by davep » Mon 17 Aug 2015, 04:22:37
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'S')o "as needed" according to whoever is in power. Or according to you and Dave because you are so much smarter or more virtuous than everyone else?
The question is who is more apt at creating money for the public good? Banks or the Government?
The answer is neither (but the banks' interests align only with their own interests; at least Governments need to be re-elected by the people). So, as is already suggested in the likes of the Money Masters Monetery Reform Bill, the Treasury would mint coin based on a formula that could not be changed outside of wartime without constitutional change.
As for distribution, this is an equity-based system, so money would be available via existing equity lending. However, this is a risky business and needs separating from money creation. So, if investors wanted a return on money, they could invest money in lending houses who would lend money. Banks for deposits would need to be separate from such lending institutions. So people or business could still borrow money if they needed to. The amount of money entering the system every year would be a very small percentage of existing money.
Note that under the existing system, a bank loan creates money. But paying it back destroys that money (although extra money needs creating to pay back the interest element), so one of the points of equity money is that liquidity is available to make loans via existing equity in the system. See the Bank of England link upthread for the reality of money creation and destruction in the debt-based money creation system.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'B')anks making loans and consumers repaying them are the most significant ways in which bank deposits are created and destroyed in the modern economy. But they are far from the only ways. Deposit creation or destruction will also occur any time the banking sector (including the central bank) buys or sells existing assets from or to consumers, or, more often, from companies or the government.
Note that historically, equity-based systems have been far more stable than debt-based systems. So ranting on about "based on history, I strongly suspect the results could be FAR worse" is based on nothing but hot air and dogma. The old English system of split tally sticks issued by the Government for lending is a good case in point. As they were good for taxes, they had value. And they lasted for many hundreds of years, even after the creation of the Bank of England. Another example was the US Civil War greenback