Quote from Sandybestdog:
Then what do you propose we do? From what I read most of the recessions in the 1800âs were caused by the British trying to mess with us. You donât believe in the gold standard, but you say banks manipulate the money supply. Why would we continually need to find gold? Why does the money supply always need to increase? Itâs simple, issue currency against the gold. When you canât get more gold you donât issue more currency. Why is this such a rediculous notion?
Because the banking system demands growth. Gold might lower leverage and uncontrolled increases in money supply, but it doesn't take care of the growth problem.
Say you have 1 bank with $100 of gold and $1000 of loans to steel companies. It was about this ratio, the ratio was never 1 to 1 as some believe).
Ok, so where will the first bank earn interest on its loans? To earn interest on its loans, the money supply must increase or the bank must cannibalize from other banks.
Here is option 1. Say a 2nd bank out there has found a newly chunk of gold valued at $100. Or maybe a miner sold them $100 worth of gold and they gave him $100 of paper.
Now that bank can issue $1000 worth of new loans to create a brand new railroad. The railroad will use some of its capital(loans) to purchase steel for its railroad. Bam! The steel company gets paid, therefore it can payback bank #1. Therefore bank 1 can earn their profit and reissue a new loan to someone else.
This process goes on forever as long as new money supply goes in the economy and business conditions are good.
Here is the second option :
Bank 1 issues $1000 worth of loans to a new steel company.
money situation is tight, steel company is getting desperate as no one is buying up their steel. So they lower prices. They manage to sell all their steel and repay their bank.
But now its competitors are screwed, because they're fighting over the same money supply. A price war ensues with everyone unloading their assets to repay their bankers. The last one in this game of musical chairs must go bankrupt as he cannot sell to anyone, no one has money!
As Steel Company N goes bankrupt, the bank holding its loans sees its capital disappear, it's losing its gold! remember the 10 to 1 leverage? The bank only needs to lose $100 from Steel Company N to be in big trouble. When that bank loses all it's gold, it must call in all $900 of its loans. This takes out a lot of demand out of the market as more companies are forced to close as they cannot pay their bank. This reduction in money supply causes even more price wars, even more bankruptcies, and a vicious cycle ensues where deflation is rampant and everyone is going bankrupt.
So basically in a gold economy, you need 2 things to make a new loan :
1.the math must make sense for the entrepreneur. He borrows at 5% but because of good business conditions he expects a higher return on capital.
2. There must be physical gold in the economy to serve as capital.
In a paper economy, you only need the first condition to make a new loan. When you ask for a new loan, the bank borrows from the central bank and it's settled. There is theoretically infinite amount of money supply, it's the business condition that decides if loans are made or not. Of course central banks today also have more power and have ways to force liquidity in the system like buying up treasuries.
The banking system can only go forward as long as there is a continual increase in the amount of loans = money supply. Is this possible open to manipulation? Yeah, who ever said we live in a perfect world?
Ahem, hopefully I won't spend all day here as I have stuff to do. I might not be very active in responding.