Debt-damned
economics: learn monetary reform or kiss your assets goodbye. http://www.examiner.com/article/debt-damned-economics-learn-monetary-reform-or-kiss-your-assets-goodbye-1-of-2
.
Carl
Herman is a National Board Certified Teacher in economics, government, and
lobbying for improved public policy. Carl_Herman@post.harvard.edu.
.
ÒAll the
perplexities, confusions, and distresses in America arise, not from defects in
their constitution or confederation, not from a want of honor or virtue, so
much as from downright ignorance of the nature of coin, credit, and
circulation.Ó – John Adams, letter to Thomas Jefferson (1787-08-25), The Works of John Adams
ÒIf all the bank loans were paid,
no one could have a bank deposit, and there would not be a dollar of coin or
currency in circulation. We are completely dependent on the commercial Banks.
Someone has to borrow every dollar we have in circulation, cash or credit. If
the Banks create ample synthetic money we are prosperous; if not, we starve. We
are absolutely without a permanent money system. When one gets a complete grasp
of the picture, the tragic absurdity of our hopeless position is almost
incredible, but there it is. It is the most important subject intelligent
persons can investigate and reflect upon.Ó - Robert H. Hemphill, Credit Manager of the
Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta, 1934 foreword to 100% Money, by Irving Fisher.
Fisher was a Yale economist whose proposal for monetary reform lost to KeynesÕ
deficit spending plan during the Great Depression.
America's
controlled economic implosion
Without knowing how money is created and managed, all other topics
concerning money are out of context. This is crucial: regarding trillions of
dollars of economic power, you have no idea where money comes from.
ItÕs time for you to learn. I teach Advanced Placement (AP) Macroeconomics. The
following is what I provide to students, AP colleagues, and non-controversial
in its first four points of content. While textbook economics
provides the information of what we have as a monetary system, citizens need to
take the last step to see for themselves what the private banks that own the
Federal Reserve will never admit: their monetary system provides parasitic
profits to leading Wall Street banks, bailouts in the trillions, and that an
honest cost-benefit analysis proves their system should immediately be retired
and replaced. When people donÕt
know how money is created and managed, the only thing between them and tyranny
is trust in ethical government. American democracy is founded upon cautious
distrust of government. To compensate for temptations of power and personal
profit in government, the US Constitution is designed with checks and balances.
However, because checks and balances can be thwarted if politicians are
unethical, the only real protection of liberty is citizen responsibility.
American democracy is dependent upon our taking personal responsibility for
understanding our most important economic and political issues. This is one of
them. ÒA mere demarcation on
parchment of the constitutional limits (of government) is not a sufficient
guard against those encroachments which lead to a tyrannical concentration of
all the powers of government in the same hands.Ó - James Madison, Federalist
Paper #48, 1788 (more here)
ÒPolitical parties exist to secure responsible government
and to execute the will of the people. From these great tasks both of the old
parties have turned aside. Instead of instruments to promote the general
welfare they have become the tools of corrupt interests, which use them
impartially to serve their selfish purposes. Behind the ostensible government
sits enthroned an invisible government owing no allegiance and acknowledging no
responsibility to the people. To destroy this invisible government, to dissolve
the unholy alliance between corrupt business and corrupt politics,
is the first task of the statesmanship of the day.Ó - Theodore Roosevelt, "The Progressive Covenant With The People"
speech (August, 1912)
Many Americans believe in the US without understanding our
major economic and government policies. Collectively, AmericanÕs trust in our
government to ethically create and manage money is so pervasive that few of us
ever give this multi-trillion dollar issue a momentÕs thought. As a teacher of
economics, I hope this brief is helpful for your responsible citizenry. There are five topics to understand for
civic competence in creating and managing money. The first four are standard to
economics curriculum; the last is rational analysis. Points 1-3 are below, 4-5
in Part 2 of the article:
0.
Money and
bank credit.
0.
Fractional
reserve banking.
0.
Debt (public
and private) and money supply.
0.
Historical
struggle between government-issued money and private bank-issued credit.
0.
Cost-benefit
analysis for monetary reform in your world of the present.
I promise you can easily understand each topic and that
your understanding will give you an informed policy voice over trillions of
dollars. I encourage you to verify and supplement the information in this paper
through additional research. My experience as a teacher is that the best tool
to visualize this information is to literally see it through an online
78-minute video, ÒMoney As Debt II: Promises UnleashedÓ (and for your use: background
and transcript of Money as Debt). Four other sources
of information that I recommend: an excellent overview of our monetary system from Want to
Know.info, incisive articles from the most-read authors on this topic,
Ellen Brown and Stephen Zarlenga, and the most-viewed documentary, Zeitgeist:
Addendum.
