Originally published on Truthout
The recent Public Banking conference held in Philadelphia offered a message that is at once so simple – but also so bold – it is hard for most Americans to pause long enough to understand how profoundly their thinking had been corralled by the masters of finance – in ways far, far, far more insidious and powerful than even the latest financial crisis suggests.
To understand what has happened, however, you first have to take a minute to shake a few cobwebs out of your brain about “money” – and how it is created and by whom and for whose benefit.
Money is “created”? Yes, obviously so – or did you imagine there is some fixed pile of “money” some place that exists once and for all and for all times?
Think about it: If that were true, it would be impossible for the economy ever to change and grow. If the “money supply” were not increased over time, the original economy of, say, 1776 – which served about 2.5 million Americans – would still define the amount of “money” we would have to work with today.
(And yes, going back further, if money were not increased – i.e. “created” – the amount that existed even in a far smaller economy prior to 1776 would be all there was and is, even down to today.)
* * *
Once you realize money must be and is regularly created and expanded, then the interesting questions begin to occur – like “How is it done?” and “Who benefits from it?”
Step One: Most people think of “money” as something real, something that is kind of like gold or silver or anything that has intrinsic value. Allowing for a very, very few minor exceptions, that is simply not what “money” is.
“Money” in the real world is a piece of paper (or electronic version of the same) that is a promissory note – a promise to pay you – that legally must be accepted by anyone to whom it is given to settle a debt. Behind this promise is the federal government in two very big ways: First, the government itself stands behind the promise as the party that will pay what it says it will pay on the piece of paper. Second, the government ensures that everyone must accept this promise if the piece of paper is handed over when you buy something or settle a debt.
So, money is a promise to pay? Yes and that is all it is – but that is huge, especially when backed and enforced by the government.
Once you fully grasp this simple truth, things get very, very interesting:
Some “authority” must have the power to issue or authorize the issuing of “promises to pay that must be accepted” – i.e. to “create” money. In the United States that “authority” is called the Federal Reserve (“the Fed”).
And yes – because the economy does, in fact, get bigger over time – the Federal Reserve Board must have a way to create more money (more promises to pay) as time goes on. It does this all the time. In the modern era, it does it via computers issuing – literally out of thin air, via nothing more than accounting entries – promises to pay that are called “dollars.”
The Federal Reserve uses these to buy up securities owned by banks – and then these newly created “dollars” are deposited in the banks’ reserve account at the Fed.
Again, yes, created literally out of thin air. (Otherwise the money supply wouldn’t expand and we would be back in 1776 …)
* * *
Now things start to get very interesting indeed: Banks have the legal right to lend more than the amount of “dollars” they actually keep in their vaults or at the Fed (their reserves) – roughly ten times more these days. So, for instance and simplifying a bit, let’s say that Bank A has $1,000 in deposits. So long as it keeps $100 on reserve, it can lend out $900 to the public.
But this is only the beginning and here’s where the real action is and how the game is played: that $900 is now multiplied throughout the banking system. Note carefully the word “multiplied.” Bank A loans the money to individuals, businesses and perhaps other banks. Then, these people deposit the money in another bank (or they spend it and someone else deposits it in another bank). Though in the real world, it would go to many banks, for simplicity assume for the moment it all goes to Bank B. Now, Bank B has $900 in “new” deposits and (keeping 10 percent in reserves as required) it can now lend out another $810. And if this is deposited in Bank C, in turn that bank can keep 10 percent and lend out $731 ($810-81). Ultimately, when the process is completed the initial $1,000 permits the creation of (again, yes, out of thin air) $10,000.
(Ten times as much is not a magical number; it is what the Federal Reserve Board currently allows for transaction accounts of more than $71 million [it is 3 percent for $11.5 million to $71 million, and zero for accounts of less than $11.5 million. It could be more; it could be less.])
* * *
Let’s stop for a moment, however, to consider something far more important: I started out this little essay by saying that “the recent public banking conference offered a message that is at once so simple – but also so bold – it is hard for most Americans to stop long enough to understand how their thinking has been corralled by the masters of finance – in ways far, far, far more insidious and powerful than even the latest financial crisis suggests.”
