"the control the US is able to exert over their companies"
You have that relationship inverted. The US gov't is a mere shell at this point, having outsourced all its core functions to private companies. There is no "medicare" budget or "defense" budget, there is only the capital allocated to and embezzled by the medical & military industrial complex.
And rest assured they do their own set of overt disappearances, notably the Boeing whistleblower and Epstein. There is an obvious playbook they follow in such cases, first they bribe, blackmail, or discredit - before being indiscreet.
Every monopoly that exists (and has ever existed) does so because of some combination of government granted monopoly rights. Mineral rights, patents, intellectual property, and all other regulatory barriers to entry.
There is no "natural" culmination into monopoly, monopoly is THE ANTITHETICAL END of the market. Where monopoly exists there is no longer a competitive market floating prices. The state itself in then in control of all production or in affiliation with a stagnant racket that controls all production. There is no market anymore, because the state (a monopoly of its own) has ceased to enforce a market. It is a choice for the state to make. The contrast between the choice between a market and monopoly is as stark as the contrast between South Korea vs North Korea, or Norway vs Venezuela.
This isn't it, he was never part of the class in the first place and he does not share its insular self-serving worldview.
He didn't go to Harvard, he went to Illinois. He built his own tech firm when taking that path wasn't even a thing for people to do, he did not inherit banking interests.
> he was never part of the class in the first place and he does not share its insular self-serving worldview
I'm sorry, I couldn't hear you over his 4,800-square-foot Tuscan-style Atherton mansion and 13-structure Malibu compound [1].
I went to public university. I then made money. Where you come from doesn't determine who you end up as. But it can leave chips on your shoulders if you never revisit your own past critically. I genuinely have no problem with Andreessen’s lifestyle. But his conspiratorial worldview is in lockstep with the class.
It's ironic he talks about markets yet Netscape came from Mosaic, developed at a public university (Urbana-Champaign in Illinois) without market forces. HTML and HTTP developed at CERN, another public institution.
In the usual pattern, there's something mysterious and totally unexplainable happening where all the systems have broken down somewhere between when Person X was a beneficiary of the system and when Person X is expected to be a benefactor to the system.
Don't you find it strange that nearly every country in the world is pursuing the same currency objective at the same time. You know the one, I just don't want to spell it out to trigger the filter.
How can every supposedly independent CB pursue the exact same goal if they are not under the direction of one nexus?
Elections indeed swing, but do the outcomes matter if the key national politicians are operating under duress? Food for thought.
Today's story is just another day of, "Eastasia has always been at war with Oceania."
What's unconvincing is the vagueness of that statement. Lets' get more specific then.
Explain, for example, how both the Fed and ECB implemented Basel III. Why do these two "independent" organizations adhere so closely to the policy recommendations of some unelected NGO?
So you're telling me that a few stuffy bureaucrats earning a salary of few hundred thousand a year are the ones who decide what happens to the money of billions? Think again.
I'll give you a big hint, both the first and second presidents of the ECB previously were part of the same small and obscure NGO concerned with the history of banking.
> a few stuffy bureaucrats earning a salary of few hundred thousand a year are the ones who decide what happens to the money of billions
You’re describing the leaders of the G-10, their central banks’ governors and the world’s most powerful legislatures, who pass the Basel Accords into law, as “stuffy bureaucrats.”
If you’re looking for conspiracy theories, the FOMC is far less elected, and arguably far more powerful, than the committees passing non-binding regulations on capital requirements and leverage limits.
Didn't you see Marc Andreesen's tweet that " 'Conspiracy theory" is code for "will be obvious in a year.' "
You only need a few first principles to see absolutely everything, like seeing the matrix code:
1) The world society is entirely made up of individual people, 8B pairs of feet on the ground. Abstractions like 'the government' or "China" are red herrings.
2) Power is relational. Vito tells Tom what to do, and it behooves Tom to carefully follow orders.