ÒThe process by which banks create money is so simple that
the mind is repelled.Ó – John Kenneth Galbraith, Money: Whence it came,
where it went (1975), p.29. Galbraith wrote five best-selling books on economics
(best-selling to the public), was President of the American Economic
Association, economics professor at Harvard, and advisor to four US
Presidents. Please be
advised that the ideas most people have about how money is created and managed
are false. Because the facts are so different from what most people believe,
cognitive dissonance will push some people to reject the facts. Please reaffirm
your commitment to embrace the facts. Here we go:
Money and Bank Credit: "A great industrial nation is controlled by its system
of credit. Our system of credit is privately concentrated. The growth of the
nation, therefore, and all our activities are in the hands of a few men who,
even if their action be honest and intended for the public interest, are
necessarily concentrated upon the great undertakings in which their own money
is involved and who necessarily, by very reason of their own limitations, chill
and check and destroy genuine economic freedom. This is the greatest question
of all, and to this statesmen must address themselves with an earnest
determination to serve the long future and the true liberties of men." -
President Woodrow Wilson, The New Freedom, Section VIII: ÒMonopoly, Or
Opportunity?Ó, p. 185.
ÒI too have been a close observer of the doings of the Bank
of the United States. I have had men watching you for a long time, and am
convinced that you have used the funds of the bank to speculate in the
breadstuffs of the country. When you won, you divided the profits amongst you,
and when you lost, you charged it to the Bank. You tell me that if I take the
deposits from the Bank and annul its charter I shall ruin ten thousand
families. That may be true, gentlemen, but that is your sin! Should I let you
go on, you will ruin fifty thousand families, and that would be my sin! You are
a den of vipers and thieves. I have determined to rout you out and, by the
Eternal, (bringing his fist down on the table) I will rout you out.Ó - From the
original minutes of the Philadelphia committee of citizens sent to meet with
President Jackson, February 1834, according to Stan V. Henkels, Andrew Jackson and the Bank of the United States,
1928
Money is broadly defined as anything generally accepted
for trade. However, in the real world something is money only when the
government authorizes it as Òlegal tender.Ó Its purpose is to facilitate trade.
Fiat money (not exchangeable for a commodity that ÒbacksÓ the currency) is all
thatÕs required for this purpose because the government enforces its acceptance
as payment. Commodity
money is the attachment of money to a thing, like gold or silver. This is not
needed for legal enforcement and introduces fluctuation as the value of the
attached commodity changes. If youÕre aware of the violent swings of the price
of gold, youÕll understand the risk of a wildly fluctuating value of commodity
money. Its proponents, like my friend Ron Paul, argue that linkage to a thing
of limited quantity is an acceptable tradeoff compared to their prediction of
inevitable corruption of any system designed to limit the supply of fiat
currency. Bank credit is the legal
power government has given banks to create quasi-money out of nothing and lend
it to the public at interest. Your deposits to a bank are loans to them. The bank
can legally take a percentage of your deposit (90 to really 100% through clever
manipulations of regulations) and create new credit to lend to the public at
interest. They are not lending your deposit, as most people envision. They are
making the new credit out of thin air! Bank credit increases the supply of
money, causes inflation (by definition as the supply increases), and devalues
the money already possessed by the public. Inflation is a hidden tax on your
money because purchasing power decreases with inflation. The banking industry
benefits from this policy of creating credit out of nothing and lending it to
us at interest, while the public has the costs of paying banks to Òso-called
borrowÓ credit at interest while existing money is devalued. I use the term
Òso-called borrowÓ because the loan wasnÕt something possessed by the bank. The
loan was created out of nothing when you asked for the loan. This can be
difficult to grasp. Watching ÒMoney As Debt IIÓ will walk you through the
process.
The fact that banks create credit out of thin air is verified
by the Federal ReserveÕs Publication, ÒModern Money Mechanics.Ó[1] Excerpts: ÒThe purpose of this booklet is to describe the basic
process of money creation in a Ôfractional reserveÕ banking systemÉThe actual
process of money creation takes place primarily in banks.Ó Ò[Banks] do not really pay out loans
from the money they receive as deposits. If they did this, no additional money
would be created. What they do when they make loans is to accept promissory
notes in exchange for credits to the borrowerÕ transaction accounts. Loans
(assets) and deposits (liabilities) both rise by [the amount of the
"loan"]."
When you understand the power of creating credit out of
nothing, your mind will probably take the next logical step: why donÕt we
create money out of nothing to pay for public goods and services directly
rather than surrender this awesome power to the banks? YouÕll begin to realize: isnÕt it insane
for a government that has the Constitutional authority to create money to not
do so when we have unemployed workers, work that needs to be done, and the
resources to do the work???