The above has, in fact, all simply been background for the big story: Think again about the fact that the Federal Reserve Board (like any central bank in any country) simply “creates money” out of thin air or authorizes it to be created by banks (by, among other techniques, setting or altering the amount banks have to keep on reserve).
Moreover, it can also decide what interest rate it will demand for the money it lends out when banks need additional reserves to meet requirements – including, if it likes, zero or near zero. (Currently banks can borrow short term from the Federal Reserve Board at three-quarters of one percent – i.e. 0.75 percent.)
Why, you might ask, doesn’t the Federal Reserve Board simply “create” money (as it does all the time) and lend it at 0.75 percent to the government (rather than let the banks do it) to pay for important public goods and to settle its debts? (Our bridges are falling down; not a bad thing in which to invest.)
The answer is: It certainly could do that, in theory. In fact, it has been doing something close to this recently using a fancy term, the origins of which I won’t bother you with. The term is “quantitative easing” – but all it means is that the Federal Reserve Board “creates” money and buys up government bonds from the banks – and, then, the banks in turn lend to the government and the government pays its debts (or buys airplanes, or schools, or bridges and roads, or anything it decides it wants to buy or spend money on ….).
The banks, of course, make a nice profit on this as “middlemen” between the Fed and the government.
If you have been watching closely, you will now begin to see why the Public Banking conference’s message is pretty dramatic: What is the big deal about deficits when the economy is stagnating? Why doesn’t the Federal Reserve Board simply “create money” (as it does all the time anyway) and lend it to the government via the banks and then have the government put people to work by investing the money (building bridges and roads and schools, for instance)? Two things then happen: the economy gets going and more tax receipts come in to help pay off the debt (of newly created money). Yes, of course, if this went too far, inflation could become a concern. So, it is important not to go too far.
* * *
Even more interesting – much more interesting! – if the law were changed – or we acted as we did in part during World War II and, for instance, Canada acted between 1938 and 1974; – it would be possible for the Fed to lend directly to the government, bypassing the bank “middlemen” who make their profit by selling bonds to the Fed and investing the money in the government.
Moreover – watch this very, very closely – since by law the Federal Reserve Board turns over almost all its profits (i.e. all interest) to the government even now, the loans would cost the government literally nothing if things were done in the simple, straightforward way (or if a “public bank” were set up that operates just the way private banks are run today, including making profits for the owners – who in this case would obviously be the public – i.e. the government).
(One rough estimate offered by the Public Banking people is that had the United States done what they are talking about over the last 24 years, the amount saved on interest payments on the national debt would have been roughly eight trillion dollars – and the economy might also have been moved out of recession. Whatever the number might be in a careful statistical analysis, it is very, very large indeed.)
* * *
There is a rough parallel in all this with the way student loans used to be handled and are handled now. For a substantial period, the banks provided some loans to students that were guaranteed by the government, adding a mark-up for their profit. In 2010, Congress decided to eliminate the middleman and the government now simply makes the loans directly at lower cost.
But, of course, we don’t allow ourselves to follow the straightforward path outlined above or suggested by the student loan program changes. Indeed, to even suggest the Public Banking strategy is to suggest a horror of horrors, since one of the biggest money makers for the banking industry would be on the chopping block.
And the banking industry – especially its Wall Street branch – plays a very powerful and rough political game opposing anything or anyone who tries to “uncorral” the thinking of the public.
Nonetheless, that is the direction that was opened up for serious discussion at the Public Banking conference. First steps first, of course. We currently have one “public bank” in the United States, the 93-year-old Bank of North Dakota. Since 2010, seventeen states have considered legislation to create banks based in one or another way on this model. Ellen Brown, the leading theorist behind the movement – along with many participants – urges the value of such banks on their own terms in that they help small businesses, farmers, home-owners, students and others.
But, down the line, the big payoff is to get us thinking much more carefully about the way the world really works, and why. Once you start thinking about how money is created and who gets to use that power and for what purpose, some very, very interesting questions indeed begin to follow.