3) There are no regulations and human laws in the state of nature, only in the social reality. You alone on Mars would be free to do whatever you wanted, but here on Earth you must file with the IRS, or else.
"They" are in a dilemma, they either go total global control or they lose control. And it's clear they are going with the former.
This is just one more law that makes no practical sense even if the intentions were noble. The WHO treaty, CBDCs, and digital IDs are all in the pipeline doing much the same.
With the real-time, global, instant communication network that is the internet, "their" ONLY hope to retain control at scale is to use AI/Software and essentially force everyone to obey a computer.
They will fail, that's the good news. Mostly because of entropy - that is to say, it is far cheaper and easier to disable a structure than build it up. A $2B data center can be disabled by a fire or a virus. A "too-big-to-fail-bank" can disappear overnight when customers close their accounts.
The reason those don't happen normally is because people are mostly good, happy, and trusting. Once the trust is gone, there is anger, and self-interest trumps good-intentions - that's when the entropy and "Black Swan" events really kick in. I recommend Joseph Tainter's The Collapse of Complex Societies for how such processes have repeatedly taken place throughout history.
The bad news is that they are going to try and force total control through anyways, so get ready. Nobody can predict how its going to unfold.
Banks create the money supply (~97% of it). A bank "loan" is not a legally a loan at all but a new security that is created and purchased by the bank. Furthermore, the money for that purchase does not come from any other account or "fed reserves" it is literally instantiated in the account. This "credit creation" theory of the money supply is what the article is about and was empirically proven by the work of Richard Werner.
This is a very important level of understanding, and one that is obfuscated by the central banks.
Once understood, it is self-evident that banks are wholly responsible for asset bubbles. Banks, especially large banks, create loans mostly for existing asset purchases, and not for new productive investment. Of course, they do this in part because those assets work as collateral.
What happens when this behavior is aggregated in the whole system is essentially wealthy people jumping over each other to secure an amount of loans approaching infinity to acquire FINITE real estate and SEMI-FINITE stock. You can see how that ratio will repeatedly create asset price inflation which inevitably implodes along with the banks who issued the loans.
The only solution is for the regulator, in this case the central banks, to issue guidance for the banks to create credit for only new productive investments, whether that be new housing, factories, machinery, or firms, because those are not inflationary and increase the size of the GDP pie. If done, the economy would grow at a high clip with low inflation. The current system of credit creation for leveraged buyouts ad infinitum of a slow growing economic pie, has only one logical outcome....
"Once understood, it is self-evident that banks are wholly responsible for asset bubbles. "
No, it's not remotely.
They are no more responsible than the counterparts to the loan.
Every loan a bank makes comes with risks to the bank.
This idea you have about what is a 'productive investment' or not is fairy interventionist.
Who are you to say what is productive, and what is not? When someone buys a building to lease out flats, is that not productive?
If you believe that there is clearly such a thing as 'non productive assets', for example, pure real estate speculation, then it's the fault of those speculators for the speculating, not the banks.
The banks make the loan if the collateral and risk line up - that's what they do.
They are not in the business of deciding what is good for the economy overall, nor should they be.
Finally, that banks create the money is not 'obfuscated' moreover, the amount of leverage in the system is actually controlled by the central bank by setting reserve requirements.
I suggest there's a lot of misunderstanding in our comment.
"When someone buys a building to lease out flats, is that not productive?"
That is simply Joe's $10M building leasing out flats has now become Sally's $12M building leasing out flats. Unless Sally makes productive investments in renovations and so on, there is a net zero gain to GDP but there is asset price inflation as a result of the bank's credit creation. If the bank instead loaned $12M to Sally to build a new identical building, there would be twice as many flats available for renters, the local builders would have work for several months, and the building materials manufacturers would make sales. Joe may have to sell his old building for $9.5M instead, but he may have slightly better rents as the local economy added jobs. And the bank, in the end, should even earn a higher rate of interest from Sally.
