What’s Wrong with Our Monetary System and How to Fix It

Via Club Orlov

[Guest post by Adrian Kuzminski]

Something’s profoundly wrong with our global financial system. Pope Francis is only the latest to raise the alarm:

“Human beings and nature must not be at the service of money. Let us say no to an economy of exclusion and inequality, where money rules, rather than service. That economy kills. That economy excludes. That economy destroys Mother Earth.”

What the Pope calls “an economy of exclusion and inequality, where money rules” is widely evident. What is not so clear is how we got into this situation, and what to do about it.

Most people take our monetary system for granted, and are shocked to learn that the government doesn’t issue our money. Almost all of it is created by loans made “out of thin air” as bookkeeping entries by private banks. For this sleight-of-hand, they charge interest, making a tidy profit for doing essentially nothing. The currency printed by the government – coins and bills – is a negligible amount by comparison.

The idea of giving private banks a monopoly over money creation goes back to seventeenth century England. The British government, in a Faustian bargain, agreed to allow a group of private bankers to assume the national debt as collateral for the issuance of loans, confident that the state would be able to service the debt on the backs of taxpayers.

And so it has been ever since. Alexander Hamilton much admired this scheme, which he called “the English system,” and he and his successors were finally able to establish it in the United States, and subsequently most of the world.

But money is too important to be left to the bankers. There is no good reason to give any private group a lucrative monopoly over the creation of money; money creation should be the public service most people mistakenly believe it to be. Further, privatized money creation allows a few large banks and financial institutions not only to profit by simply making bookkeeping entries, but to direct overall investment in the economy to their corporate cronies, not the public at large.

Ordinary people can get the financing they need only on burdensome if not ruinous terms, leaving them as debt peons weighed down by mortgages, student loans, auto loans, credit card balances, etc. The interest payments extracted from these loans feed the private investment machine of Wall Street finance, represented by the ultimate creditor class: the notorious “one percenters.”

There are two main critics of our privatized financial system: goldbugs and public banking advocates. The goldbugs would return us to a gold standard, making gold our currency. The problem is that it would become almost impossible to borrow money since the amount of gold which could be put into circulation is relatively miniscule and inelastic. They is no way easily to expand the supply of gold in the world

Credit—the ability to borrow money—is vital to any economy. If we cannot borrow against the future for capital investment—roads and infrastructure, housing, businesses, hospitals, education, etc.—then we cannot fund essential services. To that end, we need an elastic money supply.

Public banking advocates—like Stephen Zarlenga and Ellen Brown–appreciate the need for credit. Their aim is to transfer the monopoly on the creation of credit from private to public hands. Unfortunately, there is no guarantee that this form of “progressive” state finance would be any better than private finance.

If we had a truly democratic government actually accountable to the public, such a system might work. But in fact governments in the United States and most developed countries are oligarchies controlled by special interests. A centralized public bank—without a political revolution–would likely favor government contractors and continue to squeeze borrowers for interest payments, now supposedly directed to “the public good.”

This is curiously reminiscent of the system in the old Soviet Union and today’s China, where a political nomenklatura ends up calling the shots and enriching itself. Our current system of centralized private finance, as well as the “progressive” proposal of centralized public finance, are no more than twin versions of top-down financial control by an elite.

Fortunately, there is another model available. There is a long tradition in America, beginning with colonial resistance to “the English system,” and continuing with anti-federalists, Jeffersonians, Jacksonians, and post-Civil war populists. This tradition opposed any kind of centralized banking in favor of some kind of decentralized issuance of money.

The idea they developed is to prohibit any kind of central bank—public or private—and instead have money issued exclusively locally on the basis of good collateral to individuals and businesses. It’s a grassroots, ground-up approach. Priority is given to local citizens and businesses, who can get interest-free loans from local public credit banks to finance what they need to do.

Such a system would have to be publicly regulated to ensure fair and uniform standards of lending at the local level. It would, in that sense, be a public banking system. The absence of a centralized issuing authority, however, would prevent any concentration of financial power, public or private.

Any top-down system of financial control—private or public—presupposes some kind of control by elites, that is, some kind of central planning, whether in corporate board rooms or in the offices of government agencies, or some combination of both. The historical record suggests that such top-down decision-making is inevitably self-serving, distorted, and socially counter-productive.

Indeed, whether public or private, it is the love of money empowered by centralized finance which creates the “economy of exclusion and inequality” which Pope Francis decries.

The decentralized system of populist finance would operate with no central planning. Instead, countless local decisions about lending and credit-worthiness would function as a genuine “hidden hand” of finance, one which would be self-regulating. Here the love of money would find no way to leverage its power. Instead it would be dispersed among the general population, as it should be, without burdensome interest charges, to the benefit of all.

Adrian Kuzminski lives on a farm in upstate New York and is the author of The Ecology of Money: Debt, Growth and Sustainability and Fixing the System: A History of Populism, Ancient & Modern, among other works.

