Re: The Clearest Explanation of the Cause of Financial Crisi : Fri Nov 09, 2012 5:00 pm
LeighGionaire wrote:
Just because his solution wouldn't necessarily be the same as mine we both agree on the fundamental problem at the heart of this crisis.
Really?
He states the problem is that lack of regulation on banks lead to too much lending and thus private sector over-leveraging. To repair this he says we should increase banking regulation. He explicitly says that the current fractional reserve banking system shouldn't be got rid of
You say banks are perpetrating a 'money from nothing fraud', you think all debt is inherently evil, so you want to replace the current banking system.
If you genuinely think he is backing up your point then you're more crazy than I thought.
LeighGionaire wrote:
Anyway I'm still waiting for you to explain how the U.K money supply doubled in the last 8 years if banks don't create money when they give out new loans . . .
I have explicitly stated that banks create money, just not in a 'money out of nothing fraud'
I'll try once more to explain the difference between our position.
When I walk into my local Barclay's bank and ask for a £100k loan to buy a house from you, if I'm successful they will credit my account with £100k. They wont transfer money deposited from someone else's account into mine, they will simply credit my account with the money, I think we agree with this part.
But, when I successfully buy the house and the transaction goes through, what do you think happens? Do you think my bank simply transfers this newly created money into your (say Santander) bank account., and Santander accept this? This isn't what happens, they transfer money from their account with the central bank, into Santander's central bank account. They CANNOT create 'central bank money'.
As I previously stated banks can deposit as much money into people's accounts as they like. But as soon as the person tries to spend it or withdraw it, they need 'central bank money' to back it up - and they cannot create this type of money.
So yes banks can create as much money as they like, as long as they don't care about becoming insolvent. Barclays could deposit £100 trillion in my account right now, but as soon as I tried to spend it the bank would be insolvent.
I have a few questions I would like to ask you.
a) you state that ' there is NEVER enough Money/Credit in the system to pay back all the loans because the extra money needed to pay the interest isn't created at the same time as the loan'.
Where do you think the money from the interest repayments goes? Do you think banks horde all their interest repayments in big underground vault. Or do you think this money is simply income for the bank, which is used to pay the salary of its employees, and dividends to its shareholders?
b) You say governments can never pay off their debts. But governments can ensure that they run a surplus, this means debt decreases. At what point would the magic boundary come into play and stop governments reducing debt so much it became 0?