The financial meltdown we are experiencing (it is not over
by any means) could, and was, predicted long ago. In the same vein, what will
happen next can be plainly discerned, given a thorough study of the financial
system and its pitfalls.
The Federal Reserve Act
It is important to recognize that our current monetary
system was created by the Federal Reserve Act of December 23, 1913. The Founding Fathers knew,
wrote and spoke about the dangers of a Central Bank. More on this topic in a
later piece.
Contrary to widely held and persistent belief, the Federal Reserve is not a part of the Federal Government. It is a private corporation owned by its member banks, which in turn are owned by a group of individuals whose identities are protected by law. The Federal government has delegated power to create “legal tender” to this Central Bank. It did not delegate power to “Coin” money as this would violate the Constitution and the Coinage Act.
How Money Works - Simple Version
In the Federal Reserve system, money is created when a
member bank deposits money in the Federal Reserve Bank (the “Fed”) It is a
circuitous process but for the sake of example we will begin at the point someone
deposits $1000 in their local member bank (All National banks are required to
be members of the Federal Reserve, State banks’ membership is optional). Since
the system is what’s known as a “Fractional Reserve” system, the member bank is
only required to keep a portion of the money in reserve at the fed. For simplicities
sake, let’s say that reserve is 10%. That leaves $900 for the member bank to
re-loan to other customers. But it does not loan it by using the $900 in its
Reserve account. If it did that, there would be no money creation involved, and
banks readily admit that they create money when they loan it. The bank loans
the $900 by adding it to the account of the borrower in return for their IOU (note)
for that amount. Now the bank has an "additional" $900 on deposit,
balanced on its books by the borrowers IOU. Now with that $900 on deposit, only
$90 need be kept in reserve. So the bank is free to loan the remaining $810
again by simply adding it to the account of another borrower. Only $81 of that
loan needs to be kept in reserve, so another $729 can be loaned.
Deposit
|
Reserve Requirement
|
Excess Reserves (Available to Loan)
|
$ 1,000.00
|
$ 100.00
|
$ 900.00
|
$ 900.00
|
$ 90.00
|
$ 810.00
|
$ 810.00
|
$ 81.00
|
$ 729.00
|
$ 729.00
|
$ 72.90
|
$ 656.10
|
$ 656.10
|
$ 65.61
|
$ 590.49
|
$ 590.49
|
$ 59.05
|
$ 531.44
|
$ 531.44
|
$ 53.14
|
$ 478.30
|
$ 5,217.03
|
$ 521.70
|
$ 4,695.33
|
Deposit
|
Reserve Requirement
|
Excess Reserves (Available to Loan)
|
||
Original Deposit
|
$ 1,000.00
|
$ 100.00
|
$ 900.00
|
Moved to next line as deposit
|
$ 900.00
|
$ 90.00
|
$ 810.00
|
Moved to next line as deposit
|
|
$ 810.00
|
$ 81.00
|
$ 729.00
|
Moved to next line as deposit
|
|
$ 729.00
|
$ 72.90
|
$ 656.10
|
Moved to next line as deposit
|
|
$ 656.10
|
$ 65.61
|
$ 590.49
|
Moved to next line as deposit
|
|
$ 590.49
|
$ 59.05
|
$ 531.44
|
Moved to next line as deposit
|
|
$ 531.44
|
$ 53.14
|
$ 478.30
|
||
Totals
|
$ 5,217.03
|
$ 521.70
|
$ 4,695.33
|
The original $1,000 deposit becomes $4,695.33 of “money”
loaned by the bank, all of which is simply created on paper. The actual Federal
Reserve Notes (Dollars) are simply representations of the accounting figures.
The represent nothing else and are not “backed by anything. Some make the
assertion that the deposits are backed by the “Full faith and Credit of the US Government”
but that is miss-leading and simplistic. Again, more on that in a latter post.
Seems like a pretty good system at first glance, there is
lots of money to go around, lots of money to loan, and lots of money chasing
goods and services. A couple of problems are evident right away; Firstly,
suppose that 4 people want to actually withdraw the cash for a purchase instead
of using a check? Remember there was only $1000 cash in the beginning, all the
rest of the money is only numbers on paper. This problem has a simple solution.
