by Peak_Plus » Fri 19 May 2006, 05:52:33
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('deconstructionist', 's')o you are saying that a deposit into your savings account is a loan from you to the bank? sure, you and i understand this. but how many "average americans" understand that their money may not be there when they want to withdraw it?
<b>Do you think it matters what the average person thinks? It doesn't change the system</b>
and that they support the system which makes it possible through the lost purchasing power if inflation?
Yes the money is "insured" by the FDIC but keep in mind the FDIC holds only 0.5% of the money that they insure in reserve. More often than not, when a large bank becomes insolvent, the FDIC covers the whole thing with newly created money--causing inflation. Yes, it's a scam.
Since 1979, the FDIC has issued $193 billion in bailout funds, 99% of which it did not physically posess--therefore were printed by the Fed, causing inflation which robs the american people of purchasing power. if this is not a scam, what is it?
THANK YOU.
Now we're getting to the heart of it. You have found a scam, but why blame fractional reserve banking? Why not blame bad credit policy? And the false security offered by the fed? Like right now, the banks are lending out money to help you finance ANYTHING! Simply bad risk management.
This has little to do with FRB, but a lot to do with the knowlege that the Fed will bail us out.
And a loose monetary policy.
Now, let me disagree with you on a few points, again, nothing of which has to do with FRB. Please, keep these points separate from FRB:
1) Light Inflation is NOT bad. Money is there to be used, invested. Not to be put under a pillow or pay a bank to "hold" it.
2) Deflation (here: rising demand for money while money supply remains constant) is much worse than "high" inflation (10-20%)
3) The gold standard is nonsense, because it can't be expanded to meet expanding needs (population, technology)