions start small.
But Desjardins persevered and devoted a good part of his life to
credit union development in North America. He founded other credit
unions, including the first one in the United States, in 1909 in
New Hampshire.
Jay, Filene The U.S. Overture
Two Americans became profoundly influenced by Desjardins' efforts:
Pierre Jay, the Massachusetts banking commissioner and Edward A.
Filene, a Boston merchant.
Filene discovered credit unions in a village in India in 1907.
He had stopped in Calcutta and met a government official who took
Filene out into the countryside. There Filene first observed a village
credit union in operation and was immediately interested. Back home
again, he began reading about credit unions to strengthen his knowledge.
Filene was perhaps the ideal American to give the credit union
idea a push. He was a progressive thinker for his time. He had begun
profit-sharing plans for his employees, instituted other novel fringe
benefit programs, was the founder of the "bargain basement"
idea in department store operation, allowed his employees to engage
in collective bargaining and arbitration,established minimum wages
for female workers, and advocated a five-day, 40-hour week. In the
early 1900s, such ideas were revolutionary. Besides his creative
approach to business, Filene was also one of the founders of the
U.S. Chamber of Commerce.
As banking commissioner, Pierre Jay had made a study of unauthorized
banking practices in Massachusetts. He learned that several groups
of employees in the commonwealth had started their own savings and
loan organizations. These groups resembled what Henry Wolff, a European,
had described as "people's banks." Jay believed that these
small associations were providing a needed service, but he wanted
to recommend a way to make them legal.
From Wolff's writings, Jay turned to the work of Desjardins and
others. He began a chain of correspondence with Desjardins. This
resulted in a 1908 conference in Boston in which Desjardins, Jay,
Filene and other public-spirited citizens participated. Working
with Desjardins, Jay prepared the legislation for what was to become
the first general state credit union act in the United States.
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CREDIT UNION PHILOSOPHY
The credit union system is made up of organizations at the local,
state, and national levels. Credit unions, corporate credit unions,
chapters, leagues, and league service corporations serve member
needs on the local and state levels. On the national level, Credit
Union National Association and its affiliates, CUNA Service Group
and U.S. Central Credit Union, provide the leadership, products,
and services credit unions need to compete effectively in today's
financial marketplace.
The credit union system gives credit unions the strongest support
network in the financial services world. Through this cooperative
effort, credit unions of all sizes combine their individual strengths
and can offer their members a broad range of sophisticated financial
services. The programs, products, and services of the credit union
system are available to credit unions through league affiliation,
and are supported by fees and dues.
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GUIDING PRINCIPLES
As the credit union movement has spread internationally, the simple ideas behind it have remained the same:
- only people who were credit union members should borrow
there;
- loans would be made for "prudent and productive"
purposes;
- a person's desire to repay (character) would be considered
more important than the ability (income) to repay; they were,
after all, borrowing their own money and that of their friends.
These principles still govern most of the credit unions in the
world.
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