AMI Debate

MORE THAN ONE WAY TO RECLAIM THE POWER TO CREATE MONEY, August 28, 2009

Sirs: This is in response to the entry posted on your American Monetary Institute blog on August 16, 2009, which references my articles on a state-owned bank solution to the credit crisis. I was disappointed to read that you thought my proposal was “an insult to humanity,” as the idea was actually drawn from the AMI’s book The Lost Science of Money. I do quite a bit of writing and speaking, and I always follow your lead in saying the ideal monetary model is that established in Benjamin Franklin’s colony of Pennsylvania, which not only spent but lent money into the economy, through its own publicly-owned bank. The Lost Science of Money calls it “Pennsylvania’s Superior Money System.” On pages 370-71, your book quotes Pennsylvania Governor William Keith, who wrote of the province’s founding of a publicly-owned bank:

“It is inconceivable to think what a prodigious good effect immediately ensued on all the affairs of that province . . . . The poor middling people who had any lands or houses to pledge, borrowed from the loan office, and paid off their usurious creditors. The few rich men who had before this [quit] the trade – except that of usury – were obliged to build ships, and launch out again into trade.”

It is submitted that our proposals aim for the same thing – reclaiming the money power for the people themselves. We would just get there by different routes. My public bank would create credit on its books, lend it, and charge interest on it. You would have a public entity create money and lend it to private banks at interest, which would then lend it to consumers and businesses at interest. The private banks in your scheme would no doubt tack their interest costs onto the interest charged to the end borrowers, since banks are in the business of making a profit, and that is the only way they could make a profit in your system. My proposal would just eliminate the profits to the private banker middlemen. Banking would become a non-profit public service, with the interest returned to the public purse.

You maintain that publicly-owned banks are “mainly a distraction from genuine reform of the system, as encapsulated in the proposed American Monetary Act.” Indeed, much in that Act is excellent; but it would leave the determination of how much credit is available in the economy to a central planning board, when the money supply needs to be flexible, expanding and contracting organically in response to the needs of trade. The American Monetary Act gives the final word on the money supply to the Secretary of the Treasury, under the guidance of an independent monetary board. Today, that would be Timothy Geithner. Trusting Timothy Geithner to determine the day to day credit needs of the country would be the equivalent of trusting the Russian Soviet to accurately determine how many size 9 shoes its population needed. When the pot of available funds decreed by the Treasurer ran out, creditworthy borrowers would be turned away, and the economy would falter.

Ready credit is what makes an economy run smoothly, and its availability should not be subject to the whims of a political body. Credit-money is created when creditworthy borrowers take out loans. Banks merely “monetize” the borrowers’ promise to repay. As The Lost Science of Money makes clear, “money” is not a commodity but is created by legal agreement. Credit-money is created when the “full faith and credit” of the community is advanced to the borrower. The function of the banker is just to oversee the agreement, acting as the middleman who advances the funds and collects them back. Publicly-owned banks are the most efficient and cost-effective way to get ready credit into the economy. They are not a temporary stopgap measure, any more than the land bank of the colony of Pennsylvania was.

You have divided your objections to state-owned banks into two groups, “moral” and “technical,” with separate numbering for each. I will follow your numbering in addressing these points.

Moral Objections

1. You state that for a public bank to engage in “fractional reserve” lending – that is, to create credit on its books – is immoral. That appears to me to be a mischaracterization of the problem. What is immoral is the private creation of money. Both our proposals are attempting to overcome that flaw. I am just suggesting that publicly-owned banks are the most direct and practical means to that end. Congress is now owned by Wall Street, as Congressmen themselves are complaining. States, on the other hand, still have some autonomy.

2. You state that banks cannot create credit on their books but can make loans only against 90-95% of their deposits. This is no longer true. Federal Reserve data establishes that the reserve requirement is now essentially obsolete. For a detailed discussion, see Jake Towne, “Yes, Virginia, There Are No Reserve Requirements (Part 2),” August 12, 2009, establishing that “reserve requirements are effectively not in existence and easily avoided by accounting tricks in the U.S. banking system.” See also Eric deCarbonnel, “US Banks Operating Without Reserve Requirements” (March 29, 2009), stating, “Although, under current regulations, all depository institutions are required to maintain reserves against transaction (checking) deposits, the reality is they don’t.” Both articles are supported with Federal Reserve data.