Subscribe
Notify of
guest
15 Comments
kokoda
kokoda
July 14, 2015 10:47 am

What is wrong with our monetary system – government going into debt (OK for short periods with limitations and they paying back the debt should be mandatory).

KaD
KaD
July 14, 2015 11:44 am
kokoda
kokoda
July 14, 2015 11:57 am

KaD….the public banks are a big assist to fund states. Ellen Brown is a favorite of mine. But, don’t think the Banksters will allow any more to appear, with their influence on Rep and Dem leadership.

Fiatman60
Fiatman60
July 14, 2015 12:03 pm

“There are two main critics of our privatized financial system: goldbugs and public banking advocates. The goldbugs would return us to a gold standard, making gold our currency. The problem is that it would become almost impossible to borrow money since the amount of gold which could be put into circulation is relatively miniscule and inelastic. They is no way easily to expand the supply of gold in the world”

Wrong— The primary function of gold is to stop the proliferation of easy credit by central bankers and government. Gold grows roughly 10% per year thanks to mining companies. If gold were to “float” amongst different nations, would you find that those wishing to issue vast amounts of credit, would find their gold reserves would drain away as a “promise to repay” The gold would be the ultimate extinguisher of debt, as the creditor has the physical metal in his possession, and not some piece of paper to back it up. Once all of your gold reserves are gone, you are out of “credit” and if you don’t pay it back – you don’t get the gold back. You would find out pretty quick whose in debt to their eyeballs, as the gold would act in the same way as today’s currencies float against each other.

bb
bb
July 14, 2015 12:18 pm

How can we have a deflationary spiral or period when we have Fractional Reserve banking ?If the banks can always create new money how can prices on anything ever come down?Will we not always have inflation or hyperinflation?

kokoda
kokoda
July 14, 2015 12:31 pm

bb….most of the time, deflation will include rising prices, along with slower economic growth, stagnant or lowered wages, and higher real unemployment.

TPC
TPC
July 14, 2015 12:42 pm

The proposed system sounds interesting, however I’m not sure how well it would fare on the global stage.

Hell, I’m not even sure how well it would fare on the national stage.

AnarchoPagan
AnarchoPagan
July 14, 2015 12:50 pm

The problem with our monetary system is that it is politically controlled. The author is not proposing to eliminate the political control, he says that his system “would have to be publicly regulated to ensure fair and uniform standards of lending”. Sounds like control by elites to me. Existence is not by nature either fair or uniform. And “interest-free loans from local public credit banks”! What could possibly go wrong?

Here’s a wild idea, maybe we could try “freedom”. Those who wanted uniform and universally recognized money could use gold and silver coins. Those who wanted to trade with expanded credit could trade in some kind of paper thingy – maybe we could call them “banknotes”. Local banks that issued too many of them might lose the confidence of their depositors. No one would be forced to buy or sell using banknotes. I understand there is some historical precedent for this.

bb, we can have deflation by the reverse of the process that creates inflation. When bad debt is written off, that money disappears. But deflation is not a bad thing. We had about fifty steady years of it from 1870 to 1920, combined with lots of economic growth.

DRUD
DRUD
July 14, 2015 2:35 pm

I have tried to understand hyperinflation and deflation from as many different angles as possible. Everyone seems to have different ideas about these concepts, their causes and their symptoms. I have found Martin Armstrong’s to be the best description by far. People tend to think about hyperinflation and deflation from the perspective of money supply and prices, but it is better to look at it from the perspective of confidence. Confidence is the ONLY thing that gives money value (even gold-backed money). Money at its most basic level is a society-wide agreement. So, it is the confidence in money that really drives hyperinflation/deflation. Confidence can be expressed most completely by VELOCITY. Prices are merely a symptom and money supply is simply an attempted cure of a fatal disease by central banks. In deflation, when people begin to default, CREDIT dries up and people begin to hoard cash, which in turn causes more default and then more hoarding. Eventually, people buy nothing more than the barest of necessities. VELOCITY decreases in a downward spiral. People have lost confidence in the credit/banking systems. This is how deflation can work in the era of central banking, where as bb astutely notes, banks can simply print up as much money as they want. Look at the crash in the Chinese stock markets over the last month. $3.2 trillion of wealth has simply evaporated. Gone. Huge deflationary pressure. That money can no longer circulate, so velocity must decrease.

Now, one can be sure that governments/central banks will respond to this by revving up the presses. Well, there can be two responses to that, either 1) people still will not spend and the money just pools up in the reserves of a few financial elite (like what has been occurring since 2008…all the QE, yet velocity has mostly fallen) or 2) if the money makes it to the street, people begin to spend, which then cause prices to increase. Then people want to spend the money faster so that they can get more value for their money, which causes prices to increase. In this scenario VELOCITY spikes. People lose confidence in the CURRENCY…and this is hyperinflation. Deflation and hyperinflation are not opposites as most people perceive, they are in fact, kissing cousins.

