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Neat little video about the monetary system

Discussions about the economic and financial ramifications of PEAK OIL

Re: Neat little video about the monetary system

Postby MrBill » Wed 21 Mar 2007, 11:10:13

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MacG', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MrBill', 'A')s for Basel II, well my advice is not to throw around terms unless you understand them yourself. Basel II has not been implemented yet.

Yea, I was a bit to quick there. My banker friends are sweating and complaining so much over Basel II that I treated it as a fact. Nevertheless, the 10% reserve requirement is a pure schoolbook example today.


Sure. And it varies by country to country as well. But Basel II is also not perfect. It is needlessly complicated. Expensive. It favors large banks. And no matter how you design the system the banks will figure out how to game it anyway. They will figure out how to keep some risks off their balance sheet by parking them in off-balance sheet special purpose vehicles like closed funds offshore. Then it makes the system less transparent again.

The whole reason I am in Cyprus is because of capital controls in Russia. Plain & simple.

London historically became the largest banking center in the world because of capital controls in the USA and the birth of the eurodollar market. Simplify the system and there is less incentive to look for loopholes. Sadly, a lesson lost on the SEC and other regulators (Sarbox). Again pushing business towards London listings (FSA). And on it goes.
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Re: Neat little video about the monetary system

Postby mmasters » Wed 21 Mar 2007, 15:05:29

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MrBill', 'B')ut the Deposit enters the balance sheet as a CREDIT on the LIABILITY side of the balance sheet of the bank and a DEBIT in the bank's CASH account on the ASSET side.

Correct.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '
')It then sits there as a non-income earning asset until it is lent out.

From a cash perspective yes. But once the loan is made additional to the cash there is an loan entry on the ASSET side of 90% of the cash, the total of this loan ASSET and the cash ASSET is 190% of the cash ASSET itself. But what about the liability side balancing? Well, in response a 90% LIABILITY is added to the primary deposit which is now referred to as a "demand deposit" That is credit expansion or how the money supply increases.

from wiki:

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')he commercial bank now claims $1,000,000 in new liabilities (the amount on deposit in a bank is called a "liability" by the bank, because the bank has to pay interest to it, amongst other things). In the US, the law allows the bank to makes loans so long as it retains a 10% cash reserve. This lending of money that it has on deposit is the precise point at which new money is created, because the depositor still has his money, and the person getting the loan now has money too. If the $1,000,000 is held by the bank as notes then it can lend $900,000 to borrowers.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Money_creation


So 90% of the cash that was deposited in the bank is loaned out, but there is also an additional ledger entry in the form of a loan asset that has been created. This allows (like the wiki entry says above) that the depositor still has his money and this fellow taking a loan has his money too because 190% of the initial deposit is now in existance.

It's important to note that as soon as that loan is paid off the ledger entry is cancelled and the money effectively disappears back into the thin air it was created from. Some refer to all this as checkbook money, derivative money or fiduciary media. In the longtime past this money was referred to as banknotes.

The base money or physical cash remains constant (unless altered by the fed/Us Mint). And all other money is artificially created in a domino effect of fractional duplication of this "base" money. The perception of money is not the reality.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'S')o again the money creation process is by taking in $100 and then lending $90 to the next customer who spends it or saves it, and because capital only earns a return when it is lent out we extrapolate

Hogwash, interest does not come out of thin air through a chain of obligations. It's the principal that comes out of thin air. The chicken makes the egg, the egg doesn't make the chicken.

