Recently I decided to jump into the latest Austrian
discussion about fractional reserve banking (FRB). John
Tamny wrote a post critical of those Austrians who regard it as a fraud; Mike
Shedlock responded with a rebuttal.
I decided to get in the middle of it – not that I haven’t been clear in
the past regarding my position on this matter.
There are some aspects of this topic of which I have thought
(and written) about a great deal; there are others that I have not found
worthwhile to think very much about.
Unfortunately, I decided to make statements about both in
my post – and then followed it up with a
more detailed post on the topic upon which I have not spent much time.
What I Know
There are two things of which I am quite confident regarding
FRB: first, as it is practiced today it is not fraud; second, markets are well
capable of regulating bank leverage.
Once I felt settled on these two points, I decided not to
spend any more time thinking or writing about the finer points – there is no
violation of property rights, and the market can regulate the business practice:
anything else I might have to say about it seems superfluous in the face of
this.
What I Should Have
Left Alone
Tamny made a point about the money multiplier. It resonated with some background-noise-thinking
that is always going on in my brain on some topic or another. Unfortunately, I decided the background noise
was developed enough to actually put into words.
More than one person sent me a note, suggesting I do some
further research or perhaps that there was some subtle point I was trying to
make that didn’t seem so clear on the surface.
That’s when I doubled-down and wrote the second post.
What Changed?
How many times have you had a light-bulb moment? Even on a topic upon which you feel you have
some decent knowledge? Something is
written in a slightly different manner, or in a context not previously
considered, or whatever?
My long-time online friend, gpond, sent me the
link to a related article – generally in agreement with Tamny’s position
(and mine), and generally in disagreement with Shedlock’s. However, contained in it was a seed – one
that in hindsight was so terribly obvious.
The seed was a statement about the distinction of currency vs. other
forms of “money.”
While I was in the middle of working through a further defensive
response to gpond, I found I was not able to write words that made any
sense. That’s when the light-bulb went
on.
So, despite being perfectly aware that – other than cash
withdrawals – banking as practiced today is a completely closed-loop system, my
analysis was written as if it wasn’t. I
wrote as if every transaction was a cash deposit or withdrawal. But it isn’t.
Almost every transaction today – and an even higher proportion of the
dollar (or Euro or whatever) volume – is done via some form of electronic means
– where a withdrawal in one account is an instant deposit in another.
Am I certain that this was the root of my error? Even now I cannot say that I feel sure about
this; I am only certain that my current view is somewhere between “I don’t
know” and “I was wrong.”
Perhaps Next Time…
As mentioned, it is enough for my purposes that I have
concluded that FRB is not fraud and that the market is perfectly capable of
regulating bank leverage.
Perhaps next time I will leave it at this. It is enough.