"it's the fault of those speculators for the speculating, not the banks."
Both the speculators and banks respond to financial incentives and must work within the laws.
"This idea you have about what is a 'productive investment' or not is fairy interventionist."
Is it any any more interventionist than regulating the bank so that they can't make loans to borrowers who can't pay? Or that they cannot finance new coal plants? Or that they must report all transactions over $600?
It is inevitable that banks will eventually only loan for productive purposes. If we still have a working banking system in 50 years, that is how it will work.
But at least in the US mortgage origination is heavily influenced by the fact that Fannie Mae will buy the mortgages which means the banks don't really care whether new construction is being funded or old buildings are being bought at yet a higher price.
Just looking at the commercial banks alone won't get you the high level picture.
Landlords provide an economic service, in fact for most of them it's not just arbitrage.
"It is inevitable that banks will eventually only loan for productive purposes."
They will always lend to those who can pay them back with the least risk at the highest rate. That's it. Productivity is a second order thing and it will always be second order.
Productivity is indeed a second order thing in the way the banking system works now. But you still have not understood my point.
As long as IT IS LEGAL for banks to create credit for non-productive existing-asset purchases, there is a limit to infinity function applied to the economy that leads to consolidation of all assets with ex nihilo money. The banking system as it exists now leads to a future where one hypothetical private equity firm will have purchased all assets in the economy with bank created money (in practice, it will simply be government/central bank ownership).
I understood your comment, I'm sorry to say that I don't think you have yet absorbed what 'productivity' is or how 'fractional reserve' banking works.
Productivity isn't some adjective in your head that describes 'factories making stuff' vs. 'home buying'.
Fractional Reserve lending benefits the entire economy, lending is done for a variety of reasons and banks don't have the ability to (for the most part) define what is a 'better' kind of economic lending aka 'magic productivity'. They assume that demands on their assets will be borne out by supply and demand.
Yes, centralization of power is an issue, but it's not fractional reserve lending that is the driver of this.
> When someone buys a building to lease out flats, is that not productive?
Why would that be productive? Would the previous owner have left the building empty? If so, why, and isn't that an issue that should be addressed first?
Maybe you have other scenarios in mind where a change of ownership isn't the only thing that happens, but then the productivity is, at least to the first order, due to that other thing, not due to the change of ownership.
When a builder Alex builds an original building (typically using a construction loan), we both agree that’s productive (that construction loans are good things to exist).
Now that the building is standing, Billie wants to buy it. Maybe they want to live in it; maybe they want to rent it out. Is that purchase productive or unproductive? Since it’s the way Alex gets the money to pay off the construction loan (and thus be able to build another building), I think it’s as productive as the construction loan. (Further, no bank would make the original construction loan if there was no prospect for it to be paid off, so builders would have to hold buildings for their economic life if no one else could get loans to buy them.)
Now some more time passes and Charlie wishes to take a loan to buy the building from Billie. Is that productive? Well, it supports Billie’s ability to pay off their loan which supported Alex’s ability to pay off theirs, which is what supported the building existing at all, so…
Yeah, it's pretty clear that the first two loans are productive. The third one not so much, and I think that's the original point about asset inflation creeping in at some point.
Though it's obviously a matter of degree and context. If we're really talking about Billies and Charlies here, chances are that the last loan really is beneficial in terms of how it allows capital allocation to change. Perhaps Billie rented out units and just can't continue with that business anymore for some reason, but Charlie can.
If however we're talking about institutional investors or the very rich who will anyway employ somebody else to do the productive work, then the case for the loan is much weaker.
Ok. I read your previous as suggesting that even Billie’s loan was unproductive or Alex was doing something wrong. (Alex has built a spec property and intends to leave it empty until sale as they’re in the construction business.)
> They are not in the business of deciding what is good for the economy overall, nor should they be.
> This idea you have about what is a 'productive investment' or not is fairy interventionist.