Fractional Reserve Banking:
ÒThis proposal will of course be opposed by the bankers from whom it
takes the lucrative privilege of creating purchasing power. It would however insure
the safety of deposits, give large revenues to the government, provide complete
social control over monetary matters and prevent abnormal fluctuations in the
capital market. At the
same time it would permit the allocation of productive resourcesÉto remain
primarily in private hands. All in all it seems the most promising program for
the reform of our monetary and credit systemÉÓ – Paul Douglas in the Chicago Plan booklet. The
Great Depression in the US (1929-1941) motivated professional economists to
comprehensively and creatively address its causes. Upon consideration of
previous US economic depressions in 1837, 1873, and 1893, prominent economists
led by Henry Simons at the University of Chicago proposed monetary reform as
the nationÕs most effective and practical policy response, known as the Chicago
Plan (and here). This proposal was endorsed by SimonsÕ
colleague, Paul Douglas, Frank Graham and Charles Whittlesley of Princeton,
Irving Fisher of Yale, Earl Hamilton of Duke, Willford King of NYU, and sent to
a thousand academic economists for their input. Three hundred twenty responded
to the mailed proposal and survey (an impressively high number for a cold-call
proposal and survey) from 157 universities, with 73% in full agreement with the
proposal, 12.5% in approval with various considerations in its implementation,
and only 14% in disagreement. The proposal ended fractional reserve banking and
replaced it with government-created money with no debt or interest cost. ÒThe bankers will favor a course
of special legislation to increase their powerÉThey will never cease to ask for
more, Éso long as there is more that can be wrung from the toiling masses of
the American PeopleÉThe struggle with this money power has been going on from
the beginning of the history of this country.Ó – Peter Cooper, famous
American inventor [ AND FOUNDER OF COOPER UNION] in his letter to President Hayes, June 1, 1877.
This is the term for how banks and the banking industry
create credit. An individual bank creates credit and Òso-called lendsÓ it to
the public as a fraction of the deposits the public puts in the bank. Because
the money so-called lent ends up in another bank that then so-called lends the
money again, the effect in the overall economy is a multiplier effect rather
than an individual bank phenomenon of a fraction. It works like this: the
definition of Òfractional reserve bankingÓ is that banks keep a regulated
ÒfractionÓ of their total deposits Òon reserve,Ó called their reserve ration
(RR) that they cannot Òlend,Ó and can create new credit out of thin air up to
the total of all their customersÕ deposits minus their RR. Again, because my
teaching experience agrees with John Kenneth GalbraithÕs quote above that this
is difficult to grasp: once a bank is established, they must hold a percentage
(ratio) of their total deposits Òon reserveÓ that is not leant to customers.
This rate is set by the Federal Reserve (Fed), 10% for established banks and
less for smaller ones (however, banks get around these limits and will always
make credit on terms profitable to the bank)
This means that if you deposit money into your bank,
they can then create credit up to their limit in new Òloans.Ó If you deposit
$100, the bank can create new/thin-air credit of $90 to anyone asking for a
loan. ThatÕs the micro picture.
The macro picture is that the new credit then circulates to other banks
and is Òre-leantÓ at 90% and so on. LetÕs say that someone borrows the $90 from your bank, purchases
something, and then the $90 ends up deposited in another bank. The receiving
bank can create credit, letÕs say 90% of up to $81 in new credit. The injection
of increasing the money supply comes from the Federal Reserve. They create
money out of nothing and then use it to buy government securities or non-voting
shares of banks, etc. If they buy a government bond for $1,000 from money they
create out of nothing, this new money increases the money by the formula 1/RR.
Assuming a simplified textbook understanding of a RR of 10% of deposits that
banks cannot create credit from, in this case of the Fed creating $1,000 the
new credit/money multiplied from the banking system is $1000 x 1/10%, or $1000
x 10 = $10,000. This is the macro effect if all receiving banks create
credit up to their reserve requirement and all ÒlendÓ out the new credit. Because the Federal Reserve is owned by
the banking industry, this causes a classic conflict of interest: the banking
industryÕs profit comes from expanding the money supply and then creating
credit to ÒlendÓ to us at interest. Expanding the money supply is in conflict with the publicÕs
interest to limit the supply of money to guard its value from inflation. Some people are confused by the FedÕs
ownership. WhatÕs in agreement in all curricula and publications is that the
Fed is owned by their member banks; over half the stock is from the New York
area (also known as Wall Street banks). Court cases have found in each instance
that the Federal Reserve is not a government agency. You cannot find them in a
government agency organizational chart in any branch of government. They are
listed in the business section of phone books shortly after Federal Express. Debt (public and national) and the
Money Supply: ÒWhen our Federal
Government, that has the exclusive power to create money, creates that money
and then goes into the open market and borrows it and pays interest for the use
of its own money, it occurs to me that that is going too far. I have never yet
had anyone who could, through the use of logic and reason, justify the Federal
Government borrowing the use of its own money... The Constitution of the United
States does not give the banks the power to create money. The Constitution says
that Congress shall have the power to create money, but now, under our system,
we will sell bonds to commercial banks and obtain credit from those banks. I
believe the time will come when people will demand that this be changed. I
believe the time will come in this country when they will actually blame you
and me and everyone else connected with this Congress for sitting idly by and
permitting such an idiotic system to continue. I make that statement after
years of study.Ó - Wright Patman: excerpts from September 29, 1941, as reported
in the Congressional Record (pages 7582-7583). ÒOne of the most astounding facts about our American life is
that the wealth and property of the country and the control of the machinery of
government are in the hands of less than 2 per cent of the inhabitants. That
is to say, a small group of excessively wealthy individuals, members of the
Republican and Democratic Parties alike, have, through the exercise of
powerful, sinister and, too often, unlawful influence, usurped the government
and seized public property on such a wholesale scale that they have become the
virtual dictators of the destinies of more than 110,000,000 people (the US
population at the time). That is a situation which, to my mind, constitutes the
greatest menace to the safety of our republic.