To be sure, the story gets more complicated when you bring in global trade, finance, the Chinese, and so forth: A serious move in the way posed by the Public Banking people would have major implications for global finance, and the role of the US – and the US dollar – in the global system.
But this, too, is one of the purposes of taking such proposals seriously – and the importance of starting a far-reaching new debate not only about money and the US system, but the fragility of the entire superstructure of global finance these days.
* * *
(By the way, one estimate is that roughly 25 percent of the world’s banking systems allow central banks to extend credit directly to governments; another 37 percent allow short-term advances. These include some of the fast charging so-called “BRIC[S]” countries such as India and South Africa, as well as Malaysia, the United Arab Emirates, Israel and Japan.)
If you want to have some fun with this – before you get angry at the rip-offs – take a look at the video of 12 year-old Victoria Grant explaining the same thing for Canada. There is a reason why it went viral and has been seen by more than a million people.




25 Comments

Comrade, that was a lot of words and I still didn’t see the answer to this question: Why doesn’t the Federal Reserve Board simply “create” money (as it does all the time) and lend it at 0.75 percent to the government?
The answer is “The Domino Theory”. If you must maintain an ideological fraud, you must protect every domino to prevent the collapse of the fraud.
Why maintain the hysterics over a puny threat like Cuba? Because it stops people from getting ideas.
“U.S. Economy Grinds To Halt As Nation Realizes Money Just A Symbolic, Mutually Shared Illusion”
http://www.theonion.com/articles/us-economy-grinds-to-halt-as-nation-realizes-money,2912/
“Drunken Ben Bernanke Tells Everyone At Neighborhood Bar How Screwed U.S. Economy Really Is”
http://www.theonion.com/articles/drunken-ben-bernanke-tells-everyone-at-neighborhoo,21059/
J.P. Morgan has been controlling monetary policy and propping up this broken system(capitalism) since the Panic of 1893. The US Treasury and Fed are thin veneers of government control(meaning elected officials who must answer to the people who elect them). So one must ask if whether what is really happening to our so-called American capitalistic system today is anything new? Why does it need to be propped up by schemes and disingenuous persons?
Gar Alperoitz — thanks for this MyFDL diary — this is what more/all Americans should/need be looking at,thinking about,talking about.
Clearly neither Obama nor Romney who are fronting for the UniParty/INC. Wall St./GS/JPMC/assorted vested/allied banking and usury interests of the USA,Europe and Earth INC. are going anywhere near it with 2012 This Is Democracy Charade being tossed at Americans again.
Again as I mentioned in a earlier comment I put up here at FDL just recently who owns the American $$? The American people do. So why do we have to suffer this Post 2008 Crash/Depression so we can be bent over by Wall St./TBTF bankers and screwed with American $$’s that are ours not Wall Streets or Goldman Sachs or JPMorgnnChase’s to begin with?
Barack Obama within the first six weeks,the first six months after becoming POTUS on Jan.20,2009 could have nationalized U.S.banking starting with the sickest banks and working towards the not so sick banks just because as POTUS Obama he is at top of the USG which is owned by the American people who own and “print” the American Dollar in numbers from $1 to $10 to $100 to $1,000 so on and so forth. Barack Obama instead went all derelict about doing so and instead has given all Americans the last three and one half years of what POTUS Obama has let stay in place,take place or keeps letting this BS “QE” slide around on and through.
The Federal Reserve is a strange creation that likely was created by allied interests on both sides of the Atlantic to make it possible to conduct BS business and banking goals in lead-up to 1914 onwards. Here we are in 2012 with the American Empire still heavily linked up with the remaining rump British Empire now trying to move back into SE Asia and restore Anglo-Saxon planet Earth hegemony like it is 1913 again.
Lets talk about who “owns” the American Dollar more and on informed terms.
Lets talk less about the manufactured/faked kabuki “differences” between UniParty Barack Obama and UniParty Mitt Romney.
Again — thanks GA — stay with it.
Highly recommended.
Please note –
Correction to spelling error of Gar Alperovitz’s name at #4 comment.