What limits bank lending today is chiefly the capital requirement, and states are in a far better position to meet that requirement than private banks are. Banks must have Tier 1 capital equal to 4% of loans and other risk-weighted assets, and they must have combined Tier 1 plus Tier 2 capital of 8% of risk-weighted assets. Tier 2 capital includes several things, but the most interesting here is the appreciated value of unencumbered real assets. For a private bank, that typically means only the building that houses it; but a state has buildings, prisons, parks, etc. peppered all over the state. It has a HUGE asset base, so it basically does not have to worry about Tier 2 capital at all.

That just leaves Tier 1 capital, which is essentially the bank’s own money. For a private bank, that generally means the capital contributed by shareholders and the interest earned on loans. Again, a state has a huge amount of money of its own. A friendly regulator could count the state’s whole revenue base as Tier 1 capital. But let’s say that the state wants to dot all the i’s and cross all the t’s by actually setting aside enough Tier 1 capital to please the regulators. At 4%, $1 billion would be enough to create $25 billion in credit – virtually enough to meet California’s $26 billion budget deficit in one fell swoop. You say that this would just be a loan, which has to be paid back; but that is not necessarily the case. The state owns the bank, so it can roll the loan over as long as needed; and the interest returns to its own coffers, so the loan is essentially interest-free. The federal government has been rolling over its debt since the days of Andrew Jackson. For a state to create interest-free money on its books and roll the loans over indefinitely produces the same result you wish to achieve – an interest-free government-issued money supply. In both our schemes, the government gets the money interest-free, while private borrowers get it with an interest charge attached.

You say that only the federal government, not the states, can create money under the Constitution; but this is not true. The Constitution forbids states only to issue “bills of credit,” which has been interpreted to mean paper money. U.S. Supreme Court case law holds that a state can own a bank, and that the banknotes issued by the bank are not the sorts of “bills of credit” forbidden to the states by the Constitution. Banks no longer issue banknotes, but the principle still holds: bank-created money is not forbidden to governments any more than to private banks. We know that private banks create money. In fact, they create virtually all of our money. The ownership of the bank will not affect the bank’s ability to create credit on its books. Rather, it will just achieve our mutually desired end of transferring the power to create money from private to public control.

3. “The problem is being misidentified as interest,” you maintain, “when the problem is debt.” You argue that all money could be created interest-free by the government, just as coins are today; and that this would save the taxpayers money. I totally agree with that: Congress should issue money outright. That was the model followed in the colony of Pennsylvania, which we agree was the ideal model. Congress should create not just coins but paper dollar bills and accounting entry money. But that is a completely different issue from consumer credit or debt. You are not proposing to eliminate banks that charge interest to borrowers; you would just tack an extra interest charge on by making banks borrow from the government as the ultimate creator of credit. Under my proposed system, as in yours, the government would be the ultimate issuer of credit; but with a bank that was state-owned, the extra interest drawn off by private banker middlemen would be eliminated.

Technical Objections

1. You state that “no bank’s an island . . . If the other banks aren’t lending, a State-run bank wouldn’t be able to lend either.” Today, the other banks are not lending because they are not able to meet the capital requirement for additional loans; and this is because the “shadow lenders” have disappeared – the investors who were taking loans off their books, making room for more loans. A state-owned bank would have huge capital and deposit bases and a clean set of books, and therefore would have a huge capacity for lending as and where needed. It would not be dependent on other banks to meet its reserve requirement, which as noted above is now essentially obsolete.

2. You caution about following the model of the Bank of North Dakota, which you warn is playing with fire because it is not FDIC insured and could be subject to a bank run. In fact, the FDIC is now broke – literally. Its own funds offer little if any protection. In a few months it will have to start borrowing from the government. If the banks were owned by the government in the first place, this problem would have been obviated.