A small group of international bankers and money lenders,
public utility exploiters and tariff beneficiaries have actually dictated
nominations for offices up to the Presidency. They have placed the slickest,
cleverest, and most cunning manipulators in official positions, even in the
minor posts, where they could be of service when called upon by the invisible
power which, utterly devoid of all humanity, seeks but to wallow in
riches. ... Woe to the public
officials who dare to resent their dictatorship! If there be such public
officials who will not submit to their imperious dictation, then the
flood-gates of lying press propaganda are released, sweeping the unhappy public
servant to an earthly as well as political grave, or compelling him to
compromise with his conscience and become their subservient tool to the end of
his term.Ó - New York City Mayor John F. Hylan, 1922 (his office was a half-mile
from the New York Stock Exchange)
When banks ÒlendÓ credit, the interest charge can double the amount the
customer must repay. Through fractional reserve banking, only the amount leant
is created (principle) but not the interest. Because our US money is only
created as debt in our current monetary system, and the interest is never
created, we can now explain some extraordinary but predictable outcomes. Money
is debt, created out of thin air by private banks, and then ÒleantÓ to us to
repay at interest. The debt will always be greater than the money supply. ItÕs
impossible to ever repay total debt; we are in debt forever in this monetary
system. Please let this important fact have a place of honor in your
understanding and think through itÕs implications in our economy. In fact,
when you understand the mechanics, the engineering, the proper terms to
understand what we have shift in Orwellian degree: The US does not have a Òmoney supply,Ó but a Òdebt
supply.Ó ¥ What we call
ÒmoneyÓ is actually Òdebt.Ó
To put the significance of this understanding in numbers,
the total debt of the US public is currently over $50 trillion.[2] The total US
money supply is somewhere around $13-15 trillion.[3] We donÕt know the exact
amount anymore because the Federal Reserve stopped publishing that figure in
2006, claiming it was unimportant and Òtoo expensive to tabulate and print.Ó
This decision was made without consultation from Congress or opportunity for
comment from professional economists or the public. Critics responded that this
number is among the most important because inflation is a function of the money
supply, tabulating its cost is negligible, and not keeping track of the total
money supply is potentially crippling to our overall economy through the risk
of inflation. Critics suspect that the Fed is hiding how much theyÕre
increasing the money supply.[4]
The Fed is privately-owned by the banking industry with their meetings
closed to Congress and the public. The purpose of all business is to maximize
their own profit with limited interest in the public good. The Fed is only
audited by giving their accounting books to an independent firm to verify their
math is correct in the books. Because the Fed is not strictly and
transparently regulated by Congress, we have to trust the Fed that the numbers
on their books are accurate. As IÕve gently suggested, trusting people in
positions of power is un-American from the view of the Founding Fathers. The only ÒoversightÓ from Congress is
semi-annual interviews for questions and answers with the Chair of the Federal
Reserve. Presidents appoints the seven Board of Governors to help manage the
Fed, but historically these selections always come from a short-list of
candidates selected by Fed ownership.[5] The term of office for Board members
is 14 years. As you may know, Congresspersons Ron Paul and Dennis Kucinich had
bills to fully audit the Fed (HR 1207 and HR 2424, respectfully) that the Fed
is opposing to protect its Òindependence.Ó
Because the Federal Reserve can always create money out of
nothing to buy US government securities, the federal government is tempted to increase
the national debt rather than operate a balanced budget. The current national
debt of over $14 trillion [6] has an annual interest cost to the American
taxpayers over $400 billion (with danger of going much higher if interest rates
rise).[7] US taxpayers only pay the interest and never pay down the principal
of the debt. When the securities are due to be paid, additional securities are
sold to cover the cost. There is no government plan to pay the national debt or
reduce it rather than vague promises to reduce spending and reduce the debt
from higher tax revenue of a strong economy. This rhetoric has no track record
of performance since Andrew Jackson enacted partial monetary reform in his
administration that ended in 1836.
Please let that sink-in: we only pay the interest on the
debt and actually cannot pay the debt because itÕs far larger than the money
supply. Of course, youÕre now thinking there has to be a more
intelligently-designed monetary system, youÕre feeling good in your citizenry
that youÕre reading this article, and are excited to discover a better policy
in creating money! But letÕs allow the costs of our
current system to be fully understood to fuel your passion for monetary reform.
The interest payment cost of $500 billion every year to Americans is enormous.
As we learned in my article, ÒThe economics of ending poverty,Ó the investment
to fund the UN Millennium Goals that would save a million childrenÕs lives
every month while decreasing population growth rates is estimated by
professional economists from a low of $40 billion/year to a maximum of $150
billion/year at the projectÕs most expensive phase.[8] This is a ten-year
investment, as sustainable and self-funding development is the projectÕs goal.
