by Markos101 » Mon 22 Aug 2005, 07:55:16
This is an interesting matter of debate, as there are both good and bad points about the current banking system.
Under the current system, money is created out of nothing by the private banking sector. Under central bank 'regulations', if you go to a bank for a £10,000 loan, they may loan you up to £100,000 and charge you in the region of 10% interest on that loan. You must then work for the money to pay back the bank its principle, and interest, before you 'own' whatever you received a loan for. Notice that 10% interest obtains the same reserve amount in return annually simply via interest payment.
The bank did not have to work for the money on which it based its loan reserve either, that is your savings. You worked for it, and decided to put it in the bank. Often, this comes from employee income, which is the highest taxed income available, far higher than most taxes on corporate profits and extracted share dividend.
In addition, the central bank is also able to create money for the government, out of nothing. If the US government collects taxes, almost always it spends all of that money on its own projects, 'whatever is in the national interest'. It then borrows from the public, which is its next source of funds, in the form of government bonds. In this case, the government promise to take everything you have back in taxes in order to pay you back your investment, plus interest after X years.
Finally, once that source is dried up, which it usually does, they go to the central bank. They say, 'give me $1,000,000,000'. And the central bank writes a cheque, on the basis of no account whatsoever, and hands it to the government who then spends it. It has just fabricated that $1,000,000,000 out of nothing.
In the next step, it then ends up in the private banking sector, who can loan up to $9,000,000,000 from that $1,000,000,000 at interest, unearned. It ends up in the private banking sector because all of us have private banking accounts, whether we own businesses, work for private businesses, or work for the government. That $1,000,000,000, whereever it is spent, must end up at the next step in private banking accounts, in private banks.
Of course, all this lending has its consequences. Inflation then devalues all this new money going into supply. Inflation is actually a hidden tax. Why? Because whoever spends the money first, gets the full purchasing power of that money. So in the case of the government, they spend that $1,000,000,000 into the economy - and then the dollar devalues. In the case of the private sector, it is the borrower that gets the full purchasing power of that $9,000,000,000. Who is at the edge of the pot? Usually the worker - the employee who has his salary extracted from the company funds - and who is then accordingly taxed the most. The employees pay the full force of inflation, by losing the most purchasing power.
Who gets that lost purchasing power? The government, and the banks, because they spend the money first. Remember that even though the private borrower spends his money first, he must pay back on average more than double his gains from zero inflation back to the bank in interest payments - so say he paid 10% interest (that is 100% return per year for the bank if the principal isn't reduced), he loses his typical 2.5% gain in purchasing power through lack of inflation. So the bank gets back whatever the borrower gained from spending the new money first.
These are the two entities that are part of the partnership - the government, and the banks. And since 1000% inflation has occurred since 1910 under this inflating currency, every single penny, multiplied by all those millions and billions of dollars, has gone back to the bank, and the government, unearned, effectively stolen from the worker, who must already contend with having to fund shareholder's investments and the heaviest tax already.
So is banking a scam? Well if the currency didn't inflate, then as production grew, the value of money would go up. Why? Because there would be less money in supply in relation to goods and services in supply. This would mean that people could sit on their behinds, and make money; and hence production would slow and hyperinflation would ensue. You need some inflation, ideally 0%, to keep the economy turning over. However, the central banks seem to want 2% inflation. Why? Because the government and the banks continue to get this additional supply of labour-free money, unearned.
So essentially, banks provide a valuable service by allowing us to value our assets using an accounting tool. But their service charge - that is, interest - is an absolutely astronomical charge for their service, which essentially consists of signing a loan form. And because banks have a monopoly on the creation of our 'legal tender', you have to go back to the bank, to get a loan. You don't have any other choice. However, if they didn't charge that interest, then you might not be psychologically motivated to use that money efficiently.
So, is banking a scam?
Last edited by
Markos101 on Mon 22 Aug 2005, 08:09:34, edited 3 times in total.