When I inserted a corrective letter “o” in original screen spelling entry the FDL comment screen process ( or something somewhere somehow ) took out the “v” which I did not catch/notice until after posting.
Not sure as to what causes this to take place as it does not happen always — only now and then. Makes for a dicey game of doing changes/corrections to already composed words and sentences.
With this comment I am now able to insert letters/words with no next letter or word deletion(s) taking place again……..?
Here is a geeky tip, the required reserves are about 1 percent of bank deposits, just take the Federal Reserve Board reports of total bank deposits and compare to the 90 Billion or so of required reserves in the weekly H-1 report.
It did not use to be that way. When I was taught economics the required reserve rates were higher and instead of “setting” interest rates the Federal Reserve Board modified reserve requirements to manage the US money supply.
A simplistic view of a fractional reserve banking life cycle puts the US in the end game before a severe crash. This is because fractional reserve money is created as debt, and the debtors pay interest back to the banks until the interest flow dominates the economy and the debtors income. Takes about 80 to 100 years evidently.
Ah yes, the good old days of money. People weren’t living in their cars. They weren’t paying off mortgages that were underwater.
When we re-examine the nineteen seventies and eighties, we see a society in which only eight or nine cents out of every dollar of profit went to the banks or some financial firm. Now forty nine cents out of every dollar of profit made ends up in the hands of bankers and con men – oops, financial and investment people.
Thanks for this. When I learned about fractional reserve banking in college, it seemed like magic. Of course, it is.
But, if that’s what you it, isn’t it why recessions and depressions gain such traction, as well? Aren’t they to some extent just fractional reserve banking, telescoping in reverse?
One does what one can. Steve Grossman, the Massachusetts State Treasurer, has deposited a lot of state money in smaller banks on condition that they lend it out to small businesses.
Would be glad to see Massachusetts go whole hog like North Dakota with a state bank. There’s a reason that N.D. has weathered this depression better than any other state.
Excellent! Thanks.
It might be worth noting that Ellen Brown has a book out on these matters, “Web of Debt,” which she sells in electronic form for $10. I’ve not yet read it, but I read this excellent article by her at TruthOut.
We actually have three different kinds of money:
There is a problem with “quantitative easing”: Treasury bonds owned by the Fed still count toward the nation’s debt limit. Some of us here at FDL, notably beowulf and letsgetitdone, have suggest that instead of selling bonds indirectly to the Fed (and putting up with the bank fees involved), the Treasury instead mint a hundred-trillion-dollar coin and deposit it into the Treasury’s account at the Fed, which the Secretary of Treasury can do under existing law.
The debt-limit crisis would immediately disappear. But none of that money could be spent except via Congressional appropriations — an “appropriation” being permission to withdraw money from the Treasury’s accounts.
A salute to The Big Con.
Wonder if this is where it really got started.
Creating money does not create demand if economy is in a liquidity trap as is U.S. & Europe.
Exactly so, especially if the created money goes to the 1%. “Demand” is money in the hands of would-be consumers. Duh!
Happy to see you post that. Much of what goes on between the fed and treasury and involving spending are artificial constraints. And the way we account for our debts is just silly, as you noted. A hundred trillion dollar coin would indeed eliminate the constraint on the debt limit anyway. But they will find another I suspect.
Ironically, the Ag Dept. alone, could create an immediate ‘demand’, by merely, electronically increasing SNAP’s EBT individual recipients’ accounts…! A big bang for the (non-existent)buck…!
Thanks for the piece. I’m still reading it… it’s kinda long. But I did scan it and, in the meantime, I question one of your underlying assumptions:
Ron Paul has introduced legislation that he calls “Competing Currencies.” I don’t fully understand it. But in a nutshell, it’s intended to repeal legal tender laws.
Why do you believe the USG should have a monopoly on money? I’m not intending to simply disagree or challenge you. I’m trying to better understand money. It is something that most of us simply take for granted and I think “money” should be a topic of discussion in the 2012 election.
Um, what was the message?
