The legislation governing banking in Canada is the Bank Act, which is revised every ten years. Some of the highlights of the 1980 revision of the Bank Act were as follows:
(a) A reduction in reserve requirements, from 4 percent on notice deposits to 3 percent and 10 percent respectively, with the first $500 million of notice deposits requiring only 2 percent and coins to be included as reserves. The effect of this change was to reduce the reserve requirements by about one-fifth, over a period of three-and-a-half years.
(b) An additional reserve requirement of 3 percent of foreign currency deposits held by Canadians in bank branches in Canada. In late 1980, these deposits totalled $12.5 billion.
(c) Several changes affecting foreign banks operating in Canada. Foreign banks, operating largely outside the requirements of the Bank Act, represented an increasing source of competition for Canadian banks – from 1974 to 1980, their assets had risen from $1.3 billion to $8.2 billion. Under the 1980 Bank Act revisions, the total size of foreign banks in Canada would be controlled by a requirement that their total Canadian.
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