Even if we wanted to repay the debt, the average cost to the ~100 million
American households is about $110,000. WeÕll consider alternatives to this
monetary system in our cost-benefit section shortly. To put this in another perspective, the US Bureau of
Engraving and Printing (BEP) has two buildings, one in Washington, D.C. and one
in Fort Worth, Texas. Imagine each building has two halves: both print pretty
pieces of paper. In one half, money is printed; in the other half, US Treasury
Securities. Securities are mostly T-Bills, Notes, and Bonds; they are auctioned
to the public every week as loans to whoever buys them and are repaid with
interest. Bills are loans for a year or less, Notes are two to ten years, and
Bonds are ten to thirty years. These are mostly all marketable, meaning that
they can be resold. If Congress
wants to buy government programs beyond their tax revenue, they may print and
sell as many securities as they wish but cannot get money directly because that
is illegal in our current monetary system. If the Fed wants money, they request
as much as they wish at the cost of the paper and then charge the taxpayers as
an operating expense. Of course, the Fed can also enter money electronically
into accounts. We have no way of knowing if the Fed abuses their power to
create money by entering money into accounts and not reporting this on their
books. The only safeguard the public has is their word that they would never
ever create money for themselves, even though that is possible with a few
computer keystrokes and undetectable. And please let the
above facts and risks sink-in. For comparison, imagine if your family was a
nation with the power to print its own money. I offer to take this job from you
with the following spin: IÕm a banking expert. Whomever you appoint from your
family to create money will combine ignorance with inevitable corruption that
will be incapable of managing your familyÕs money no matter what transparent
safeguards you enact. Therefore, I will print money to lend to your family at
interest. With your familyÕs increased education and economic productivity, you
can only increase the money supply by additional lending from me. As a
Ògovernment,Ó your family need never pay off the loan, only the interest. Your
family will work for me in paying the interest, and my family will manage the
money to lend to your family. This is fair because printing your own money will
lead to your ruin. Your family
becomes increasingly in debt to me. After decades of this practice, your
family doesnÕt give this system any thought and whines about the interest
payment and debt without taking any action to understand the system and look
for alternative structures. This is our Federal Reserve system today.
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=There are five
topics to understand for civic competence in creating and managing money. The
first four are standard to economics curriculum; the last is rational
analysis. The first three topics are in the first part of the article; this has the final two: 1. Money
and bank credit. 2. Fractional
reserve banking. 3. Debt
(public and private) and money supply.
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=Historical
struggle between government-issued money and private bank-issued credit.
0.
Cost-benefit
analysis for monetary reform in your world of the present.
I promise you can easily understand each topic and that
your understanding will give you an informed policy voice over trillions of
dollars. I encourage you to verify and supplement the information in this paper
through additional research. My experience as a teacher is that the best tool
to visualize this information is to literally see it through an online
78-minute video, ÒMoney As Debt II: Promises UnleashedÓ (and for your use: background and transcript of Money as Debt). Four other sources
of information that I recommend: an excellent overview of our monetary system from Want to
Know.info, incisive articles from the most-read authors on this topic,
Ellen Brown and Stephen Zarlenga, and the most-viewed
documentary, Zeitgeist:
America's
controlled economic implosion ÒThe process by which banks create money is so simple
that the mind is repelled.Ó – John Kenneth Galbraith, Money: Whence it
came, where it went (1975), p.29. Galbraith wrote five best-selling books on
economics (best-selling to the public), was President of the American Economic
Association, economics professor at Harvard, and advisor to four US Presidents.
Please be advised that the ideas most people have about how money is created
and managed are false. Because the facts are so different from what most people
believe, cognitive dissonance will push some people to reject the facts. Please
reaffirm your commitment to embrace the facts.
Here we go:
Historical struggle between government-issued money and private
bank-issued credit: ÒThe treasury,
lacking confidence in the country, delivered itself bound hand and foot to bold
and bankrupt adventurers and bankers pretender to be money-holders, whom it
could have crushed at any moment. ...Yet there is no hope of relief from the legislators who have
immediate control over this subject. As little seems to be known of the
principles of political economy as if nothing had ever been written or
practiced on the subject, or as was known in old times, when the (bankers) had
their rulers under the hammer. It is an evil, therefore, which we must make up
our minds to meet and to endure as those of hurricanes, earthquakes and other
casualties: let us turn over therefore another leaf.Ó – Thomas Jefferson,
October 16, 1815 letter to Gallatin. Letters and
Addresses, edit. William Parker, (New York: 1905).
ÒThe real
truth of the matter is, as you and I know, that a financial element in the
larger centers has owned the Government ever since the days of Andrew Jackson
— and I am not wholly excepting the Administration of W.W. (Woodrow
Wilson). The country is going through a repetition of Jackson's fight with the
Bank of the United States — only on a far bigger and broader basis.Ó - Franklin Roosevelt, letter to Col. Edward
Mandell House (21 November 1933); as quoted in F.D.R.: His Personal Letters,
1928-1945, edited by Elliott Roosevelt (New York: Duell, Sloan and Pearce,
1950), pg. 373.
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-="The powers
of financial capitalism had another far-reaching aim, nothing less than to
create a world system of financial control in private hands able to dominate
the political system of each country and the economy of the world as a whole.
