wizardwatson
Member
- Joined
- Jun 15, 2007
- Messages
- 8,077
Fractional Reserve Banking is not fraud. When you deposit money with a bank you know what the reserve ratio is. If they claimed that they would keep 100% money in their reserves but then did not, that would be fraud. But no banks claim that.
Likewise, in a free market banks would be free to set whatever reserve ratio they want. When a customer deposits money with them, they are accepting the reserve ratio. Only if the bank enters into a contract to store money at a certain reserve ratio, and then later changes this ratio without legally amending or changing the contract with the depositor has the bank committed fraud.
In a free market, reserve ratio's would be set similarly to how interest rates would be set.
One bank may chose to have a very low reserve ratio. This will allow them to reduce customer fees and pay more interest on deposits. However it also will cause them to have to pay more money for insurance on the deposits. If they don't purchase insurance, then the rational person will not deposit money they cannot afford to risk with the bank.
On the other hand, some banks may chose a very high reserve ratio. This bank will have to charge the customers substantial fees for the services the low reserve ratio bank offers for free. They also won't be able to offer interest on deposits. But the bank will have to pay much less for insurance.
Ultimately, the private deposit insurance companies that replace the FDIC will have a sliding scale of insurance costs depending on a banks reserve ratio. Through the competition among the private insurance companies, ultimately the market will be setting the ideal reserve ratio.
I don't have any problem with this as long as the non-FRB money is identifiable from the FRB money, so that I can avoid using it. But then, we can already do this in a way. What's lacking is a non-FRB banking system.
I don't think FRB's are 'fraud' in the sense that someone one is criminally defrauding someone. I think it is fraud because it creates a logical contradiction of property rights.