Perhaps you shouldn't be mixing beer and old wise man tales with your financial studies. :razz:
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Re: Neat little video about the monetary system

Postby MonteQuest » Wed 21 Mar 2007, 15:33:58

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('mmasters', ' ')from wiki:

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')he commercial bank now claims $1,000,000 in new liabilities (the amount on deposit in a bank is called a "liability" by the bank, because the bank has to pay interest to it, amongst other things). In the US, the law allows the bank to makes loans so long as it retains a 10% cash reserve. This lending of money that it has on deposit is the precise point at which new money is created, because the depositor still has his money, and the person getting the loan now has money too. If the $1,000,000 is held by the bank as notes then it can lend $900,000 to borrowers.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Money_creation


So 90% of the cash that was deposited in the bank is loaned out, but there is also an additional ledger entry in the form of a loan asset that has been created. This allows (like the wiki entry says above) that the depositor still has his money and this fellow taking a loan has his money too because 190% of the initial deposit is now in existance.


Yes, as the FED clearly states and which I have used before to refute Mr Bill's claims to the contrary.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Federal Reserve', '
')
Bank Deposits - How They Expand or Contract
Of course, they 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 borrowers' transaction accounts. Loans (assets) and deposits (liabilities) both rise by $9,000. Reserves are unchanged by the loan transactions. But the deposit credits constitute new additions to the total deposits of the banking system.


Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago
Last edited by MonteQuest on Thu 22 Mar 2007, 14:09:29, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Neat little video about the monetary system

Postby CrudeAwakening » Wed 21 Mar 2007, 17:44:47

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('mmasters', ' ')But once the loan is made additional to the cash there is an loan entry on the ASSET side of 90% of the cash, the total of this loan ASSET and the cash ASSET is 190% of the cash ASSET itself. But what about the liability side balancing? Well, in response a 90% LIABILITY is added to the primary deposit which is now referred to as a "demand deposit" That is credit expansion or how the money supply increases.

This is 190% correct... credit (money) creation occurs at the point the loan is made.
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Re: Neat little video about the monetary system

Postby paimei01 » Wed 21 Mar 2007, 20:40:03

The system is 2000 years old, that is why it's legal. I said legal, I do not talk about any conspiracy here.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '')The modern banking system manufactures money out of nothing. The process is perhaps the most astounding piece of sleight-of-hand that was ever invented. Banking was conceived in inequity and born in sin... But if you want to continue to be slaves of the bankers and pay the cost of your own slavery, then let the bankers continue to create money and control credit .”
"Banking was conceived in iniquity and born in sin. Bankers own the earth; take it away from them but leave them with the power to create credit; and, with a flick of a pen, they will create enough money to buy it back again. Take this power away from them and all great fortunes like mine will disappear, and they ought to disappear, for then this world would be a happier and better world to live in. "
Josiah Charles Stamp (English Economist President of the Bank of England in the 1920's and the 2nd richest man in Great Britain)


$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')he banks do create money. They have been doing it for a long time, but they didn't quite realise it, and they did not admit it. Very few did. You will find it in all sorts of documents, financial textbooks, etc. But in the intervening years, and we must all be perfectly frank about these things, there has been a development of thought, until today I doubt very much whether you would get many prominent bankers to attempt to deny that banks create credit. H. W. White, Chairman of the Associated Banks of New Zealand, to the New Zealand Monetary Commission, 1955.


$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'A')nyone who believes exponential growth can go on forever in a finite world is either a madman or an economist.—Kenneth Boulding, economist.


People do not know because they never asked, most do not even know that the question exists
http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid ... 79&q=money
http://paimei01.blogspot.com/
One day there will be so many houses, that people will be bored and will go live in tents. "Why are you living in tents ? Are there not enough homes ?" "Yes there are, but we play this Economy game". Now it's "Crisis" time !Too many houses! Yes, we are insane!
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Re: Neat little video about the monetary system

Postby MrBill » Thu 22 Mar 2007, 03:50:02

mmasters wrote:
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'F')rom a cash perspective yes. But once the loan is made additional to the cash there is an loan entry on the ASSET side of 90% of the cash, the total of this loan ASSET and the cash ASSET is 190% of the cash ASSET itself. But what about the liability side balancing? Well, in response a 90% LIABILITY is added to the primary deposit which is now referred to as a "demand deposit" That is credit expansion or how the money supply increases.


