Banking Act 2009

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Banking Act 2009
Commencement
Certain provisions on 21 February 2009
Status: Amended
History of passage through Parliament
Text of statute as originally enacted
Revised text of statute as amended

The Banking Act 2009 (c. 1) is an

BACS
), amends the law on the issue of banknotes by Scottish and Northern Irish banks, and makes other miscellaneous amendments to the law on banking.

Banknotes

Part 6 of the Act specifically deals with the right of certain commercial banks in Scotland and Northern Ireland to issue their own private banknotes, repealing the Bank Notes (Scotland) Act 1845, the Bankers (Ireland) Act 1845 and the Bankers (Northern Ireland) Act 1928. The 2009 Act empowers HM Treasury to control banknote issue more strictly, requiring commercial note-issuing bank to maintain backing assets so that, in the event of the commercial failure of a bank, the value of their banknotes would be protected.[2]

The Act additionally prohibits the issue of banknotes by any other banks other than those authorised under the 1845/1928 legislation and the Bank of England, and provides that, if a commercial bank decides to discontinue the issuing its own banknotes, it then irrevocably loses its note-issuing privileges.

See also

References

  1. short title is authorised by section 265
    of this Act.
  2. ^ "Part 6: Banknotes: Scotland and Northern Ireland". Banking Act 2009 - Explanatory Notes. HM Government/National Archives. Retrieved 3 November 2011.