The
first credit unions were founded in Germany in the 1840s to
provide savings and borrowing opportunities to working-class
people. The guiding principles were simple:
Only
people who were credit union members could borrow there.
Loans
should be for prudent and productive purposes.
A person's
desire to repay (character) would be considered as important
as a person's ability to repay (income).
These
principles still govern most of the credit unions in the world
today.
In
Georgia, the credit union movement started when Edward A.
Filene, a Boston merchant, visited Atlanta in 1922 and persuasively
explained the need for credit unions. Later that year, Atlanta
attorney E. Marvin Underwood drafted a state credit union
bill. The bill was introduced in the Georgia General Assembly
that year and each following year until it was passed in 1925.
Georgia
currently has 190 credit unions serving more than 1.7 million
members. Combined, these credit unions have more than $12.1
billion in assets.
|