The member bank requests money from the
Federal Reserve who in turn instructs the Bureau of Engraving and Printing to
print more. The Fed only pays for the actual cost of printing the money, not
the face value. This is where money comes from. The Federal Government has no
involvement in the process other than Appointing the Federal Reserve Chairman
and actually printing the bills at the command of the Fed.
A serious problem arises however if we discover the original
$900 IOU is no good. Now, we don’t just have $900 in jeopardy, but $4,695.33 is
in danger of disappearing. This is the essence of the so-called sub-prime
crisis. A huge percentage of defaults is not necessary to bring the whole
system crashing down. A relatively few bad loans are enough to crumble the
entire scheme.
Of course it is plain to see that the system is geared to promote
more and more loans and more and more consumption. There is a real incentive to
make more loans. More loans mean more money to lend and charge interest on,
more loans mean more money to loan, etcetera. It is not simply a matter of a
few greedy mortgage brokers or bankers or homeowners buying beyond their means.
The problem is systemic. The fatal flaws are built in. Anyone can turn on the
news or search on the Internet and hear or read countless complex explanations
for the financial crisis, but in the simplest terms the Federal Reserve system
is the cause of the problem. To be sure, there are countless other much more
complex interactions and factors not taken into account in this article such as
interest or derivatives. These are complete topics in themselves.
The more one studies the financial system, its history and
structure, especially from an un-biased outside view, the more obvious the near
and long term consequences become. What should you do to protect your assets?
It is NOT what you hear and see on the mainstream media. We have seen that the
Federal Reserve is at the root of the problem, the Federal government has
capitulated its duties and mainstream talking heads are regurgitating the
official line with little variance. What should you do? Stay tuned.
Do you remember reading earlier of the crisis that will
arise when a nation's total productivity is insufficient to pay the interest on
its debt? After all, our modern money provides no means for the ultimate
payment of debt, but only its continual rolling over by re-borrowing. Well,
that is happening now in Poland
and Mexico.
It places the largest banks--those that loan to governments--in jeopardy. But
organizations smaller than governments also get loans from smaller banks, and
these organizations and banks are also in trouble. Perhaps these banks are not
big enough to be rescued by the international monetary fund. They may be
allowed to fail. Eventually, larger and larger banks will fold as the companies
whose IOUs they hold collapse under the crushing burden of debt.
It is not a matter of conjecture that the banks of the world
are cooperating to provide further funds to Poland, for the reason that its
default would be unthinkable. But it is equally unthinkable that Poland's
inability to pay its debts can be remedied by placing it still further in debt.
But when money is perceived of as debt, what is the alternative?
You will occasionally hear people express concern that the United States
government may go bankrupt if it does not curtail spending. That is nonsense.
The banks will not allow that for the same reason that they will not allow Poland
to go belly-up. A bankruptcy of that magnitude would pull the entirely monetary
system down. The fractional reserve requirement is a very sharp two-edged
sword. It permits my deposit of $1,000 to be parlayed into $10,000. But it also
permits an equally drastic contraction of loans (deposits) if the reserve
should cease to exist, as in a bankruptcy. So why should the government go
bankrupt, and bring the entire economy down? It isn't as though the government
owes something like silver or gold. All it "owes" are its
"obligations," which are not obligations at all. Bankruptcy is out of
the question.
So much for the "good" news. The "bad"
news is that the means by which the government avoids bankruptcy leads to what
is at least as catastrophic: namely, runaway inflation. The government can
always pay off its debts by borrowing ("rolling over" the debt) from
the banks, which can hardly refuse the loan request, for to do so would trigger
catastrophe. But the rapidly mounting flood of "money" tends to
quickly become worthless. So the choice is between disaster on one hand, and
catastrophe on the other.
But you are forewarned. The people who will be hurt
the most are the holders of---"money!" Do you have an IRA, or
time-deposit?