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by baobabKoodaa
1322 days ago
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You claim that the bank needs no existing customer deposits to create a demand deposit and liability in your account. This claim is true only in the pedantic sense: if the bank is otherwise capitalized (e.g. money from investors in the bank), then it could create loans using whatever money it has, as opposed to using money specifically from depositors. However, what you probably meant is that a bank could loan out money even if it has $0 money in the bank. This is not true at all. A bank can not loan out money if it has no money. It has no printing presses that print physical banknotes, and other banks would refuse electronic transfers from a bank which is known to have $0 money. Furthermore, it's not clear to me how you believe that the BoE article contradicts what I'm saying. I'm under the impression that you (along with most other people) are simply misunderstanding what you are reading here. |
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EDIT: note that this paragraph (and the one preceding it) directly contradicts what you are saying:
This description of money creation contrasts with the notion that banks can only lend out pre-existing money, outlined in the previous section. Bank deposits are simply a record of how much the bank itself owes its customers. So they are a liability of the bank, not an asset that could be lent out. A related misconception is that banks can lend out their reserves. Reserves can only be lent between banks, since consumers do not have access to reserves accounts at the Bank of England.