No. Your double counting your assets because you're only looking at assets vs. liabilities and not also debits and credits to the same side of the balance sheet, which in effect cancel themselves out. Here it is very simple if you look at your T-accounts or at the cash flows as I suggested.

Step One:

ASSETS

CASH DR $100

----------------------Liabilities

----------------------Demand deposit CR $100

Assets = Liabilities + Equity

Step Two:

ASSETS

-----------------------CASH CR $90

Loans Recievable
DR $90

Assets = Liabilities + Equity

As in this case the DR + CR on the Asset side of the leger match and cancel each other out. Therefore, the Liabilities side is not effected.

The loan receivable becomes an asset for the bank which is a promise to pay by the borrower.

There is no $100 + $90 = $190 because then both assets the cash and the loans receivable would have to be not only on the same side of the balance sheet, but also both debits. They are not.

And only the original $100 demand deposit is a credit on the Liability side of the balance sheet, so there would be no offsetting liability to match 'those extra' assets (or $190 in your example).

This is just basic introductory accounting.
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Re: Neat little video about the monetary system

Postby paimei01 » Thu 22 Mar 2007, 07:27:42

http://www.basicincome.com/basic_banks.htm

Solution : take away this power to create money from the banks. The state alone must have this power. We will borrow money from the state, then when we return them the state(we) will be richer, not some bankers, and the state will be able to use those money for something like tax cuts
Everytime a bank makes a loan, new money are created out of nothing, with a click of the mouse the money appear on some credit card. People will work to give back those money or they will lose their mortgage or something. The perfect theft.
Yes our society needs new money to grow, no the power to create them must no be in the hands of private people. The state must do this
Imagine me lending out money I do not have = jail
Bankers have done this for 2000 years, because it is so old , that is why this system is legal. Today it is called "fractional reserve banking" and they say it is useful for "flexilble money suply". Yes it is, no private people must not control it. The state must have control over it, and we will profit when we borrow and when we return the money
http://paimei01.blogspot.com/
One day there will be so many houses, that people will be bored and will go live in tents. "Why are you living in tents ? Are there not enough homes ?" "Yes there are, but we play this Economy game". Now it's "Crisis" time !Too many houses! Yes, we are insane!
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Re: Neat little video about the monetary system

Postby max_power29 » Thu 22 Mar 2007, 08:03:01

Not only must the state have control over the currency, it must be backed by contantly audited precious metals so the state cant be allowed to overprint/overcreate/overspend/and inflate.
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Re: Neat little video about the monetary system

Postby chuck6877 » Thu 22 Mar 2007, 08:09:19

QUESTION:
Say the Bankers want to enslave the people of the world by making it difficult for people to pay their debts. Wouldn't the Bankers be better off by causing DEFLATION?

By causing deflation and a severely shrinking economy, with people jobless, people can not pay their debts as easily and the Banks will become the OWNERS of everyone's defaulted property correct?

Then they could reinflate after they own everything and sell the inflated homes or assets for profits.....

If hyper inflation were what was to come, people would more easily be able to pay back their old debts as long as their wages continued to climb.

I've always thought inflation would be the way, but if the Bankers want to enslave the people and accumulate all the assets, maybe it will be DEFLATION?

Any thoughts?



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Re: Neat little video about the monetary system

Postby max_power29 » Thu 22 Mar 2007, 08:14:14

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('chuck6877', 'Q')UESTION:
Say the Bankers want to enslave the people of the world by making it difficult for people to pay their debts. Wouldn't the Bankers be better off by causing DEFLATION?

By causing deflation, people can not pay their debts as easily and the Banks will become the OWNERS of everyone's property correct?

Then they could reinflate after they own everything and sell the inflated homes or assets for profits.....

I've always thought inflation would be the way, but if the Bankers want to enslave the people and accumulate all the assets, maybe it will be DEFLATION?

Any thoughts?