3. You say that a state bank would take deposits away from other banks, reducing the lending ability of those banks. However, the overall credit capacity of the system would not be reduced; the business would just move to the state-owned bank, as well it should if the latter can provide superior service at cheaper rates. The State of California has $17.6 billion in demand deposits and NOW deposits, which could be moved at will; and most of the banks it has them at actually turned down California’s request to honor its IOUs. Some of those banks got taxpayer bailout money specifically to keep credit flowing to the states and consumers, an obligation they have clearly failed to fulfill. California owes them nothing and has every right to remove its deposits from those banks into its own. That is free-market capitalism. More than that, it is a matter of survival. Why should we be feeding parasitic out-of-state banks that aren’t helping us in return? The Bank of North Dakota was set up in exactly those circumstances: the farmers were losing their farms to the Wall Street bankers, so they set up their own credit system to escape the Wall Street maelstrom — and it worked, brilliantly well.

4. You state that the meager benefits of forming a state-owned bank would not be worth the costs. However, you are looking at a very limited range of benefits. Let’s consider again California. With its enormous capital base, California could generate enormous amounts of credit, which could be used to refinance its existing debt; and since the state would own the bank, it would pocket the interest. California pays $5 billion yearly in interest alone — as much as some states’ whole budgets. Just that savings would make a state-owned bank worth the trouble; but a state-owned bank could serve more purposes than that. It could eliminate the cost of borrowing for income-generating projects such as infrastructure, low-cost housing, and alternative energy development. On average, interest has been calculated to compose 50% of the cost of every project. Moreover, the state wouldn’t have to scramble around looking for a loan when it needed one, knuckling under to inflated interest rates. On the question of costs, today a bank can be set up on the Internet, without even the cost of a physical building.

5. You suggest that negotiating better terms with existing banks would be more cost-effective than setting up a new bank. Again, you are overestimating the costs and underestimating the potential benefits of a state-owned bank.

6. You write, “We citizens have only so much energy and time to devote to changing our world for the better. Diverting good people into nonsense condemns us to continue suffering unnecessarily. This time of crisis must be used for real reform, not diversions.” I agree with that. The economy is in an emergency state. We cannot afford to wait for a Congress that has been captured by the same private money-creating monopoly from which we are trying to free ourselves.

Your plan represents a far more radical diversion from the status quo than mine and is therefore a harder sell to make to basically clueless politicians. A state-owned bank has already been operating very successfully for 90 years in one pioneer state, and following that model would require doing nothing different from what banks do now. How can regulators object, when we’ll be satisfying all their requirements? In fact, the shift will seem so minor that its significance is liable to be missed. Even committed monetary reformers like yourselves have apparently missed its implications and potential. Through state-owned banks that create money on their books, we can achieve what Benjamin Franklin, Thomas Jefferson, Abraham Lincoln and William Jennings Bryan all aimed to achieve: a publicly-created money supply issued by the people for the people.

356 Responses

  1. How to steal everybody’s everything and get away with it:

    First thing you hijack is the language the people use.

    You re-name what is actually the commons, the common heritage, the earthly gifts given to all equally by whatever it is you think created us, the work done for everybody in common by mother nature – the commons – you rename this “natural resources” and get everybody to use that terminology.

    you do this because the commons obviously cannot be owned

    but resources can.

    bingo. now you can own the earth and all the works of man upon it.

    brilliant?

    • Excellently put — language shapes reality! We just need to rewrite the whole thing.

      • Linked you to a great NY TImes article from 6 Dec 1921, in which Thomas Edison makes beautifully succinct and clear argument for what we’re trying to do. He and Henry Ford were arguing that the government should issue its own currency for public works projects. Edison destroys the gold-standard and the concept of Federal Reserve notes with ease and grace. I certainly admire how he’s able to simplify the message.

        Perhaps we should all take note of Edison’s approach when explaining to our friends and neighbors.

        • Edison and Ford were both fans and advocates of Henry George’s economic philosophy, as was Samuel Clemmons, (Mark Twain) and hundreds of other 19th and early 20th century notables.

      • James Joyce wrote something like… ‘the war is in words and the wood is in the world’. I think that’s a warning (disguised as only JJ could and did) that language can get us far from our reality, from what’s really real, from what really matters. (I have the idea that we humans started letting error in when we first learned to prefer (this was our (inevitable) fall from grace, this was our leaving Eden), when we departed universality and began to think in particulars, divisions – and began naming things.) Anyways, I’m working up some hopefully helpful stuff to put in the forum, about unhelpful versus better words and memes for reformers to think about and use if they see fit – plus some handy specifics on engineered manipulations that have been perpetrated against the people. (Anybody else here read the Frank Luntz propaganda playbook that got leaked a while back?)

