| New federal laws and regulations
are changing the structure and face of the financial services
industry. In this time of accelerating change, it is important
to truly understand how credit unions are unique and different,
and why we remain a necessary and extremely popular financial
alternative for more than 85 million Americans.
Not-for-profit. Credit unions are not-for-profit
financial cooperatives. We exist to serve our members, not
to make a profit. Unlike most other financial institutions,
credit unions do not issue stock or pay dividends to outside
stockholders. Instead, earnings are returned to our members
in the form of lower loan rates, higher interest on deposits,
and lower fees.
Taxation. Credit unions do pay taxes –
payroll taxes, sales taxes, and property taxes. Congress
exempts credit unions from federal income taxes. The exemption
was established in 1937, affirmed by statute in 1951, and
re-affirmed in 1998 in H.R. 1151, the Credit Union Membership
Access Act, which states:
"Credit unions, unlike many other participants in the
financial services market, are exempt from Federal and most
State taxes because credit unions are member-owned, democratically
operated, not-for-profit organizations generally managed
by volunteer boards of directors and because they have the
specified mission of meeting the credit and savings needs
of consumers, especially persons of modest means."
Ownership. Credit unions are economic democracy.
Each credit union member has equal ownership and one vote
-- regardless of how much money a member has on deposit.
At a credit union, every customer is both a member and an
owner.
Volunteer Boards. Each credit union is
governed by a board of directors, elected by and from the
credit union’s membership. Board members serve voluntarily.
Membership Eligibility. By current federal
statute, credit unions cannot serve the general public.
People qualify for a credit union membership through their
employer, organizational affiliations like churches or social
groups, or a community-chartered credit union.
Financial Education for Members. Credit
unions assist members to become better-educated consumers
of financial services. Additionally, CUNA is partnering
with the National Endowment for Financial Education, a not-for-profit
foundation, to expand financial education among high school
students. A national study shows that just ten hours of
personal finance education can positively affect students'
spending and savings habits for a lifetime.
Social Purpose: People Helping People.
Credit unions exist to help people, not make a profit. Our
goal is to serve all of our members well, including those
of modest means – every member counts. Our members
are fiercely loyal for this reason. They know their credit
union will be there for them in bad times, as well as good.
The same people-first philosophy causes credit unions and
our employees to get involved in community charitable activities
and worthwhile causes – just ask us.
THE CREDIT UNION DIFFERENCE
— JUST ASK YOUR CREDIT UNION!
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