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| An urban myth is circulating on the internet that banks have been creating money out of thin air. |
| Banks, money and thin air |
Those who have seen the cult film Zeitgeist and its sequel Zeitgeist
Addendum, popular amongst conspiracy theorists and others suspicious of
governments and banks, will have heard recounted the argument that
banks can somehow create money out of thin air by the stroke of a pen
or, these days, by the touch of a computer keyboard.
In Zeitgeist Addendum this argument is based on what is stated in an
educational booklet published by the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago.
Entitled Modern Money Mechanics it first came out in 1975 and has gone
through several editions.
Zeitgeist Addendum begins by describing how it thinks the Federal
Reserve Bank (the “Fed”) creates money. If, it says, the
government wants more money then, through the Treasury, it creates
Treasury bonds which it exchanges with the Fed for currency notes of
the same face value; as the government has to pay interest on the bonds
this adds to the National Debt and so is “debt money”. Both
the Treasury bonds and the currency notes have been created out of thin
air.
This is one way of putting it but it is misleading. It is rather the
other way round in that the initiative to create more currency comes
from the Federal Reserve Bank. Once it has decided that more notes are
needed it asks the Treasury to print them (for which the Treasury
charges). The normal way these get into circulation is by the
commercial banks converting into currency some of the reserves they are
obliged to lodge with the Fed. Modern Money Mechanics explains:
“Currency held in bank vaults may be counted as legal reserves as
well as deposits (reserve balances) in the Federal Reserve Banks. Both
are equally acceptable in satisfaction of reserve requirements. A bank
can always obtain reserve balances by sending currency to its Reserve
Bank and can obtain currency by drawing on its reserve balance”
(p. 4).
In any event, both the Treasury and the Federal Reserve are part of
government so we are talking about internal state accounting
arrangements. It is, however, true that the new currency has been
created out of nothing. Since it is not backed by gold and convertible
on demand into a pre-fixed amount of gold, it is what in the US is
called “fiat money”, that is, money created by a mere act
of State.
Modern Money Mechanics does not in fact have much to say about currency
creation but concentrates on what it calls “money
creation”. It draws a distinction between “currency”
and “money”. This is explained clearly enough on the first
page of the booklet where money is defined as currency plus bank
accounts with a cheque or debit card; which is M1 in the jargon
(“In the remainder of this booklet, ‘money’ means
M1”).
Congressman Ron Paul, from Texas, a critic of “fractional reserve
banking” and advocate of a return to a gold-backed currency, has
an even wider definition of “money”:
“"M3 is the best description of how quickly the Fed is creating
new money and credit. Common sense tells us that a government central
bank creating new money out of thin air depreciates the value of each
dollar in circulation." (27 April 2006, see
http://www.lewrockwell.com/paul/paul319.html).
M3 includes other types of bank deposits and liabilities not included
in M1. In claiming that all new money created by the Fed depreciates
the dollar he is overstating his case. All the US currency (but, as we
shall see, not bank deposits) is created “out of thin air”
but an increase won’t lead to a depreciation of the dollar as
long as it corresponds to an increase in the amount required by the
economy for its various transactions (paying for goods and services,
settling debts, paying taxes, etc). It is only currency issued in
excess of this that will cause a decline in its value and so a rise in
the general price level.
Everybody accepts that cash (currency, notes and coin) is money. Some
might be prepared to include cash deposited in banks as well. But
Modern Money Mechanics definition of bank deposits is wider than this.
It doesn’t mean just deposits by people of the money they already
possess but any account for which the holder has a cheque or debit
card, i.e. including credit lines granted to those who banks have lent
money to (so enabling Zeitgeist to go on talking about “debt
money”):
“Checkable liabilities of banks are money. These liabilities are
customers’ accounts. They increase when customers deposit
currency and checks and when the proceeds of loans made by banks are
credited to borrowers’ accounts” (p. 3, emphasis added).
So, when it talks about “money creation” it is not talking
about currency creation but mainly about “bank deposit” (in
the above sense) creation.
The Federal Reserve booklet goes on to explain what “fractional
reserve banking” involves and how it can lead to the creation of
more “money” in the sense of more bank deposits. Banks, it
explains, have learned that when cash has been deposited with them they
only need to keep a part (a “fraction”) of it as cash as a
“reserve” to deal with likely cash withdrawals; the rest
they can lend out. What this fraction is depends on the circumstances,
but historically it has been around 10 percent.
On the booklet’s definition, in making a loan a bank is
“creating money” as their loans will take the form of
creating a new bank deposit as a credit line which the borrower can
draw on as if they had made a deposit of their own money (except they
will be paying interest on it). The booklet then asks “What
Limits the Amount of Money Banks Can Create” and answers that
this depends on the cash reserves it has decided to hold or is required by law to keep. More on next page 13

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