Chuck


I think this is exactly what happened with the great depression and what may happen again in the next never ending great depression.

They also got the american people to accept the slavery known as national socialism.

Thomas Jefferson predicted this: "I believe that banking institutions are more dangerous to our liberties than standing armies. If the American people ever allow private banks to control the issue of their currency, first by inflation, then by deflation, the banks and corporations that will grow up around [the banks] will deprive the people of all property until their children wake-up homeless on the continent their fathers conquered. The issuing power should be taken from the banks and restored to the people, to whom it properly belongs. "
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Re: Neat little video about the monetary system

Postby Eli » Thu 22 Mar 2007, 09:46:11

I have got to say I think that is exactly where we are today.

Does anyone know how much money the international Bankers have? The wealth and power these people have is completely hidden from view. What magazine or paper would print the info.

There are a lot of people who are richer than Bill Gates they just never have let anyone do a public accounting of their finances or wealth.

Look back at the stock panic of 1907 which led directly to the creation of the Federal Reserve. Back then it was JP Morgan with the backing of the banking houses of Europe who came in and saved the day. They manufactured a crisis and then came in to save the day. Wilson signed the Fed Charter into law and regretted it soon after.

The Fed and Banks are run by den of Vipers.

It is an incredible thing that the an organization as powerful as the Federal Reserve would be placed in private hands. The Fed has the power to sink the stock market with just a few words.

The housing boom was manufactured. It is ludicrous to think that the these Banks who understand all the workings of finance would not know making an ARM loan to somebody who already had bad credit was a mistake. They knowingly made loans to people who did not have the ability to repay their debt.

We are all victims of their greed, the Banks knowingly inflated the housing market now they will deflate it at their whim. They have put everything in place and are ready to make is their final move.

The end goal is an absolute cashless world, one in which they control every legal transaction made. In the ensuing panic they are going to implement the system of money that they have always dreamed of.
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Re: Neat little video about the monetary system

Postby MacG » Thu 22 Mar 2007, 09:47:07

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('chuck6877', 'I')'ve always thought inflation would be the way, but if the Bankers want to enslave the people and accumulate all the assets, maybe it will be DEFLATION?

Any thoughts?


Nahh... I cant imagine any banker who want to own assets fair and square. They want to own TITLES to assets, but that's a different thing. If you own something you have to look after it and maintain it to prevent it from deteriorating. The neat trick with banking is that they just own the titles to stuff indirectly, while lenders belive that THEY own the stuff, and thus look after and maintain the stuff.

A house or something else which is unoccupied and owned outright by a bank run a very high risk of beeing stripped bare by small scale entrepreneurial recyclers. And a house with just all copper removed is suddenly not worth very much.
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Re: Neat little video about the monetary system

Postby mmasters » Thu 22 Mar 2007, 13:41:57

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MrBill', '
')No. Your double counting your assets because you're only looking at assets vs. liabilities and not also debits and credits to the same side of the balance sheet, which in effect cancel themselves out. Here it is very simple if you look at your T-accounts or at the cash flows as I suggested.

Step One:

ASSETS

CASH DR $100

----------------------Liabilities

----------------------Demand deposit CR $100

Assets = Liabilities + Equity

Step Two:

ASSETS

-----------------------CASH CR $90

Loans Recievable
DR $90

Assets = Liabilities + Equity

As in this case the DR + CR on the Asset side of the leger match and cancel each other out. Therefore, the Liabilities side is not effected.

The loan receivable becomes an asset for the bank which is a promise to pay by the borrower.

There is no $100 + $90 = $190 because then both assets the cash and the loans receivable would have to be not only on the same side of the balance sheet, but also both debits. They are not.

And only the original $100 demand deposit is a credit on the Liability side of the balance sheet, so there would be no offsetting liability to match 'those extra' assets (or $190 in your example).

This is just basic introductory accounting.

What you're saying is correct for investment banking but with commerical banking this double counting hokey pokey does go on when a loan is made. At least I can see you understand what I'm saying, even if you don't believe it.

