This article may lack focus or may be about more than one topic. In particular, state banks in the US or Australian context should not be dealt with in the same article as public banks or central banks. The article does not refer to a single concept and is redundant with the disambiguation page of the same name.(July 2024) |
In Australia and the United States, a state bank in a federated state is usually a financial institution that is chartered by the government of that state, as opposed to one regulated at the federal or national level.
In British English, the term is more or less synonymous with the term "national bank",[1] which refers to any bank owned and operated by a government or state.[2]
Each Australian state formerly had a state bank, but all have since been privatised.
In the United States, the terms "state-chartered bank" or "state-chartered savings bank" are used in contradistinction to "national bank" or "federal savings bank", which are technically chartered across all US states.[3] A national bank must have "National" or "N.A." in its corporate name, a Federal Savings Bank must have "Federal" or "F.S.B." in its name, while a state chartered bank cannot have "National" or "Federal" in its name.[citation needed] All national banks and savings institutions are chartered and regulated by the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency.[4]
State banks are chartered and regulated by a state agency (often called the Department of Financial Institutions) in the state in which its headquarters are located. In addition, state banks that are members of the Federal Reserve are regulated by the Federal Reserve; state banks that are not members of the Federal Reserve are regulated by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC). Therefore, virtually every state chartered bank has both a state and federal regulator. There are a very small number of state banks that do not have FDIC insurance.[citation needed]
Usage of the term "state bank" varies in other countries. It is often a national bank of some type.
In India, the State Bank of India is an Indian multinational public sector bank and financial services statutory body.[5] It is a defined type of bank in India known as a public sector bank, and the largest bank in India.[6] It was founded as a private commercial bank, then nationalised by the Government of India, and the product of several mergers.[7] Meanwhile, the State Bank of Vietnam is defined as an executive department under the Government of Vietnam, being the country's central bank that represents the government to manage functions of monetary, banking and foreign exchange operations as well as being the designated issuer of the national currency đồng.[8]
The State Bank of Vietnam (SBV) is a ministerial-level agency of the Government, acting as the Central Bank of the Socialist Republic of Vietnam; performs the State management functions of the monetary, the banking and the foreign exchange operations (hereinafter referred collectively as the monetary and banking operations); performs the role of a central bank as the money issuer, and as the bank for the credit institutions, and the provider of monetary services to the Government; and performs the State management of the public services under the SBV's jurisdiction.