One new twist I must mention, while hyperinflationary and deflationary collapses have occurred in the past, they have NEVER occurred on anywhere near the scale of today’s global economy, AND they have never happened in the era of digital money. We have all been convinced, gradually over decades that digital currency is completely fungible with paper money. In other words, a dollar bill, a “digital” dollar in your bank account and a “digital” dollar on your credit card statement all have the exact same value and are all immediately and completely interchangeable with one another. But is this really true? Just ask the people of Greece, many of whom have many thousands or maybe millions of “digital” Euros in the bank…can they freely exchange them with cash? This has always been the case with fractional reserve currency and the reason for bank runs in the past, but I believe, the situation will be even more dramatic in the era of “digital” money.

Russia Is Strong
Russia Is Strong
July 14, 2015 3:16 pm

“What’s Wrong with Our Monetary System and How to Fix It”

We all know what’s wrong with it: MASSIVE FRAUD!. As to the question of how we can fix it”, well …I have a suggestion:

Backtable
Backtable
July 14, 2015 3:49 pm

This also points to why under our present system secession is impracticable. So long as the Federal Reserve oversees the US banking system, all it has to do is instruct US banks not to accept a seceding state’s currency. This would complicate things significantly for any new “nation-state.”

Texas recently requested the repatriation of $1 billion in gold bullion from the Federal Reserve. Theoretically, what would happen if Texas were able to exit the Union and develop its own national banking system like North Dakota’s? The North Dakota State Banking system isn’t guaranteed by the FDIC, it’s instead backed by the State. What if it held sizable gold reserves to back it’s financial system? Would this change the perception of its currency to those outside its borders?

Under the Fractional Reserve (or Reserve Requirement) system, a depository institution’s reserve requirements vary by the dollar amount of net transaction accounts held at that institution. In 2014, institutions with net transactions accounts:

-Of less than $13.3 million had no minimum reserve requirement;
-Between $13.3 million and $103.6 million had to have a liquidity ratio of 3%;
– Exceeding $103.6 million had to have a liquidity ratio of 10%

Although simplified for the purpose of example, for a bank with a 10% reserve requirement, for every $1 dollar on deposit it can place $10 into circulation via loans. This is the “money-magnifier” effect of fractional reserve banking.

There was an argument in 2008 that the Fed would “flood” the US economy with money in an attempt to prop it up. That didn’t quite happen, at least not through the consumer side. The Fed can disperse funds into the banking system but it can’t make banks lend it anymore than it can make borrowers take it. In bad economies, banks, whose officers live and die by bonuses, aren’t about to pump money out into more bad loans…it’s easier to simply park excess funds back with the Federal Reserve for a small gain in annual interest.

Since 2008 this is what has happened. As of 2014 there was $1.8 trillion held in “excess reserves” at the Fed by US banks. This is money the Fed “pays” interest on to the banks. Imagine this being dumped back into the $17 trillion GDP US economy with a 10:1 lending ratio? Inflation, anyone? The Fed sets the reserve requirement so yes, it could reel this in significantly, but still…next meltdown the Fed will no doubt announce to banks that it no longer pays interest on excess reserves parked with it, but now charges fees for doing so. This would be done in an effort to force the banks to put excess reserves back into the economy.

Currency concepts are intriguing and while become even more so in the coming years. Personally, I still think Nixon made a mistake taking the US off the gold standard in 1971.

Econman
Econman
July 16, 2015 12:32 am

Dmitry Orlov doesn’t understand shit about economucs.

Fixes:
No central bank
Follow Constitution, plus reinstate Glass-Steagall. All other laws void.
All $ is gold or silver coinage, if paper it is fixed to a gold standard.
Banks can only lend out what they take in as deposits, no $ multiplier or fractional reserve system
All companies mark to market
No bailouts
No deficit spending allowed, ever.
Ron Paul as President.
No lobbying allowed
Term limits in Congress, no health plans or pensions for members
Congress not allowed to insider trade
Disband IRS, NSA, Dept. of Ed.
No public education system

Econman
Econman
July 16, 2015 12:38 am

Fiscal fucking discipline, true Capitalism, real free markets, freedom, entrepreneurship, no giant fascist corporations, a small government that provides defense/enforces the Constitution, no international aid, Israel can go fuck off..

Backtable
Backtable
July 16, 2015 6:18 am

@Econman

Nailed it.

Econman
Econman
July 19, 2015 12:10 am

Thanx. Some of my former students once asked the same question of how to, at least, try to fix this shitstorm the politicians & bankers created – I answered similar. 1 student, hilariously & seriously, said, “Mr. ___, I’d vote for U, but if U became President U’d probably be assassinated before your first week was up!”

I had showed them Ron Paul embarrassing that fraud Bernanke (who people actually considered an “expert” on the Great Depression) & they all said it was obvious Ron Paul was the smartest politician out there. They nailed it when 1 said, “They’ll never let him even get close to winning”. & people think teens are stupid? No, just taught by mediocre teachers as the best & brightest students in America do not become teachers. Most teachers I’ve met are former mediocre students.