As evidenced the Wikipedia and the FED link Monte provided above this double counting aspect is acknowledged though they don't use the exact term.
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Re: Neat little video about the monetary system

Postby MrBill » Fri 23 Mar 2007, 03:38:41

mmasters wrote:
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'W')hat you're saying is correct for investment banking but with commerical banking this double counting hokey pokey does go on when a loan is made. At least I can see you understand what I'm saying, even if you don't believe it.

As evidenced the Wikipedia and the FED link Monte provided above this double counting aspect is acknowledged though they don't use the exact term.


UPDATE: However, I still think we could clarify much of the misunderstanding about 'money creation' if we could distinguish between cash & cash equivalents like on demand deposits, which are not actually money or cash, but credit expansion. The same way that treasury bills are treated as cash equivalents for accounting purposes, but are also not cash.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'A')ccounting standard setters have taken another step toward erasing the term "cash equivalents" from corporate financial statements. In what one board member called a "perfect opportunity" to simplify accounting standards, the Financial Accounting Standards Board approved a staff recommendation on Wednesday to eliminate the heading "cash equivalents" from balance sheets and cash-flow statements.

The FASB staff had recommended that cash-flow statements should present only flow related to cash. Items currently classified as cash equivalents would be classified in the same way as other short-term investments. The FASB staff is now assigned to work on the issue of what footnotes should appear to describe items listed under the "cash" and "short-term investment" headings and how the change in presentation might influence cash-flow statements.
FASB Moves to Nix "Cash Equivalents"
Because obviously when the Fed says for example, "that the majority of money supply creation takes place in the banks themselves," what they actually mean is that the Fed loans the money into existance creating a debit on the commercial bank's cash position, even if it is just an electronic entry, and a credit on their liabilities under short-term loans payable.

Then through fractional banking and the expansion of money supply that $100 loan from the Fed to the commercial bank CAN compound to up to 9X more if continually lent out again and again.

What the FED is saying is that, "we lend out the first $100 and then through credit expansion and the money multiplier effect the net sum ends up to be closer to $1000 afterwards." That was very clearly explained on the Chicago Fed's webpage. They even covered the T accounting through all phases of the process. And the contraction of money supply as well.

But I believe the majority of the confusion lies with the definition of cash and cash equivalents. An on-demand deposit or a treasury bill can be considered cash equivalents, but they are not money nor are they cash. And from the accounting and the technical transfer point of view it does not matter whether we are talking about real cash, electronic debits or accounting entries. They all work the same way. In commercial as well as investments banks.

Commercial bank takes loan from the FED

Step One:

ASSETS
Cash account
$100 DR
-----------------------------------------Liabilities
-----------------------------------------Loan Payable (to FED)
-----------------------------------------$100 CR

Step Two (through One Hundred....):

Commercial bank(s) lend out money

ASSETS
------------------------------------------CASH
------------------------------------------$90 CR
------------------------------------------$81 CR
------------------------------------------$72.90 CR
------------------------------------------etc.

Loans Recievable
$90 DR
$81 DR
$72.90 DR
etc.

The amount of cash & cash equivalents ends up to be 9X the original deposit of $100 that was loaned into existance by the FED at stage one, but not one commercial bank(s) created money out of thin air or lent out cash or cash equivalents they did not themselves possess at one point during the chain. They continuously lent out only up to 90% (assuming minimum reserves on deposits is 10% AND the money was re-deposited at a bank and not invested directly elsewhere). Then the next bank, etc. along the chain.


But by the way I always take anything written on Wiki with a grain of salt. It suffers from the same problem of any user generated content website such as peak oil dot com. Anyone (that is registered) is free to write whatever they like on any topic, and if no one else comes along to correct it, it stands, whether it is correct or not.

Why do you think I care so much about getting this right? Because if not then everyone will go on believing banks create unlimited amounts of money out of thin air instead of understanding the natural limits of money creation and the tools that the central bank has to control it.