This system was to be controlled in a feudalist fashion by the central banks of
the world acting in concert, by secret agreements, arrived at in frequent
private meetings and conferences. The apex of the system was the Bank for
International Settlements in Basle, Switzerland, a private bank owned and
controlled by the worlds' central banks which were themselves private
corporations. The growth of financial capitalism made possible a centralization
of world economic control and use of this power for the direct benefit of
financiers and the indirect injury of all other economic groups." - Mentor
to Bill Clinton and Georgetown University History Professor, Carroll Quigley in
Tragedy and Hope.
As you can imagine, privately-owned banks would love to
have the legal right to create and manage a nationÕs money. This authority
gives a whole new meaning to Òtaking your work home with you.Ó For an excellent
comprehensive history, watch ÒThe Money MastersÓ online (made in 1996: among many) and/or read the transcript.[9] Watching ÒMoney As Debt
IIÓ will give you a general appreciation of the history, as will the historical
quotes at the end of this lesson.
Watching ÒMoney As Debt IIÓ is important. From my
conversations among AP Economics teachers, their reports are in agreement with
my experience that students (of all ages) will not be able to understand our
monetary system and creation of debt without a walkthrough demonstration. I highly recommend that you watch the
beginning of ÒThe Money Masters;Ó if you like what you learn, keep watching. The
entire video is 3.5 hours, so you might want to watch in chapters. A short
written parable might also help: The Money Myth Exploded.[10] The bottom-line
of the history is a centuries-long struggle of wealthy bankers who have
endeavored for the ultimate banking job. In the US, this struggle was won by
the banks with the passage of the Federal Reserve Act in 1913. This allowed for
the legal practice of fractional reserve banking and a monetary system of
perpetual debt. LetÕs consider the alternative envisioned for the Constitution
but not included because the debate took so much energy and time at the Constitutional
Convention that the members tabled the issue for Congress to resolve later.
[ However, the next biggest debt cited, NASAÕs budget,
actually produced positive benefits . The
High Frontier, Human Colonies in Space by Gerald OÕNeill shows NASA, like the GI Bill,
another investment, our NASA investment (not an expense) resulted in economic
benefits that were from 5 to 15 times the cost of the program. The return on investment (ROI) for just one NASA
invention, the insulating foam for
space shuttles and satellites, is alone greater than the entire cost of the
NASA program, as the foam conserves
energy thus making, for example, refrigerators cheaper to operate daily. According
to every poll on the issue, most Americans, on the right AND the left, want
the US Government to maintain our leadership in space: Why
arenÕt we?]
Cost-Benefit Analysis for
Monetary Reform: "That is to say, under the old way
any time we wish to add to the national wealth we are compelled to add to the
national debt. Now, that is what Henry Ford wants to prevent. He thinks it is
stupid, and so do I, that for the loan of $30,000,000 of their own money the
people of the United States should be compelled to pay $66,000,000 -- that is
what it amounts to, with interest. ...But here is the point: If our nation can
issue a dollar bond, it can issue a dollar bill. ...It is absurd to say that
our country can issue $30,000,000 in bonds and not $30,000,000 in currency. Both
are promises to pay; but one promise fattens the usurer, and the other helps
the people.Ó - Thomas Edison and Henry Ford, interview with NY Times, 1921 "The art and mystery of
banks... is established on the principle that 'private debts are a public
blessing.' That the evidences of those private debts, called bank notes, become
active capital, and aliment the whole commerce, manufactures, and agriculture
of the United States. Here are a set of people, for instance, who have bestowed
on us the great blessing of running in our debt about two hundred millions of
dollars, without our knowing who they are, where they are, or what property
they have to pay this debt when called on; nay, who have made us so sensible of
the blessings of letting them run in our debt, that we have exempted them by
law from the repayment of these debts beyond a give proportion (generally
estimated at one-third). And to fill up the measure of blessing, instead of
paying, they receive an interest on what they owe from those to whom they owe;
for all the notes, or evidences of what they owe, which we see in circulation,
have been lent to somebody on an interest which is levied again on us through
the medium of commerce." --Thomas Jefferson to John W. Eppes, 1813. ME
13:420
Monetary reform would nationalize the Federal Reserve (this
name is deceptive so the public would perceive it as a government entity) and
retain its use for bank administrative functions. Fractional reserve lending by
private banks would be made illegal, with the US Treasury having sole legal
authority to issue new money for the benefit of the American public rather than
the benefit of the banking industry. About 40% of the national debt is
intra-governmental transfers and 10% held by the Fed; this debt would be
cancelled as it becomes a bookkeeping entry with nationalization. Of the
publicly-held debt of various parties holding US Securities, the US Treasury
would monetize (pay) the debt in proportion to fractional reserves being
replaced with full reserves over a period of one to two years to monitor money
supply and avoid inflation. The American Monetary Institute has a proposal
called The American Monetary Act.[11] Ellen Brown has extensive articles,
including how states can act now rather than waiting for federal
reform.[12] The governmental cost
of this reform is negligible. The benefits are astounding: the American public
would no longer pay over $400 billion every year for national debt interest
payments (because 30% of the debt is intra-governmental transfers, this is a
savings of ~$300 billion/year). If lending is run at a non-profit rate or at
nominal interest returned to the American public (for infrastructure, schools,
fire and police protection, etc.) rather than profiting the banks, the savings
to the US public is conservatively $500 billion.[13] If the US Federal
government increased the money supply by 3% a year to keep up with population
increase and economic growth, we could spend an additional $400 billion yearly
into public programs or refund it as a public dividend.[14] This savings would
allow us to simplify or eliminate the income tax.[15] The estimated savings of
eliminating the income tax with all its complexity, loopholes, and evasion is
$250 billion/year.[16] The total benefits for monetary reform are
conservatively over a trillion dollars every year to the American public. One
trillion is $1,000,000,000,000. I invite professional economists and committed
citizens to analyze and comment on my observation of costs and benefits.
