Savings bank

In many European languages, savings banks are referred to by a word that differentiates them from banks (French: caisse, German: Kasse, Italian: cassa, Russian: касса, Spanish: caja) and denotes their more restricted scope of activity, sometimes translated as "fund".

The origin of savings banks lies in liberal and philanthropic aspirations that motivated their promoters to create non-profit establishments aimed at promoting a culture of thrift and financial prudence among the lower classes, and using savings and the logic of compound interest as an incentive to think beyond short-term living horizons.

In France, savings banks projects started to emerge in the 1750s and multiplied during the French Revolution but with no lasting success.

Liberal luminaries including Adam Smith, Thomas Robert Malthus and Jean-Baptiste Say took interest in the economic and social role of savings.

[1] The oldest lasting savings bank is widely recognized to have been the Ersparungsclasse der Allgemeinen Versorgungsanstalt established in Hamburg in 1778, followed by other endeavors in Germany and Switzerland in the late 18th century.

Savings banks mushroomed in the early 19th century, with landmark establishments in Göttingen (1801, first municipal savings bank), Ruthwell, Scotland (1810, first in the United Kingdom), Boston (1816, first in the United States), Paris (1818, first in France), and Vienna (1819, first in the Austrian Empire).

By the early 21st century, savings banks were most significant in Germany and Spain, and to a lesser extent in Austria.