And also without fractional banking bank's could not afford to pay interest on deposits because they themselves could not re-lend those deposits out. That means no intermediation between savers and borrowers. That means savers would have to pay to keep their money in a bank or keep it at home earning zero interest.

Also, capital markets would not function properly because banks would not be there to link savers to investors. No stock market. No bond market. No place to invest money saved today against let us say pensions paid tomorrow or next year. The time value of money and therefore the incentive to save would disappear. No mortgages. Only those with savings today could buy today by paying in full.

I guess those that rant against fractional banking just do not understand this at all.

And I am so sick and tired of that quote about the dangers of banks creating their own currency. Obviously, in the past before there was a central bank and common legal tender each bank was free to issue its own currency or script. What that quote refers to is that this is less than ideal as then each bank could inflate or deflate their own bank's money supply in their own interest. Because the notes would not have been fungible.

That quote which I have read here at least 100 times has nothing to do with the legal tender issued by the US Treasury or issued into existance by the Fed via the banks as all US dollar bills are fungible and backed by the government of the USA. So therefore banks cannot control the money supply by issuing their own notes. Although they certainly can issue their own banker's acceptances, which are cash equivalents, but they are not fungible or accepted as legal tender.

I have run out of ideas of how to explain this any further. We will just have to let it be. I don't have the time to respond everyday, and as I said, I have exhausted new ways to explain the samething. At least thanks to our conversations I now have a much better understanding of the mechanics even if you do not believe me either. It was an issue I really had not given much thought to in the past. Cheers.
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Re: Neat little video about the monetary system

Postby MacG » Fri 23 Mar 2007, 08:46:04

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MrBill', ' ')That means savers would have to pay to keep their money in a bank or keep it at home earning zero interest.


Spot on! This is one of the absolutely most pivotal questions in the entire weirdness around PeakOil.

At the end of it all, when everything has been said and done, and there are no subsidies left in nature to give feed "expansion", this is where we will end up. Zero interest.

This thing with "interest" had (for good reasons) been banned by all major religions, but got stelthily started in Venice around the 1200's, since early colonialism could subsidise "expansion". Later came fossil energy and provided HUGE subsidies which made further "expansion" possible.

All this "expansion" will, however, end some time. It's only a matter of when, an in some ways "where" on a windling path. Local collapses can help to feed local expansions elsewhere even if the net global BNP is shrinking for example, but this is petty details.

Like it or not, but we WILL ultimately have a world where humans are in balance with nature. That world could be a peaceful vegan ecotopia or a poisoned desert inhabitated by 5000 degenerated cannibals, or anything between, but the laws of nature will ultimately prevail.

So, when everything has been said and done, and we are left with a world in balance, there is no place for "interest". The best you could hope for is to lend something out and get THE SAME in return.

How come?

If we dont have "stuff", we are not more than animals. We need food, clothes and shelter for example. And preferably some tools to manufacture that stuff. All that stuff is constantly deteriorating. The entire world is constantly in decay, and has to be repaired and maintained. Food, clothes, houses and tools, they all deteriorate and have to be created new again and again.

If you manage to grow wheat and stockpile it, mould and rats will eat it, and after a year you will have less of it. The same is true for all the "stuff" that forms human life. If you lend out some wheat with a promise to get THE SAME amount back, you have actually preserved it.

Yea, sure, forrests and plants grow and provide some kind of "surplus", but forrests dont grow furniture and tools, and they dont harvest themselves, it takes human labour.

I think it might be beneficial if humans weaned themselves from "interest" before nature administer some serious cold turkey.
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Re: Neat little video about the monetary system

Postby MrBill » Fri 23 Mar 2007, 09:46:02

MacG, I understand what you are talking about. The interest paid and earned has to be based on the underlying sustainable development in the real world and not paper profits.