To give you an idea of this amount, imagine a new stack of
$1 bills. New bills are about 200/inch. Imagine if you laminated bills in a
horizontal stack; this would be the same size as a 2x4 board. Now imagine that
this board of money was to travel on your nearest freeway. How far would the
money-board go to equal $1 trillion? Make your guess, then check the
footnote.[17] The private sector economic costs of monetary reform are
transfers of wealth from the banking industry to the American public. The
replacement would be either non-profit banks operating as needed with minimum
public cost such as fire departments and the postal service, for-profit banks
lending time-deposits in regulated free-market competition, or a hybrid of the
two (perhaps with government mortgages at a non-profit rate of 1%).
Monetary reform stops the current built-in increases of the
money supply through fractional reserve banking, and redirects it for direct
payment of taxes for public goods and services. Each dollar transferred from
bank creation to public benefit is one dollar less in public tax payment. Opponents of monetary reform claim that
even if government issued money with transparency, any oversight created would
be defeated; government would issue too much money and cause inflation. Ron
Paul believes that gold should be used as a physical-limit barrier to creating
money. Some fear that any change will make things worse. Some also claim that
competition for large profits in the banking industry spur innovation that
wouldnÕt occur in a non-profit design. Improvements such as ATMs, on-line
banking, instant purchasing are worth the cost of giving monetary power to the
private sector.
The statutory purposes of the Fed are stable prices,
maximum employment, and moderate interest rates. For prices, consider for
yourself how well theyÕve done since the Fed began in 1913. Ask parents and
grandparents if prices have remained stable in their lifetimes or if theyÕve
increased just a teensy-weensy little bit. You could, of course, also check the
data and confirm that the dollar has lost over 95% of its value since the Fed
went to work for stable prices.[18]
For employment, consider that we have unemployed people in this country,
resources to put to work, and infrastructure to improve; then judge the FedÕs
effectiveness in creating money only as debt. For example, consider in
California that 20,000 teachers were scheduled to be laid-off in 2008 and again
in 2009 because of government budget cuts.[19] We have the need for teachers,
the teachers are available, but we have unemployed teachers because the
government must borrow its money to hire them rather than issue money directly.
Nationally, the US had over 11 million unemployed workers at the end of
2008,[20] and perhaps up to 30 million at the end of 2009.[21] These millions
of individuals are key income earners to a multiple average of 2.5 additional
Americans. This unemployment rate puts these Americans livelihoods at risk.
This only occurs because money is debt in our current system; we would not have
this problem if government restored this Constitutional power and issued money
directly. If we were serious about achieving the goal of full employment,
OBVIOULSY the only way to achieve it is for government to be the employer of
last resort. In market failure of what free-market capitalism cannot employ, we
either put people to work on infrastructure/public service jobs or we donÕt
achieve our goal of full employment. Please ponder that idea to full
realization. If the public jobs provided to the unemployed and funded by
government-created money provide greater economic benefit than their cost, then
inflation will actually decrease from creating those jobs. That is conservative
definition of how inflation/deflation works. Another angle of minimizing our costs: consider that the US
Government Interagency Council on Homelessness has compiled every known study
on cost-benefits of housing the homeless and providing food, medical care and
job-employment services versus just leaving them on the streets. In every case
study the costs are less to take action for their care.[22] Ponder that. For
interest rates, the non-profit rate of borrowing money is generally considered
among economists at 3% in our current inflationary economy caused by fractional
reserve banking. With monetary reform, the non-profit rate for a home loan
would be less than 1%. Ask yourself if the value added by the banking industry
is worth the amount you currently pay above 1%, understanding as you do that
your total cost of a home loan has a higher cost of the interest than the
principal. That is, youÕre paying the banking industry more than your home is
worth for them creating credit out of nothing on their bank books. If the
performance of the Fed is acceptable to you along with its trillion dollar
annual cost, feel free to defend it. If you prefer monetary reform, a trillion
dollars of benefit every year to the American public will go far to building a
brighter future. Thank you for
your attention to learn how ÒmoneyÓ is created in the US - really Òcredit/debtÓ
in not a Òmonetary system,Ó but a Òdebt system.Ó If youÕd like to read my
comprehensive analysis of our economic solutions, try the following three.