I want to add a word about money. The dollar is a tax credit. It is “redeemed” by the government (ie destroyed) when we pay taxes. And that is likely the primary reason we use dollars and not euros to buy things. Everyone has to get their hands on dollars to pay their taxes. So why make it hard on yourself by using sea shells or whatever? Also note that all US debt is in dollars so the government can always pay it and can not go broke. And the dollar is not convertible into anything else, like say gold. It is a fiat currency.
There is now 15 trillion dollars in debt. That is the amount of money the government has created beyond what was destroyed in collecting taxes and that money helps to fuel the economy.
One other point. The banking system is not constrained on lending by a reserve requirement at the fed. If the loan is profitable, they loan the money and only later borrow the reserves, which the fed supplies. So bank lending could be limitless, but, of course, it is constrained by the market. The fed regulates the overnight interest rate on reserves. They used to do this by buying and selling treauries but I think now they just pay a fixed rate on reserves. In that sense it is a savings account just like a treasury bond.
People like Beowulf and Letsgetitdone (also Warren Mosler, Randy Wray, et al) are more expert in these matters than me, but I think this is about right.
I am intrigued by your reference to Ron Paul and would like to know more about his proposal.
Yes, but I don’t think the fed creates money. When they buy treasuries they just swap one asset for another. The fed gets the bond and credits the banks reserve account and the bank credits the bond and debit the reserve?? If the bond pays more interest than the reserve, the fed turns the interest back to the treasury. So in a sense they are taking money out of the economy.
Here is where this stuff loses me. But I think money is created when the treasury spends beyond what it takes in, ie a deficit.
The USG does not have a “monopoly on money.” Every time a bank makes a loan or purchases a bond, it is creating money, i.e., credit in a bank account in exchange for that mortgage, bond, or whatever.
The monopoly that the USG has is that they get to say what they’ll accept in payment of U.S. taxes. And, they accept currency that they and/or the Fed have issued and credit in accounts at duly chartered banks.
But, anyone is free to set up a barter system, whereby members can exchange goods and services in exchange for “credits” in that barter system. Of course, transactions in that barter system are legally subject to the same tax treatment they would have if they’d been carried out in recognized dollars.
“For a substantial period, the banks provided some loans to students that were guaranteed by the government, adding a mark-up for their profit. In 2010, Congress decided to eliminate the middleman and the government now simply makes the loans directly at lower cost.”
I’m a little confused by this. It seems like a genuinely good thing the Obama administration has done. But as we’ve learned by bitter experience, there’s always a catch when evaluating the president’s “accomplishments.” Is there a catch here, or is this an exception to the rule?
And my understanding is that if those two individuals try to simplify their barter system by way of gold / silver / any commodity, then those two individuals will have to pay “sales & use tax” on both the goods bartered and the “gold” money.
What is the moral principle underpinning the monopoly on money?
If a silver dime is worth $4, then why I can’t I use that to buy a gallon of gasoline? (Assuming a station would take it!)
Ron Paul wrote this opinion piece in July 2011. I hadn’t seen it until today when I googled it due to your request. His goal is fairly straightforward:
And whether it’s civil liberties or monetary liberties, I don’t see why the government should be so heavily regulating me. So I agree with the thrust of Paul’s goals.
Yes there is they have tons of oil money.
I have some problems with this analysis. (I am not a banker or an economist, so pardon me if I simply am misunderstanding something.)
First of all, I don’t like the characterization that money is always created out of thin air. Money only has value if it represents the provision of goods and services. This is important.
Secondly, when banks borrow short-term from the Fed, are they not borrowing against reserve deposits? At least that should be the case in theory. So, if the government were to borrow from the Fed instead of by selling bonds and notes, the government would be borrowing the banks’ deposits interest-free. (All interest payments made to the Fed go to the government.)
That would create a conflict of interest since the reserve amounts could be set at whatever level was necessary to cover deficit spending by the government to allow the government to borrow interest-free. If the government instead borrowed money from the Fed that was not tied to bank reserve deposits, then the Fed and the government would be essentially creating money out of thin air and that would devalue the currency. It would be inflationary. It would devalue savings.
So there are reasons why things are done the way they are. Those reasons are not simply to enrich bankers.