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by bufordsharkley 3338 days ago
That's true for currency from the government itself. But for the stuff we actually use, that's issued from private banks, constrained by partial reserve banking.

It's true that to some extent, their assets are land (real estate is a common collateral). It's not shocking that land busts and banking crises tend to coincide.

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the land (and house, usually) are used as collateral in home mortgage lending, which is a major category of lending but not nearly as foundational as Federal Reserve lending, which is the basis of the entire fractional reserve banking system.

there are many other categories of credit that rarely use land as collateral. small business loans don't (or almost never do, in any case). corporate bonds don't either. consumer credit (including student debt) is totally non-collateralized.