Importantly, our current system has systemic criminal fraud that must be
understood and removed before solutions are possible. The 2011 Academy
Award-winning Best Feature Documentary, Inside
Job, powerfully makes this clear. Revolt: US could have full-employment, but chooses our
misery, decay, death
Open proposal for US revolution: end unlawful wars,
criminal economics. 1 of 4
What to do with US traitors who wage Wars of Aggression? 1:
Truth & Reconciliation. 2: Prosecution. ÒThere is no Science, the Study of
which is more useful and commendable than the Knowledge of the true Interest of
one's Country; and perhaps there is no Kind of Learning more abstruse and
intricate, more difficult to acquire in any Degree of Perfection than This, and
therefore none more generally neglected. Hence it is, that we every Day find
Men in Conversation contending warmly on some Point in Politicks, which, altho'
it may nearly concern them both, neither of them understand any more than they
do each other.
Thus much by way of Apology for this present Enquiry into
the Nature and Necessity of a Paper Currency. And if any Thing I shall say, may
be a Means of fixing a Subject that is now the chief Concern of my Countrymen,
in a clearer Light, I shall have the Satisfaction of thinking my Time and Pains
well employed.Ó – Ben Franklin, A Modest Enquiry into the Nature and Necessity of Paper
Currency, 1729. "The only thing new in the world is the
history you don't know." - President Harry Truman: Plain Speaking: An Oral Biography (1974) by Merle Miller, pg. 26.
[1] Chicago Federal Reserve Bank. Modern Money Mechanics: http://www.truthsetsusfree.com/ModernMoneyMechanics.pdf
[2] Washington Post. Phillips, K. The Old Titans All Collapsed: Is the US Next?
May 18, 2008: http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/05/16/AR2008051603461.html
[3] Shadow Government Statistics. John Williams. http://www.shadowstats.com/alternate_data/money-supply
.
[4] Wikipedia for overview: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Money_supply#United_States
, alternative statistics: Shadow Government Statistics homepage. Williams, J. http://www.shadowstats.com/alternate_data
, and The Mess that Greenspan Made. M3, We Hardly Knew You. Nov. 22, 2005: http://themessthatgreenspanmade.blogspot.com/2005/11/m3-we-hardly-knew-you.html
.
[5] This has been the practice for as long as I remember. I wasnÕt able to find
documentation from the media; sorry!
[6] Treasury Direct. The Debt to the Penny and Who Holds it: http://www.treasurydirect.gov/NP/BPDLogin?application=np
[7] Treasury Direct. Interest expense on the debt outstanding: http://www.treasurydirect.gov/govt/reports/ir/ir_expense.htm
.
[8] Borgen Project: FAQs. http://www.borgenproject.org/#!__globalpovertyfaqs
and The End of Poverty: Economic Possibilities for our Time. Jeffrey Sachs. http://www.earth.columbia.edu/pages/endofpoverty/oda
.
[9] Many of their quotes from Presidents are not included at the end of this
lesson because their sources are usually the Congressional Record. Members of
Congress did not footnote their sources and we do not have other written
sources to corroborate the quotes.
[10] Evan, L. The Money Myth Exploded: The Financial Enigma Resolved – A
Debt-Money System: http://www.michaeljournal.org/myth.htm
[11]http://www.monetary.org/
[12] Web of Debt is EllenÕs book. My favorite state-solution article is
California dreamin: how the state can beat its budget woes: http://www.webofdebt.com/articles/california_dreamin.php
.
[13] Of $50 trillion total debt, a conservative current interest cost of 5% is
$2.5 trillion every year. The academic estimate of the true cost of borrowing
is about 3%. A $500 billion savings if the profits are transferred to the
American public rather than to the banking industry is probably low.
[14] The US GDP is ~$13 trillion. Three percent growth is moderately
conservative. [15]
Of the US Federal governmentÕs ~$2.5 trillion annual budget, about $1.2
trillion is received from income tax.
[16] Tax Foundation. Hodge, S, Moody, J, Warcholik, W. The Rising Cost of
Complying with the Federal Income Tax. Jan. 10, 2006: http://www.taxfoundation.org/research/show/1281.html
.
[17] Over three times around the world at the equator. . EarthÕs circumference is ~25 K miles.
There are 63,360 inches in a mile.
[18] US Bureau of Labor Statistics. CPI Inflation Calculator: http://data.bls.gov/cgi-bin/cpicalc.pl
.
[19] California Department of Education. State Schools Chief Jack O'Connell,
Teachers, Support Staff, Administrators Announce More Than 20,000 Teachers and
Support Staff Getting Layoff Notices Due to Budget Crisis. March 14, 2008: http://www.cde.ca.gov/nr/ne/yr08/yr08rel31.asp
[20] Bureau of labor statistics: http://www.bls.gov/news.release/empsit.nr0.htm
.
[21] Huffington Post. What a jobless recovery today means for tomorrow? http://www.huffingtonpost.com/leo-hindery-jr/what-a-jobless-recovery-i_b_261667.html
. August 17, 2009. Also consider economist John Williams Shadow
Stats site: http://www.shadowstats.com/
. [22] Interagency Council on Homelessness: http://www.examiner.com/la-county-nonpartisan-in-los-angeles/all-government-cost-studies-sheltering-the-homeless-is-most-cost-effective
, and here: http://www.usich.gov/usich_resources/research_and_evaluation/cost_effectiveness_studies/