nobody's_hero
Member
- Joined
- Jan 23, 2008
- Messages
- 10,909
Well, I recently posted a topic in General Politics forum about Georgia's HB-3, sound money bill. Part of that bill includes a transfer back to gold/silver-backed currency, and the other part attacks the fractional reserve banking system.
I'm already told by naysayers that a return to gold/silver will cause massive deflation and crash the economy (mostly folks who refuse to admit that the dollar has lost 95% of its purchasing power since 1913).
Now I'm told ''economies can't grow without fractional reserve banking.'' Thus, the poll question. I'd like to know whether or not economies have ever grown without fractional reserve banking.
My first inclination is that fractional reserve banking is inherently fraudulent. You can't loan out money that doesn't exist on a 9-to-1 ratio and not ultimately crash the economy via inflationary effects, but I was wondering what others had to say about the system.
Follow up question:
Is there such a thing, or has there ever been, a non-fractional reserve banking system, and if so, how did it work?
I'm already told by naysayers that a return to gold/silver will cause massive deflation and crash the economy (mostly folks who refuse to admit that the dollar has lost 95% of its purchasing power since 1913).
Now I'm told ''economies can't grow without fractional reserve banking.'' Thus, the poll question. I'd like to know whether or not economies have ever grown without fractional reserve banking.
My first inclination is that fractional reserve banking is inherently fraudulent. You can't loan out money that doesn't exist on a 9-to-1 ratio and not ultimately crash the economy via inflationary effects, but I was wondering what others had to say about the system.
Follow up question:
Is there such a thing, or has there ever been, a non-fractional reserve banking system, and if so, how did it work?
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