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> I don't understand where, in this simple math, does a regular bank "create money out of thin air". Through rinse & repeat. When the bank has loaned those $90, the deposits still show $100, and are still available to their respective owners. Just not all at once, but we don’t care as long as the illusion is maintained — and it is. Where those $90 go? to other deposits. So where we had $100, we now have $190. Only $100 of those are central money, but again, as long as the illusion is maintained (and it is), everything works exactly as if we had $190. And since money is but a convention, a good enough illusion is actually real. $90 really have been created. And those $90 that have been added to deposits can also be used to lend money. $81 in the current example. So now we have $271. Rinse & repeat indefinitely, eventually you end up with up to $1000 total, with $900 created out of thin air. As long as the illusion works at least. And it does. Sure, sometimes it breaks down. Sometimes we get a bank run. But in practice the illusion is so important that the state steps it an make it real: by creating actual central money to compensate for the bank run. Heck, often just the promise of doing so is enough to prevent the bank run in the first place, and maintain the illusion. Strictly speaking money hasn’t been created. It’s just an accounting trick. But the trick works. Those $900 may be fake money, but if people are using it (and they are), it’s also real money. It’s not real real money, but it’s close enough. |
> as long as the illusion is maintained (and it is)
> a good enough illusion is actually real.
> As long as the illusion works at least.
> But in practice the illusion
> maintain the illusion.
You sure like that word.
It's not an illusion. The money is real. It's real real. It's real real. There is nothing fake or illusory about it. It is just as equally real as a $100 bill straight from the Bureau of Engraving and Printing.
Stop pretending that it's not.
> But in practice the illusion is so important that the state steps it an make it real: by creating actual central money to compensate for the bank run. Heck, often just the promise of doing so is enough to prevent the bank run in the first place, and maintain the illusion.
This is false. FDIC is insurance. The money that is used to step in and rescue a bank is real money that comes from banks that pay insurance premiums to have their depositors' money insured. It's not "central money" created by the state. It's exactly the same kind of money that banks lend out to you and me. Banks pay insurance premiums to the FDIC and when a bank fails the FDIC uses those insurance premiums to step in and insure the deposits.
> Strictly speaking money hasn’t been created.
This is also false. Money really is created when banks give out loans based on fractional reserves. This is called the money multiplier effect, and it's a really important economic factor. But it's not fake money, it's real money. Real real money.