The Gosbank was one of the three main Soviet economic authorities, the other two being Gosplan (the State Planning Committee) and Gossnab (the State Committee for Material Technical Supply). It closely collaborated with the Soviet Ministry of Finance to prepare the national state budget.
The State Bank presided over the two successive devaluations of the ruble, in 1922 (1 for 10,000) and 1923 (1 for 100). Meanwhile, on 11 October 1922 it was granted the right to issue the gold-backed chervonets or gold ruble that brought an end to the early Soviet hyperinflation. In 1923, it took its permanent name as State Bank of the USSR. In 1924 the State Bank produced its first consolidated credit plan, and formed the Committee on Banks to oversee the sectoral banks that had been created under the NEP. In 1925, it took over the previously separate cash holding system of Narkomfin.[1]
The subsequent phase of Soviet central planning and phasing-out of the NEP led to the State Bank being granted a monopoly over short-term bank credit in 1927, and over all short-term credit in 1930 after mutual and direct commercial credit was terminated. In 1928-1930, the local branches of other banks were brought under the State Bank or closed, so that Prombank, Tsekombank or Selkhozbank subsequently operated largely through the State Bank's local offices. That phase of reform was completed in 1932, after which the division of labor between the State Bank and the other components of the Soviet banking system remained broadly stable until the late 1980s.[1]
Following aggressive monetary expansion during World War II, the monetary reform of 1947 resulted in another round of devaluation (1 for 10) and related confiscatory measures. In 1959, the consolidation of the specialized long-term credit banks into the Construction Bank of the USSR resulted in the assumption of some former operations of Selkhozbank, Tsekombank and municipal banks by the State Bank. The monetary reform of 1961 introduced another round of devaluation (1 for 10). In 1963, the State Bank's control over the system was further strengthened as it took over the State Labor Savings Banks System from the Soviet Ministry of Finance.[1]
The Soviet state used the State Bank primarily as a tool to impose centralized control upon industry in general, using bank balances and transaction histories to monitor the activity of individual concerns and their compliance with five-year plans and directives. The State Bank never acted as a commercial bank aiming at profit maximization, but purely as an instrument of government policy. Instead of independently and impartially assessing the creditworthiness of the borrower, Gosbank would provide loan funds to individuals, groups and industries as directed by the central government.
In the late 1980s, the role of the State Bank evolved as new specialized banks were created, even though they remained within the framework of a single-tier system.[4]: 14
Branch building in Stalino (later Donetsk), shortly after inauguration in 1928
The same building in 2008
Demise
The Gosbank started to unravel with the establishment (or, in the Baltic Republics, revival) of autonomous central banks in individual Soviet republics. The Estonian SSR, implementing a plan prepared by a group of economists led by Siim Kallas,[5]: 362 decided in late 1989 to re-create the Bank of Estonia, which opened on 1 January 1990. Latvia and Lithuania followed suit in March 1990, taking over operations of the State Bank on their respective territories. On 13 July 1990, the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic (RSFSR) similarly established a separate State Bank of the RSFSR. On 2 December 1990, the Supreme Soviet of Russia passed legislation that referred to the State Bank of the RSFSR as the "Bank of Russia" and granted it attributes of a central banking. The Ukrainian SSR followed suit in early 1991.
Despite legislation passed also in December 1990 at the USSR level to organize the relationship between the Soviet Gosbank and the new institutions in some of the republics including Russia, relations between the respective central banks soon became conflict-ridden. Deputy Premier Grigory Yavlinsky advocated the creation of a "banking union", namely a formal monetary union among the Soviet Republics, in the New Union Treaty, but that attempt rapidly foundered in the second half of 1991.[6]: 183
In late November 1991, the Supreme Soviet of Russia authorized the Bank of Russia to assume the assets and liabilities of the Soviet Gosbank by 1 January 1992 and to act as a source of ruble liquidity for the other post-Soviet states; eventually, the latter adopted their own respective currencies, starting with the Baltics in mid-1992 and ending with Tajikistan in May 1995.[7]: 3–5 The State Bank of the USSR was dissolved on 20 December 1991, a few days before the USSR itself.[1]
Leadership
The following is a list of the chairmen of the Board of the State Bank.[1][8] The chairman was appointed by the Premier of the Soviet Union.
^"ГОСУДАРСТВЕННЫЙ БАНК СССР" [State Bank of the USSR]. СОВНАРКОМ, СОВМИН, КАБМИН СССР 1923-1991 гг. (SOVNARKOM, SOVMIN, CABMIN of the USSR 1923-1991) (in Russian). Archived from the original on 14 April 2016. Retrieved 24 January 2020.