So, banks do not give a damn about what's good for the economy (while having enormous power to drive economies), but you believe interventionsim is bad anyway?
Also, if you don't know what a productive asset is, you just need to read a little bit: it's not hard to know.
The delusion of efficient central planning is maybe one of the most poignant problems in civilization, because free markets are completely counter intuitive.
The 'reading' that needs to be done here is Adam Smith.
It is extremely difficult to know what a 'productive asset' is.
Luxury items: feels like a waste? But this is a way for rich people to spend stupid amounts of money on something that only they value in their heads, but which nobody else values, and money spreads into the hands of working people. And there are a lot of intangibles that come out of that. Rich guys spending billions on race car teams is where a lot of automotive innovation comes from.
Education: feels productive? Show me millions and millions of papers that nobody else reads, that nobody will ever read and where the 'value' in that is. It would be more 'productive' to send them into Nursing in many cases. But who is going to decide which 'Scientists' are worthy and which one's are not? Tough job!
> If you believe that there is clearly such a thing as 'non productive assets', for example, pure real estate speculation, then it's the fault of those speculators for the speculating, not the banks.
It doesnt matter whose responsibility is it if it screws up the entire economy. Breaking everything for everyone is not something that should be allowed regardless of justification.
> Who are you to say what is productive, and what is not? When someone buys a building to lease out flats, is that not productive?
In theory there is a powerful argument here, but in practice I am suspicious because when people attempt to start settling trades in, say, gold the police will soon get involved.
If we're appealing to principles of freedom of opinion, there has to be a really good justification for why we all have to agree with the bank's opinions on who is creditworthy? I think somewhere in the mess I'm being robbed, and everyone being forced to participate in the system is not allaying my suspicions.
It is the old argument against socialism - while there is often not a good argument against the individual parts; it is the communists building the wall to keep people in. Looks kinda suspicious and the people controlling the monetary system see little reason to compromise or allow people to choose the best personal options.
>> socialism - while there is often not a good argument against the individual parts; it is the communists building the wall
Communism and socialism are distinct. The confusion arises because Marx (& Engels) used the terms interchangeably but that was a long time ago and a lot has changed in the interim (as has just about every other discipline in the world) and now these terms refer to distinct ideas.
Within socialism, there’s a few major branches. The one of most interest to western countries would be democratic socialism.
Just to help cement the idea that there’s fundamental differences, here’s some ideas from socialism that might be surprising if you equate socialism with communism:
They’re against redistributive taxes because they’re heavy in administrative overhead and can reduce the desire to work. Instead they prefer the idea that income distributions are maintained fairly. E.g. for one example, the board can award the CEO any amount they desire limited only by the available money to the company - however, the lowest paid employee, regardless of role within the firm, must not earn less than 0.X times the remuneration of the CEO. Where X is set such that the lowest and highest paid workers dont diverge by excessive amounts.
Socialists believe in individual creativity - they strive to provide freedom to be creative to all individuals.
While ultimately they’re against the waste of capitalism (e.g. a sweeping simplification but advertising driven consumption - consumption not based on need but based on wants) socialists do seek to beat production of the capitalist approach where communism has no interest in this.
> regardless of role within the firm, must not earn less than 0.X times the remuneration of the CEO
So penalizing companies in low margin sectors and depriving them of top tier leadership talent while favoring companies in high margin industries seems reasonable to them? e.g. Amazon would have a much lower cap on CEO remuneration mainly because they are in retail and distribution (not implying that warehouse workers are not treated poorly) than Google for instance just because they employee less software engineers etc. proportionally?
You’re trying to add apples and bricks and getting fishing hooks as an answer.
The concept of a CEO is quite radically different when there’s collective ownership of the means of production.
Going back to the grandparents point - it’s often healthy and useful to disagree, often the root of progress but we can’t skip the necessary first step of learning first. An opinion built from a misunderstanding of what’s being discussed is not useful.