But let us say I lend you the seed to plant your garden this spring because you ate your surplus last winter to stay alive. you think I will do it for 6% of what you eventually grow? no way, dude, I want 25-50% of the harvest! that is real interest on my risk that you once again fail to grow enough.

many simply do not realize how expensive merchantile capitalism was or could be again. the rich would get richer and the poor poorer without efficient intermediation.

you want me to underwrite your sea voyage to pick-up spices to keep your rotten meat tasting edible? okay, I get half the incoming cargo for taking that risk!

mortgage? HAH, live in my rented premises until you have saved enough year after year to get out from under the yoke of renting!

that is the way it was. rage against interest if you want. it is simply the time value of money or capital and that capital can be measured as an agricultural surplus, the gains from trade or the future value of those rents to allow you to sleep in my house.

and as energy becomes more scarce its value, no matter how you measure it, will become more expensive in real terms. I want to be the one who owns the only source of renewable power in any given area. preferably a hydro-electric dam. there may be less energy to grow the economy, but my energy will be worth more and more in real terms - grain, spices or rental units.

be careful what you wish for?
The organized state is a wonderful invention whereby everyone can live at someone else's expense.
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Re: Neat little video about the monetary system

Postby chuck6877 » Sat 24 Mar 2007, 16:37:15

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MacG', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('chuck6877', 'I')'ve always thought inflation would be the way, but if the Bankers want to enslave the people and accumulate all the assets, maybe it will be DEFLATION?

Any thoughts?


Nahh... I cant imagine any banker who want to own assets fair and square. They want to own TITLES to assets, but that's a different thing. If you own something you have to look after it and maintain it to prevent it from deteriorating. The neat trick with banking is that they just own the titles to stuff indirectly, while lenders belive that THEY own the stuff, and thus look after and maintain the stuff.

A house or something else which is unoccupied and owned outright by a bank run a very high risk of beeing stripped bare by small scale entrepreneurial recyclers. And a house with just all copper removed is suddenly not worth very much.


I didn't read a lot of this thread so excuse me if this has been answered.

Does everyone agree that they are going to try inflation and that it is probably going to end up in hyperinflation?

Will this hyperinflation eventually even bring back up home values?

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Chuck
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Re: Neat little video about the monetary system

Postby Concerned » Tue 27 Mar 2007, 17:01:58

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MrBill', '
')many simply do not realize how expensive merchantile capitalism was or could be again. the rich would get richer and the poor poorer without efficient intermediation.


Considering that the rich 2% own 80% of the worlds wealth and the disparity continues to grow I hardly think this is a convincing argument.

Sure there are such fantastic breadcrumbs falling off the table that in comparison even a lowly western worker is far better off than in the past. Capatilism has never been about distributing wealth it's about creating and hoarding. The majority of wealth redistribution under capatilism has had to be fough tooth and nail for. Im discussing a fair days pay for a fair days work not welfare BTW.

We are fortunate in the western world that workers struggles in the past had instituted things such as the 40hr week and companies paying health benefits for sick workers, and yearly holiday allowance.

Of course now with the demise of the left and "competitive pressures" from 3rd world nations you can only expect the general mass of populations standard of living to continued decline.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '
')mortgage? HAH, live in my rented premises until you have saved enough year after year to get out from under the yoke of renting!

Sounds like some of the IMF and World Bank SAP programs. Shock therapy anyone?
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '
')and as energy becomes more scarce its value, no matter how you measure it, will become more expensive in real terms. I want to be the one who owns the only source of renewable power in any given area. preferably a hydro-electric dam. there may be less energy to grow the economy, but my energy will be worth more and more in real terms - grain, spices or rental units.


The energy will be worth what you can do with it and how you can plug it into the economy. If you don't have some sort of grid to connect all the hydro energy, then you can't have a uniform spot market for that energy for arguments sake.

This means each geographic areas grid would have different values for the energy flowing through it and what could be produced or leveraged with that energy.
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