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by mikea1
1147 days ago
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> banks couldn’t lend as much money if they couldn’t create it How could a bank lend _any_ money if it must reserve 100% of deposits as cash? > they are printing money and decide who can borrow and who cannot, without democratic oversight I do not understand how regulations are equivalent to democracy. Either way, banks are heavily regulated in the G7 countries. Such regulation was thought to exacerbate the mortgage crisis of 2008 because regulations created incentives to offer mortgages to people who should not have qualified. Supply and demand of deposits and loans creates a competitive market - banks operate with razor thin margins. I still do not know how you would improve upon the current system. |
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That’s the thing though, they could lend out and pay interest on “savings” with the understanding that the money might not be immediately available for withdrawal as it’s “in the wild”.
And a different class of banking, we’ll call it “checking”, would allow for immediate withdrawal as it’s backed by 100% reserves and doesn’t pay interest because it doesn’t make any money for the bank. Heck, they might even charge for the convenience of warehousing your money and being able to transfer it to any other economic actor you chose through a novel intra-bank clearinghouse.
What this doesn’t allow is for banks to lend out 90% of every dollar they take in — even ones available for immediate withdrawal.
As we’ve seen from the recent SVB[0] catastrophe if people assume their money is immediately available and it isn’t there’s big problems because everyone rushes to get their money right now instead of maybe getting their money at a later date. Big problem…
This is all stuff they figured out centuries ago, the main problem is it cuts into the banks’ profits so it isn’t done this way.
[0] as an illustration of the problem, they didn’t seem to get in trouble due to fractional reserve lending but from the liquidity of their assets.