
The
myth of magic money
One
thing that the current banking crisis has done is to explode the myth
about banks being able to create credit, i.e. money to lend out at
interest, by a mere stroke of the pen. Events have clearly confirmed
that banks are financial intermediaries which can only lend out
either what has been deposited with them or what they have themselves
borrowed or their own reserves. As the US Federal Reserve put it in
one of its educational documents:
“Banks
borrow funds from their depositors (those with savings) and in turn
lend those funds to the banks’ borrowers (those in need of funds).
Banks make money by charging borrowers more for a loan (a higher
percentage interest rate) than is paid to depositors for use of their
money.” (http://www.federalreserveeducation.org/fed101/fedtoday/FedTodayAll.pdf.
p. 57)
Actually,
banks don’t just borrow from individual depositors, or “retail”.
They also borrow “wholesale” from the money market. It is in fact
the difficulties they have experienced here that has revealed that
they cannot create credit out of nothing.
Because
some banks had burnt their fingers by buying securities based on
sub-prime mortgages in America, other banks were reluctant to lend on
the money market for fear that the borrowing bank might turn out to
be insolvent. Which meant that one source of money for the banks to
re-lend to their customers had shrunk. Or at least had become too
expensive as interest rates had risen too high compared with the rate
banks could charge their borrowers to allow them to make a profit or
enough profit. So, deprived of this source of money, the banks had
less to lend out themselves. Which of course wouldn’t have been a
problem if they really did have the power to create money to lend out
of nothing.
But
at least one person was unable to see what should have been obvious.
On 15 October the Times printed a letter from a Malcolm
Parkin, in which he wrote:
“Only
3 per cent of money exists as cash. Therefore the rest is magic money
conjured into existence, and issued as debt by banks, at a ratio of
about 33 magic pounds to 1 real pound, by the quite legal means of
fractional reserve banking. In a rising market, it follows that
anybody able to create such money, at such a ratio, can soon get
rich.”
The
“fractional reserve” he mentions is the proportion of retail
deposits that a bank keeps as cash to handle likely withdrawals.
Fifty years ago in Britain it was 8 percent. But, as banks resorted
more and more to the wholesale money market to get money to relend,
the percentage of cash to loans became almost irrelevant. Parkin’s
figure of 3 percent is the percentage of cash banks hold compared to
total loans, including those based on money borrowed from the money
market (which even on his definition is not “magic money“).
What
a “fractional reserve”, or “cash ratio”, of say, 10 percent
means, is that if £100 is deposited in a bank that bank has to
keep
£10 as cash and can lend out £90. Parkin has misunderstood
this to
mean that a bank can lend out £900 - and charge interest on it.
Easy
money, as he says, if it were true. But it isn’t.
The
theory of “fractional reserve banking” is that an initial deposit
of £100 can lead to the whole banking system, but not a
single bank, being able to make loans totalling £900. The
argument
is that the initial £90 will eventually be re-deposited in some
bank
(not necessarily the bank that made the loan), which can then lend
out 90 percent of this, i.e. £81, which in turn will be
re-deposited, and so on, until in the end a total of £900 has
been
loaned out.
This
is theoretically the case as one of the key features of capitalism is
that money circulates, but what the theorists never emphasise is that
this is based on the assumption that the same money is used and
re-used to create new deposits. If this does not happen then
the process cannot work or continue. So, the banking system has not
created any “magic money” out of nothing. It is still dependent
on individual banks only being able to lend out what has been
deposited with them or what they themselves have borrowed – they
cannot magically lend out vast multiples of this, as poor Malcolm
Parkin assumed.
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