> You’re trying to add apples and bricks and getting fishing hooks as an answer.
I'm sorry but I really don't understand what are you trying to say.
> The concept of a CEO is quite radically
Perhaps. My point was that tying minimum pay to CEO salary/remuneration doesn't really make sense. Nothing else.
> An opinion built from a misunderstanding of what’s being discussed is not useful
You mean like my opinion? Why? I mean your comment is very vague and unspecific. You didn't say anything besides that I don't understand what I'm talking about with no explanation or arguments.. (which sort of illustrates my implicit point that idealistic socialists tend to ignore most of the hard issues and mainly focus on gaslighting their 'ideological opponents' instead of offering actual solutions)
> bank "loan" is not a legally a loan at all but a new security that is created and purchased by the bank
No. Bank loans are legally loans in all competent jurisdictions and definitely not securities. (One can securitise loans, e.g. leveraged loans, but that's separate from lending.)
> a very important level of understanding, and one that is obfuscated by the central banks
What? Central banks somewhat consolidate credit creation. Credit has always been the basis of money, even in the commodity era.
Well, the obligation to pay back the loan itself may not be a security, but the receivership of the money that is paid back is usually packaged into a security, so that the entity that give out the loan may not be the one that is eventually paid back for it. Banks package and sell the rights to get the money back.
The bit I don't get is where there can be An accurate (?) measure of the productive capacity of ... anything. So under MMT as Inunderstand it the idea is it's feasible to create money to level of productive capacity - via government purchase of that capacity to build roads and buy policing services etc.
Wartime economies get more "productive" because the government is able to divert resources to its needs (ie stop being a hairdresser and work in the arms factory) - thus increasing the productive capacity.
So, if the government wanted to (peacetime) redirect resources it would have to bid for services at a level that encouraged hairdressers to become munitions workers - and then create money to pay for that.
And they create money through (ok lots of pieces I don't get but I think it's QE ala Richard Werner).
This is typified by a thought exercise: if the government simply replace fiat money with a crypto fiat (ie all money is in bank of englands blockchain ledger ) then suddenly private banks cannot make loans becaus they cannot create money on that blockchain. But the bank of england could ... and this is equivalent of QE except much cleaner and more obvious.
But ... and we eventually get to my point ... if money creation is taken away from banks (regulation, 2008 crash, crypto) and in theory banks are close to the real world and able to judge if loaning money for a factory is a good idea - then how does one judge how much money should be created ?
I am dubious of "we measure inflation" because not just lag but the fairly common view of "prices go up while RPI stays flat"
And since money creation is tied to collateral, and collateral is basically land, land absorbs all money creation in end - which is where we see our land price issues - and essentially means money creation is rich get richer.
If we could break the link between collateral and increasing productive capacity there might be a flowering of equality.
Just in the first half of your comment, it reminds me of Diane Coyle's long standing argument that the GDP, and many productivity indexes, are just very sexist and not for any real reason other than our patriarchal government, and economics specifically.
This is the "if you paid for a housekeeper and nanny it's the same as paying your wife but it does not show up in statistics "
Yes - but it still does not get closer to measuring productivity. I mean we are all pretty much unproductive sitting in a damp field. It's infrastructure, organisation, trade and then low down the lost, skills that matter.
It would if the government printed money to pay women that were doing aforementioned unpaid work. Or paid in social security credits. It is not an unmeasurable thing, just ignored. And these skills and work do matter, it is just subsidized by money from other employment and often not very efficiently, even less fair.
The problem with land is that you can't produce it. Producers arbitrage the interest rate and the profit rate of manufacturing until the difference is almost zero. But you can't produce land so the cost of land goes up instead.
This is like MMT inspired nonsense, lower interest rates from central banks aren't causing lower growth.
We have lower growth, so we have lower interest rates. Increasing rates would decrease the price of assets, as we've just seen from the past 12 months. The purpose of that was to handle the NGDP overshoot from covid.