        Meantime… I’m daring to post a delicious language treat below – because we reformers do hard work for humanity’s good and carry the burden of knowing what all should know, and our lives deserve to be brightened by great delights (especially ones that inspire us to persevere) – or we have missed the whole point of living.

        Please don’t try to understand this excerpt – much better to just let it wash over you. Read it slowly, out loud to yourself is good if you like. (there are no typos. This is from James Joyce’s immensely important masterpiece Finnegans Wake – and JJ will forgive me the license I have taken in editing it… because me n JJ are having a language and lifelove affair)

        Awareness is on the rise, Friends. Truth is getting her boots on, climbing out of her dungeon. The human tribe…the Finnegans…are waking…so, enjoy, Monetary Reformers:

        “You mean to see we have been hadding a sound night’s sleep? You may so. It is just, it is just about to, it is just about to rolywholyover. Of all the stranger things that ever not even in the hundrund and badst pageans of unthowsent and wonst nice…to be have happened! The untireties of livesliving being the one substrance of a streamsbecoming. Totalled in toldteld and telltold in tittletell tattle. Why? Because, graced be Gad and all giddy gadgets, in whose words were the beginnings, there are two signs to turn to, the yest and the ist, the wright side and the wronged side, feeling aslip and wauking up, so an, so farth. Why? It is a sot of a swigswag, systomy dystomy, which everabody you ever anywhere at all doze. Why? Such me. Where did thots come from? It is infinitesimally fevers, resty fever, risy fever, a coranto of aria, sleeper awakening, in the smalls of one’s back presentiment …a flash from a future of maybe mahamayability through the windr of a wondr in a wildr is a weltr as a wirbl of a warbl is a world.

        Tom.
        It is perfect degrees excelsius.
        Anemone activescent the torporature is returning to mornal. Humid nature is feeling itself freely at ease with the all fresco.”

        Lots of fun at Finnegans wake!
        Love soft fun at Finnegans Wake?

      • As good as your solution is, Yours and AMI’s proposals seem to keep the concept of making money with money using “compound interest” which grows exponentially while economies do not. Interest as a substitute for taxation may help govt’s fiscally but does less for average Americans still stuck working years paying amortized interest.

        In additional to municipalities, would not the easiest idea for reform be to simply cut banks out of the middle of mortgages for credit worthy Americans? Repeal the Fed Act and refinance everyone using the 0.5% discount rate banks get but for 30 years. One each and you have to live in it.

        Most direct interest expense is mortgage. We already own everyone’s mortgage already anyway (Freddie/Fannie, and the toxic waste that Obama/Congress allowed onto the Feds books, marked to fantasy).

        Imagine the purchasing power from drastically reduced cost of interest. Wealth distribution would be more even. If we incentivize US and service sector spending, we would have full employment and a much higher standard of living for most. . We Americans like to spend so with expenses reduced drastically, money would go to purchases and better yet, personal services. Wages would rise and the real economy would do very well.

  2. Look at the land dispute in Israel. When certain land is regarded as “sacred” such as the Temple Mount / Western Wall, it should be internationally owned, or better yet, mutually agreed not to be owned by anyone on this earth, ever.

    Having said that, we seem to do better as territorial peoples, as compared to nomadic tribes. Territories need to be guarded, governed and defended, lest the young and weak are not provided for.

    In Illinois, as well as many other places, much of the farmland is owned by the insurance companies. Right now we are loosing control of our food supply, and could be headed for disaster on that front.

  3. Land and Money are the two ultimate monopolies that plague humanity. They feed off each other, and both must be ultimately remedied in order for any reform in the other to stick.

    I’m now concentrating on money only because I think the people will wake up to that monopoly first, because of the economic crisis and collapsing dollar.

    But money cannot be lastingly repaired if the monopoly in land and resources (the Earth;s natural wealth) is not also repaired. Henry George explains this best in “Progress and Poverty”. It is quite simply the best economics book there is, and one of the easiest to understand.

    The ownership and control of land, like money, has been rapidly concentrating in the top 1 % of the wealthiest people on the planet. That single fact is going to make serfs of nearly everyone in the world within a few decades, at the most… unless we reverse the trend.

