Okay here's one:

http://www.marxists.org/archive/marx/works/1894-c3/ch36.htm

But the authors themselves add in a footnote:

"The advantage that would accrue from the mediation of bankers between
the idle rich and the travailleurs is often counterbalanced, or even
canceled, by the opportunities offered in our disorganized society to
egoism, which may manifest itself in various forms of fraud and
charlatanism. The bankers often worm their way between the
travailleurs and idle rich for the purpose of exploiting both to the
detriment of society."

Travailleur here means capitaliste industriel. Incidentally, it is
wrong to regard the means at the command of the modern banking system
merely as the means of idle people. In the first place, it is the
portion of capital which industrialists and merchants temporarily hold
in the form of idle money, as a money reserve or as capital to be
invested. Hence it is idle capital, but not capital of the idle. In
the second place, it is the portion of all revenue and savings in
general which is to be temporarily or permanently accumulated. Both
are essential to the nature of the banking system.

But it should always be borne in mind that, in the first place, money
— in the form of precious metal — remains the foundation from which
the credit system, by its very nature, can never detach itself.
Secondly, that the credit system presupposes the monopoly of social
means of production by private persons (in the form of capital and
landed property), that it is itself, on the one hand, an immanent form
of the capitalist mode of production, and on the other, a driving
force in its development to its highest and ultimate form.

The banking system, so far as its formal organization and
centralization is concerned, is the most artificial and most developed
product turned out by the capitalist mode of production, a fact
already expressed in 1697 in Some Thoughts of the Interests of
England. This accounts for the immense power of an institution such as
the Bank of England over commerce and industry, although their actual
movements remain completely beyond its province and it is passive
toward them. The banking system possesses indeed the form of universal
book-keeping and distribution of means of production on a social
scale, but solely the form. We have seen that the average profit of
the individual capitalist, or of every individual capital, is
determined not by the surplus-labour appropriated at first hand by
each capital, but by the quantity of total surplus-labour appropriated
by the total capital, from which each individual capital receives its
dividend only proportional to its aliquot part of the total capital.
This social character of capital is first promoted and wholly realized
through the full development of the credit and banking system. On the
other hand this goes farther. It places all the available and even
potential capital of society that is not already actively employed at
the disposal of the industrial and commercial capitalists so that
neither the lenders nor users of this capital are its real owners or
producers. It thus does away with the private character of capital and
thus contains in itself, but only in itself, the abolition of capital
itself. By means of the banking system the distribution of capital as
a special business, a social function, is taken out of the hands of
the private capitalists and usurers. But at the same time, banking and
credit thus become the most potent means of driving capitalist
production beyond its own limits, and one of the most effective
vehicles of crises and swindle.

The banking system shows, furthermore, by substituting various forms
of circulating credit in place of money, that money is in reality
nothing but a particular expression of the social character of labour
and its products, which, however, as antithetical to the basis of
private production, must always appear in the last analysis as a
thing, a special commodity, alongside other commodities.

Finally, there is no doubt that the credit system will serve as a
powerful lever during the transition from the capitalist mode of
production to the mode of production of associated labour; but only as
one element in connection with other great organic revolutions of the
mode of production itself. On the other hand, the illusions concerning
the miraculous power of the credit and banking system, in the
socialist sense, arise from a complete lack of familiarity with the
capitalist mode of production and the credit system as one of its
forms. As soon as the means of production cease being transformed into
capital (which also includes the abolition of private property in
land), credit as such no longer has any meaning. This, incidentally,
was even understood by the followers of Saint-Simon. On the other
hand, as long as the capitalist mode of production continues to exist,
interest-bearing capital, as one of its forms, also continues to exist
and constitutes in fact the basis of its credit system. Only that
sensational writer, Proudhon, who wanted to perpetuate
commodity-production and abolish money, [25] was capable of dreaming
up the monstrous crèdit gratuit, the ostensible realization of the
pious wish of the petty-bourgeois estate.
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