> The only solution is for the regulator, in this case the central banks, to issue guidance for the banks to create credit for only new productive investments
Just plain stupid. I don't even know what this means or what the policy would look like.
> new housing, factories, machinery, or firms, because those are not inflationary
Obviously wrong. What does inflation mean? An increase in the price level. If you increase demand all else being equal, what happens to the price of something?
By the way - that's the whole point of central banking affecting interest rates. To lower the cost of credit so aggregate demand increases (which is inflationary).
You need to give me a really good thesis on why increasing the cost of credit for """"semi-finite""" assets causes lower growth. The gall to end this with "only one logical outcome" smh.
Edit:
It's like you live in post 2008 fantasy land where aggregate demand is depressed forever. We do not live in this world.
Sorry, that's incorrect. Banks loan out money that is backed by collateral. This money is indeed created. But when the loan is paid back, the money is destroyed. The money tracks the value in the economy, so the inflation is zero.
What the fed does is create money that is backed solely by the fed promising to pay it back in the future. But the money is paid back by issuing more debt! Hence, inflation.
I do agree that the assertion holds true in most cases, but it break down during extreme environments - widespread bank collapses or when the productive ability of the economy is sharply reduced. Loans that cannot be repaid break the equation at some point.
As for government spending, it greatly depends on what it does with the money, and also on taxation. The government promises to pay back money based on future taxation, and if the taxation grow faster than the debt then there won't be any inflation.
Yes, it does imply this, because inflation is a supply & demand thing. More money representing the value of goods and services means each dollar is worth less == inflation.
Borrowing using assets as collateral means the money created matches the value of the collateral.
Theoretically, yes. Technically, however, these people are getting bailed out. That makes inflation. The government still have to pay for the debt, but it seems like it’s not happening anytime soon (the debt ceiling just keep getting higher and higher).
US government debt is around 31.5 Trillion $$ at the moment. If the US government were to pay its debt today, all that liquidity will be removed from the market and this will have enormous deflationary pressures.
In the same way for private individuals, if you can always keep renewing your debt and pricing your assets higher (a bubble would help), you’d create inflation.
> The only solution is for the regulator, in this case the central banks, to issue guidance for the banks to create credit for only new productive investments, whether that be new housing, factories, machinery, or firms, because those are not inflationary and increase the size of the GDP pie.
I struggle to see exactly what you are advocating for. If a family wants to buy a house, they will generally have to take out a loan to cover the upfront cost and pay off the loan over a long period of time. However, the loan is not a "productive investment" (no new assets are being created, only traded) and as such the central bank should regulate normal banks to not be allowed to issue loans for existing houses.
Without the ability to take out a loan for a house, I think we can all see how no normal family without 20-40 years of combined salary payments would be able to afford a house. Is this in line with what you are suggesting, or is it something else?
I'm not trying to be asinine, this is just my interpretation of your suggestion and I am trying to understand what you are suggesting.
They create all of it. God knows where the 97% comes from. We don't have silver coins any more, and even they were tokens for a promise.
It was empirically proven by Keynes by in the 1930s. Werner was way behind the curve.
It's not new knowledge. Reginald McKenna published a book on it in the 1920s.[0]
"What happens when this behavior is aggregated in the whole system is essentially wealthy people jumping over each other to secure an amount of loans approaching infinity "
Wrong. The entire system is a liquidity provision for existing stuff. It is systemically limited by physical collateral and risk limits within banks. If a bank takes on too much risk then it goes bust and the shareholder capital is wiped out.
There is no asset bubble. Artificially intervening in the market for money (which is what interest rate setting is) suppresses the price of assets, which means insufficient are produced.
We're seeing that now as the house builders go into hibernation - another round of stop start in the construction industry - which is one of the reasons why they tend to use subcontractors rather than hire and train employees.
