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Thursday, 3 April 2014

Pros, Cons, And Con Jobs: The World Of Fractional Reserve Banking Explained

By Wallace Eddington


Are there deleterious effects of fractional reserve banking? While many insiders defend the practices, others point to a host of potential and certain damages that directly ensue.

Familiarity with the basic practices of the system is assumed in what follows. Unfamiliarity with those practices would recommend first reading this introductory article before launching into this one full throttle.

The defenders of fractional serve banking point to the liquidity benefits of greasing the gears of our large, complex economy. By means of such liquidity, obtained through lending, sufficient funds are made available for entrepreneurs to start new enterprises and consumers to purchase big ticket items like houses and cars. All this is said to stimulate demand, production, and employment.

Some of the fundamentals of those claims are certainly challenged. However even if, only for the sake of argument, one accepts such proposed benefits, it would be poor economic analysis to ignore the costs. What are the costs of fractional reserve banking?

Three potential costs are considered below: risks 1) to the individual bank; 2) to the overall banking system; and 3) to the monetary system - increasing the vulnerability of the economy and thereby increasing the dangers of the first two costs.

1) To be precisely technical all fractional reserve banks are at every moment bankrupt. That is to say they are incapable of fulfilling all their financial obligations. Since, fortunately, most depositors are not cognizant of this fact, the banks get by.

Occasionally, though, something happens to alert depositors to the fragility of the bank's accounts and large numbers of them start demanding their money. This is called a bank run. And we've seen that it can even happen in the digital world. (See the recent Mt. Gox run.) Such events can put a bank out of business. At the very least it can prove extremely costly for the taxpayers to bail the bank out of its liquidity shortage.

2) In our densely interwoven banking world, though, what's bad for one bank can be bad for all. (And, of course, for all of us, who have money in banks, anywhere.) In our globalized financial world, banks borrow from and deposit with each other: they are the creditors of other banks, either long or short term. As you'd expect, bankers are more sophisticated about the reserve system than the average depositor. They appreciate the danger of a bank run's cascading consequences.

However, even the bankers' increased sophistication and knowledge is no warrant against a bank run. Heavily indebted banks, with too many poor loans on their books, facing high danger of systemic default, will be abandoned by lender and depositor banks. Concluding that further credit is throwing good money after bad, they cut their losses. The bankers effectively instigate a bankers' bank run.

There is though an additional problem to consider. The extremely high level of inter-bank borrowing in the current global banking system means that an explosive chain reaction can be set off by such events. Just such a dynamic was a major contributor to the 2008 financial crash. The entire global financial system becomes vulnerable.

3) It is also important to consider the contributions of fractional reserve banking to destructive inflation. The lead culprits in that story certainly are central banks and governments, who employ their police powers to enforce the fraudulent fiat currency. Fractional reserve banking though also contributes considerably to the mess.

The precise mechanics of how this happens are too involved for discussion here. Suffice it to say that the same money cannot be both in one person's bank account and another person's loan portfolio. Yet, this is precisely what the formal position of accounting presumes.

This bit of fractional reserve voodoo creates an illusion about the level of savings, which erroneously lowers the interest rate on borrowing, increasing demand for borrowing and incentives for banks to further stretch their reserves. The result is the crushing valleys of the business cycle: recession or depression. And of course such economic downturn reduces the prospects of borrowers being able to repay their loans, hence heightening the dangers of 1 and 2, above.

These numerous and dangerous consequences arising from fractional reserve banking have given rise among some critics for demands to ban the practices. Some claim it is nothing more than criminal fraud. I don't think the matter is quite that simple, though. As usual, I prefer free market solutions over government coercion.

For insight into how such a solution could work, watch for my upcoming article on Free Market Fractional Reserve Banking, coming soon. Stay tuned!




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