  4. As you know, 1% own most land and money for the same reasons – the money system and the historically corrupt concept of compound interest.

    If you haven’t already, I recommend reading

    http://michael-hudson.com/articles/debt/CompoundInterest1.html

    • Michael Hudson is one of the rare economists who write to earnestly educate and inform, rather than use econospeak to cloud and confuse the issues, and make them more unintelligible.

      Kudos to Professor Hudson! A refreshing voice of sanity in a nutty world.

  5. Here is an example of Compound Interest growing at unsustainable rates as the jesters show in Chinese actions during President Obama’s visit …..

    http://www.moneyandmarkets.com/the-hidden-costs-of-too-much-government-debt-3-36508

    How can the American People pay for 2.5 trillion Health care Reform , as Judd Greg said on CNBC , and this massive China Debt thats growing ever so rapidly ?????

    China owned $799 billion of our Treasury debt as of September. That’s up from $618 billion a year earlier and $468 billion the year before that. About 61 percent of the Treasuries traded in the marketplace, as of mid-2008, were in foreign hands. And now, China has surpassed Japan as the largest foreign owner. That means they control the purse strings.

    Heck, China is such an 800-pound gorilla in our debt market, they don’t even have to dump their existing bond horde to send prices plunging and interest rates surging. They can just step back and buy fewer bonds at auction!

    China knows this. What’s more, the country’s leaders are so confident in their position of strength that The New York Times reported the following about the China-U.S. trip …

    “In six hours of meetings, at two dinners and during a stilted 30-minute news conference in which President Hu Jintao did not allow questions, President Obama was confronted, on his first visit, with a fast-rising China more willing to say no to the United States.

    “On topics like Iran (Mr. Hu did not publicly discuss the possibility of sanctions), China’s currency (he made no nod toward changing its value) and human rights (a joint statement bluntly acknowledged that the two countries “have differences”), China held firm against most American demands.

    “With China’s micro-management of Mr. Obama’s appearances in the country, the trip did more to showcase China’s ability to push back against outside pressure than it did to advance the main issues on Mr. Obama’s agenda, analysts said.”

    • This all depends on us paying China back. We print money, run up the debt, hide our defaults (toxic waste), while China and others must continue to buy our treasuries to maintain their currency peg to support their export sector, propping up the dollar. We get to keep interest rates near zero which helps Wall Street borrow artificially cheap dollars to invest in Chinese assets (carry trade) and they have no choice but to weaken their currency to maintain their peg. They give us money, Walmart, wind turbines, solar panels etc. We give them dubious promises that we will pay them back.

      To reduce the amount of US treasuries they must buy, China prints RMB as well and spends it as fast as it can subsidizing industry, increased export capacity, access to resources and many mal-investments. If they stop, it will result in our inflating our way out of our debt to them and we might very well not pay them back at all. They won’t be able to do much seeing we spend so much of the money they give us on our military.

      So we do finance and military things, promote asset inflation bubbles. They produce, we extract. It’s why we keep inventing new ways to carry more debt and sell it to them (hello derivatives and fiscal deficits). No wonder Cheney said “deficits don’t matter”.

      Explains why Obama is so much like Bush on military spending and Wall Street.

      This logic suggests we should spend as much as possible on everything we can think of so long as China is our banker. Crazy? Yes but this seems to be our course.

  6. Wall Street has been transferring money, wealth, productive assets, and investments to China and India for Decades. That process is mostly complete now. All presidents, including Obama, are pretty much hostage to the events the Wall Street and City of London Banksters have created. It is Wall Street, Bernake, Sommers, Geithner, et al, who are actually running things – or are at least the visible faces among those who are running the world… and that includes China, Russia, etc.

    Whatever appears “logical” to us is at least 5 moves behind their global strategy. It’s almost senseless to try to make sense out of it all.

    The important thing to remember is that “they” (Wall Street, etc) have control of the giant vacuum that is sucking all the wealth out of the people in every country, and funneling it up to their coffers and vaults. The wealthiest 0.01% have title or control of almost ALL of the wealth of all kinds anywhere.

    And it is because THEY run the “magic money-machines” and collect the compound interest from them.

    It’s past time for the people to take back their money and their governments.

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