Channelling the stability process via the banks, and thereby making them 'special' means we can't let the standard process of capitalism, bankruptcy and loss of capital, control the risk limits in banks.
Out of curiosity, can you wax lyrical a bit more on construction? I’m about to build a house but I’m considering holding off for 12 months to see what happens with materials prices. Particularly steel. Not too concerned about contractors as I am building myself.
Interest rates go up, money is harder to come by, people are building less since they can't get a loan, contractors find other work until construction picks back up.
I understand this much. But, the world is pretty weird at the moment. It seems more complex now than just moving interest rate levers around to manipulate the economy.
> Once understood, it is self-evident that banks are wholly responsible for asset bubbles. Banks, especially large banks, create loans mostly for existing asset purchases, and not for new productive investment. Of course, they do this in part because those assets work as collateral.
This is probably the best part of what you wrote. Loans are typically given to help purchase a finite resource, helping increase demand for limited supply, having the overall effect of inflation.
The person who gets screwed is the person who saved their money. Now, when they withdraw it to buy an asset, it costs more, because the bank allowed somebody else to buy it.
An IRL example I see is tonnes of young people driving around in brand new cars on finance. Not a single one of them can afford the car they apparently own. Now I, as somebody who saved to buy their car, will need to pay more because the bank increased the demand for these cars so much.
The problem really occurs when high numbers of people start defaulting on these loans, and the things they purchased were highly inflated at the time of purchase. Even if the bank goes to collect the asset, they will find it's not worth what was originally paid, but they are still missing a large amount of money not originally factored into their risk.
Needless to say, 2023/2024 is about to get really bad.
> The person who gets screwed is the person who saved their money. Now, when they withdraw it to buy an asset, it costs more, because the bank allowed somebody else to buy it.
I don’t know needs to hear this, but I should remind everyone that putting your long-term savings in cash is, and always has been, a guaranteed way to lose to inflation. Long-term savers should be using a mix of bonds, CDs, stocks, and money market accounts depending on time horizons and risk tolerance.
Loans create deposits. Balance sheets have to balance.
The loan creates the advance, and the advance is transferred to the credit of another person - which is either directly the payee, or the bank where the payee has the account.
Yeah but now you answered your own question. The deposits represent a claim to debt, they are what is used to settle the debt. So the bank can't just delete the deposits it creates. Debts would become unpayable electronically and then cash must be used to settle all transactions.
The obvious factor is liquidity between banking institutions and liquidity requirements by the central bank.
When withdrawing cash, the bank has to give you central bank money, not commercial bank issued money. If it doesn't have this CB money it has to borrow it from the central bank. So having central bank deposits saves you these costs. The other factor is that transfers between banks are also settled with CB money so you either borrow it from the central bank or get it from customers. Finally, the central bank wants to limit maximum money creation by mandating that a bank must keep a percentage of central bank money.
In short the bank could exclusively operate on money borrowed from the central bank but customer cash deposits are cheaper.
People don't withdraw cash. They transfer it to another bank. When they transfer it to another bank the destination bank becomes a depositor in the source bank.
That's how correspondence banking works.
Central banking is nothing more than an optimisation of that process. There is no need for central bank money to do bank transfers. The liquidity automatically arises.
They don’t which is why they have become hostile to customers in the last 10-20 years. Especially with negative interest rates, the customer is a net negative. Still, people with money are usually the people who generate most business for the bank (either via loans or by buying other products), but it helps to have your account there first.
Gold buggery, now crypto, is an old scam. In truth, sound money has never existed.
And it cannot exist. Value is a subjective measure on reality. Transporting that across time requires work. Expecting to get that transport for free is the perpetual-motion problem of finance.
Gold buggery and crypto may be scams, but the current system where the people with the most money get to issue themselves more money is definitely a scam.
The largest banks in the US collectively decide things like what the federal reserve interest rates will be. They literally decide how much money they can create.
