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TOPIC: FT now mentions FR banking and calls for treasury money instead (no sh*t)

FT now mentions FR banking and calls for treasury money instead (no sh*t) 25 Apr 2014 00:18 #1

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www.ft.com/cms/s/0/7f000b18-ca44-11e3-bb...0.html#axzz2zqdwooG9

Strip private banks of their power to create money
By Martin Wolf

The giant hole at the heart of our market economies needs to be plugged



Printing counterfeit banknotes is illegal, but creating private money is not. The interdependence between the state and the businesses that can do this is the source of much of the instability of our economies. It could – and should – be terminated.
I explained how this works two weeks ago. Banks create deposits as a byproduct of their lending. In the UK, such deposits make up about 97 per cent of the money supply. Some people object that deposits are not money but only transferable private debts. Yet the public views the banks’ imitation money as electronic cash: a safe source of purchasing power.
High quality global journalism requires investment. Please share this article with others using the link below, do not cut & paste the article. See our Ts&Cs and Copyright Policy for more detail. Email This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. to buy additional rights. www.ft.com/cms/s/0/7f000b18-ca44-11e3-bb...0.html#ixzz2zqfRAw9w

Banking is therefore not a normal market activity, because it provides two linked public goods: money and the payments network. On one side of banks’ balance sheets lie risky assets; on the other lie liabilities the public thinks safe. This is why central banks act as lenders of last resort and governments provide deposit insurance and equity injections. It is also why banking is heavily regulated. Yet credit cycles are still hugely destabilising.
What is to be done? A minimum response would leave this industry largely as it is but both tighten regulation and insist that a bigger proportion of the balance sheet be financed with equity or credibly loss-absorbing debt. I discussed this approach last week. Higher capital is the recommendation made by Anat Admati of Stanford and Martin Hellwig of the Max Planck Institute in The Bankers’ New Clothes .
A maximum response would be to give the state a monopoly on money creation. One of the most important such proposals was in the Chicago Plan, advanced in the 1930s by, among others, a great economist, Irving Fisher. Its core was the requirement for 100 per cent reserves against deposits. Fisher argued that this would greatly reduce business cycles, end bank runs and drastically reduce public debt. A 2012 study by International Monetary Fund staff suggests this plan could work well.
Similar ideas have come from Laurence Kotlikoff of Boston University in Jimmy Stewart is Dead, and Andrew Jackson and Ben Dyson in Modernising Money . Here is the outline of the latter system.
First, the state, not banks, would create all transactions money, just as it creates cash today. Customers would own the money in transaction accounts, and would pay the banks a fee for managing them.
Second, banks could offer investment accounts, which would provide loans. But they could only loan money actually invested by customers. They would be stopped from creating such accounts out of thin air and so would become the intermediaries that many wrongly believe they now are. Holdings in such accounts could not be reassigned as a means of payment. Holders of investment accounts would be vulnerable to losses. Regulators might impose equity requirements and other prudential rules against such accounts.
Third, the central bank would create new money as needed to promote non-inflationary growth. Decisions on money creation would, as now, be taken by a committee independent of government.
Finally, the new money would be injected into the economy in four possible ways: to finance government spending, in place of taxes or borrowing; to make direct payments to citizens; to redeem outstanding debts, public or private; or to make new loans through banks or other intermediaries. All such mechanisms could (and should) be made as transparent as one might wish.
The transition to a system in which money creation is separated from financial intermediation would be feasible, albeit complex. But it would bring huge advantages. It would be possible to increase the money supply without encouraging people to borrow to the hilt. It would end “too big to fail” in banking. It would also transfer seignorage – the benefits from creating money – to the public. In 2013, for example, sterling M1 (transactions money) was 80 per cent of gross domestic product. If the central bank decided this could grow at 5 per cent a year, the government could run a fiscal deficit of 4 per cent of GDP without borrowing or taxing. The right might decide to cut taxes, the left to raise spending. The choice would be political, as it should be.
Opponents will argue that the economy would die for lack of credit. I was once sympathetic to that argument. But only about 10 per of UK bank lending has financed business investment in sectors other than commercial property. We could find other ways of funding this.
Our financial system is so unstable because the state first allowed it to create almost all the money in the economy and was then forced to insure it when performing that function. This is a giant hole at the heart of our market economies. It could be closed by separating the provision of money, rightly a function of the state, from the provision of finance, a function of the private sector.
This will not happen now. But remember the possibility. When the next crisis comes – and it surely will – we need to be ready.

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The comments are even more staggering tbh...both the intelligent ones and the unbelievably stupid ones.

I decided to put this in the news section rather than the economy section as its too important to miss IMHO.
The FT printing something like this is pretty surprising given that this is 'tin foil hat' conspiracy stuff right? :p
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Last Edit: 25 Apr 2014 00:18 by andyh.
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FT now mentions FR banking and calls for treasury money instead (no sh*t) 25 Apr 2014 00:26 #2

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The only thing is...this is written by Bilderberg attendee Martin Wolf:

www.commondreams.org/headline/2013/06/05-3

Who wrote this:

41c2LpwDuSL. BO2,204,203,200 PIsitb Sticker Arrow Click,TopRight,35, 76 SX342 SY445 CR,0,0,342,445 SH20 OU02


Maybe he's a good guy, maybe he went to Bilderberg and disagreed with everything that was said, but I couldn't help noticing his name. He was mentioned in my book too.
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FT now mentions FR banking and calls for treasury money instead (no sh*t) 25 Apr 2014 00:31 #3

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The really bizarre thing about it is that apparently theres an IMF study that agrees with it!
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FT now mentions FR banking and calls for treasury money instead (no sh*t) 25 Apr 2014 00:40 #4

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And he is the chief economics commentator at the FT.

Quite a lot of 'establishment clout' so to speak and yet here he is telling everyone about FR banking ffs lol...

Has he had an epiphany or are there scheming plans afoot? :D
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FT now mentions FR banking and calls for treasury money instead (no sh*t) 25 Apr 2014 00:46 #5

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andyh wrote:
And he is the chief economics commentator at the FT.

Quite a lot of 'establishment clout' so to speak and yet here he is telling everyone about FR banking ffs lol...

Has he had an epiphany or are there scheming plans afoot? :D
Let's just assume it's the latter for the sake of argument!

Actually, I find that the FT will tell people the truth probably more than any other newspaper, and I surmise this is for two reasons. One, there are more people there that actually know what's going on at the FT. Two, their market is the investor-class sort of person, and they will actually do something if they get fucked over. I've found that the FT will report stuff that other newspapers don't touch with a bargepole.
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FT now mentions FR banking and calls for treasury money instead (no sh*t) 25 Apr 2014 00:53 #6

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Is this perhaps the political class turning on the bankers? :p
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