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Originally posted by kwakakev
Lets take the housing loan for example. In the past the bank use to have the assets to cover the housing loan through the savings of the people. As long as there was enough savings to cover the debts things where fine. As personal savings went down and personal debt went up this banking system failed to work. Leverage was introduced to fix the problem. Now when someone wants a house loan, a 10% deposit is made and the bank makes the other 90%. The bank did not have this 90% before the loan was approved and essentially makes it up from the debt. So is leverage a way to introduce new money into the system?
Do you think the bank would ever be able to finance anyone if this was the case?
And that is where inflation comes in to secure a fair trade among the increasing amounts of money. Security does break down when too much money enters the market suddenly as peoples expectation and access to money is outstripped by its supply.
New money does not appear magically in equal percentages in all people's bank accounts or under their mattresses. Money spreads unevenly, and this process has varying effects on individuals, depending on whether they receive early or late access to the new money.
It is these losses of the groups that are the last to be reached by the variation in the value of money which ultimately constitute the source of the profits made by the mine owners and the groups most closely connected with them. Mises on Money: www.lewrockwell.com...
We all might want to review some of the survival threads on raising food and growing gardens
WHERE does the VALUE of the "new money" come from? WHO gets the benefit of that "New Money" In other words who get the value of that "new money" and WHO gave it value.
Really not interested in Economics either to tell you the truth,
The value of new money comes from the community. Who is the Fed. The benefit is those behind and linked into the fed. The introduction of new money only shifts the balance of worth from those who already have worked for their money to those who produce it. There is only so much social worth at any one time, a production of more paper bills does not change this, it only changes how much the paper bills are worth.
Some of the most frank evidence on banking practices was given by Graham F. Towers, Governor of the Central Bank of Canada (from 1934 to 1955), before the Canadian Government's Committee on Banking and Commerce, in 1939....
Q. But there is no question about it that banks create the medium of exchange?
Mr. Towers: That is right. That is what they are for... That is the Banking business, just in the same way that a steel plant makes steel. (p. 287)
The manufacturing process consists of making a pen-and-ink or typewriter entry on a card in a book. That is all. (pp. 76 and 238)
Each and every time a bank makes a loan (or purchases securities), new bank credit is created — new deposits — brand new money. (pp. 113 and 238)
Broadly speaking, all new money comes out of a Bank in the form of loans.
As loans are debts, then under the present system all money is debt. (p. 459)
Q. When $1,000,000 worth of bonds is presented (by the government) to the bank, a million dollars of new money or the equivalent is created?
Mr. Towers: Yes.
Q. Is it a fact that a million dollars of new money is created?
Mr. Towers: That is right.
Banks typically have 3% of their assets in cash in order to meet customer needs. Since 1960, banks have been allowed to use this “vault cash” to satisfy their reserve requirements. US banks operate without Reserve
Let me try again. You seem to be confusing worthless fiat money with wealth (the results of your labor)
I honestly can no figure out how you can consider "making a pen-and-ink or typewriter entry on a card in a book" that produces a 10 million dollar loan out of thin air as a moral way of making money.
Originally posted by Dance4Life
Originally posted by kwakakev
Lets take the housing loan for example. In the past the bank use to have the assets to cover the housing loan through the savings of the people. As long as there was enough savings to cover the debts things where fine. As personal savings went down and personal debt went up this banking system failed to work. Leverage was introduced to fix the problem. Now when someone wants a house loan, a 10% deposit is made and the bank makes the other 90%. The bank did not have this 90% before the loan was approved and essentially makes it up from the debt. So is leverage a way to introduce new money into the system?
I don't believe you are correct, but there is also a possibility I am wrong. I am pretty sure that the definition of fractional reserve banking is such that they (the bank) never had to have reserves equal to the outstanding amount of the loan.
Do you think the bank would ever be able to finance anyone if this was the case?
Regardless, what this all boils down to is lax regulation from congress. They of course will point the finger to the banks (not sure why..). Probably because they need to be re-elected I am assuming though. Never their fault . That is also why I am a big believer in leaving the Fed independent of congress, IMO that would be a catastrophe.