I did and didn't learn anything new. The big banks make up the federal reserve. The federal reserve sets the interest rates. The interest rates determine the amount of money created. The banks decide how much money they can create.
People create money substitutes at will when their central government isn't providing them with a suitable money system. That should give you an intuitive sense that money is always a social relationship.
A bank acts like an internet router but one that transforms the risk relationship. It is not an intermediary that accepts deposits and lends them on. It is an intermediary that acts as a third party to a double sided debt contract where one side owes products and services to the creditor and another side owes money to the debtor.
I don't agree. Instead of being between two people, think of the transaction as being between a person and society. Since society offers a lot of different things, you can sell your pigs to society for a token which you can later use to redeem goods and services later. In this sense money is a debt - or an IOU - from society to the holder.
I don't understand what "sound" is supposed to mean in the first place.
From an engineering perspective a debt based system has a lot more guarantees about what will happen to the economy from a stability perspective. There is still the obvious non determinism of not paying debts on time but it sounds like it could be solved by introducing negative feedback so that the system self stabilized toward a desired state.
But this "sound" money thing, it is supposed to work just by sheer willpower alone.
The central bank only controls the nominal "time value of money". The money holders have a big impact on the real "time value of money". Why haven't you looked there?
Also, the system behaves erratically even when there is no central bank. In fact, the erratic behaviour becomes even more frequent. That would imply that private market participants are a bigger factor in erratic behaviour than central banks.
Thank you, was hoping for someone to point this out.
Banks don't take deposits and they don't lend money. Banks create money.
When they "lend," what they are legally doing is purchasing a newly issued security for your home. And they are doing so with created money, that money is not transferred from some other account.
Similarly when you "deposit," the money is legally now the bank's. The bank now has a liability to you, but it is not a custodial intermediary "holding" your money for you.
It is poorly understood that banks are in fact creating credit. Most people believe in either the fractional reserve model of banking or in the financial intermediary model.
This is a real problem, because as they create credit to finance existing asset purchases (as opposed to financing new investment) they create asset price inflation & bubbles and foster inequality.
> create credit to finance existing asset purchases (as opposed to financing new investment)
the seller of that purchase transaction will have received the financing credit as cash.
This cash is, in most cases, invested. If the seller had a loan, they might've repaid the loan - but then this repayment would in part, cancel out the credit creation the buyer's bank did. The net outcome, if it was positive, is the profit that the seller obtained, and this is real wealth created.
This wealth is often reinvested somewhere - either to purchase existing assets (in which case, this cycle repeats), or to finance a new asset/investment (like a startup).
However, the purchasing of existing assets is required for this system to work - like an exit strategy for the initial investors of that asset.
Banks doing lending _could_ cause a bubble, if the rate of interest is too low compared to the growth in the economy (the assumption is that there's a limit to how fast you can grow new assets). Whether the past decade since the GFC had too low an interest rate, is up for debate.
Foucault implied the same. Or at least, suggested that as the scientific definitions are created so too does the phenomena emerge. Ian Hacking expanded upon this and named this concept, dynamic nominalism.
That's why we had "madmen" in 19th century and that no longer exists, only to be subsumed by supposedly more specific new descriptions that psychologists have come up with.
The idea of dynamic nominalism is not that such a label as "Multiple Personality" is contrived but that the described phenomena becomes real. The two simultaneously and unconsciously converge, in a sense, to exist.
My own thought is that you can this expand concept for a lot of current & former social categories that are even broader - and not restricted to psychology, such as being a hippie. And also the social category that is currently in vogue.
You have that relationship inverted. The US gov't is a mere shell at this point, having outsourced all its core functions to private companies. There is no "medicare" budget or "defense" budget, there is only the capital allocated to and embezzled by the medical & military industrial complex.
And rest assured they do their own set of overt disappearances, notably the Boeing whistleblower and Epstein. There is an obvious playbook they follow in such cases, first they bribe, blackmail, or discredit - before being indiscreet.