Mini-Me
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- Joined
- Jan 9, 2008
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- 6,514
Your analogy fails since there are MANY other reasons for having a gun than to commit crime.
Fractional reserve banking IS inherently inflationary. It was developed for the purpose of enabling those who control that system to inflate more efficiently. Inflation IS inherently fradulent, ergo fractional reserve banking is also inherently fraudulent.
Only those who either have a vested interest in continuing with the fraud, or are ignorant (in the true sense of the word, not intended as an insult) of the economics involved would assert otherwise.
I think you're missing the crux of the problem though: Banks are only committing fraud when bank customers are misled into believing - as we are today - that IOU's from the bank (i.e. bank deposits) are just as good as cash. It is this misconception (which the system fraudulently encourages) about the nature of money that allows fractional reserve banking to inflate what we call the money supply. However, the real money supply in cash is (or should be) an entirely different entity from the supply of credit: If our monetary base was gold (or something similar), no banking system could ever inflate the "cash supply" (physical metal), only the amount of credit on the books. As long as people were not misled into believing that credit (which can be inflated) is the same thing as real money, credit inflation alone would not be fraudulent.
If people knew the truth, they would not blindly put their money in on-demand accounts, because they'd understand that the accrued interest comes at a risk. Instead, they'd more seriously consider alternatives, and if they chose on-demand accounts, they'd be much more vigilant about choosing responsible banks and demanding hefty interest rates (and without a central banking system, banks could not rack up credit in concert anyway, since they'd each exist as a competitive counterbalance to each other...as Rothbard explains in the quote in my earlier post).
You might argue that banks would still be committing fraud, because people then go out and spend their bank deposits in the general economy as though they were cash. However, the point is that they are NOT cash, and as long as the banks let their own customers know that, they are not committing fraud. If banks were not defrauding customers - i.e. if they did not mislead them or lie to them about the nature of bank deposits - then it would be the responsibility of the bank account holder to be up front about their own transactions with others. In other words, if people selling goods and services knew the truth, they may very well be more hesitant accepting a bank IOU as money in the general economy, knowing full well that IOU's could potentially lose their value at any time...and so they would likely prefer actual cold hard cash from customers, or they may even charge a premium for those paying with bank credit. Whatever we consider "cash" (gold, etc.), there's only one way for credit inflation to cause cash to unfairly lose buying power: That is if credit starts chasing the same goods and services while pretending that it is cash as well, and the people selling the goods and services are misled into believing there's no distinction between the credit (IOU's) and the real commodity we call cash.
To give you an analogy, let's say the bank makes Monopoly money. They can make as much Monopoly money as they want, and it would not be fraudulent as long as they aren't trying to pretend it's real money; after all, they're not actually inflating the money supply. Similarly, if the bank gives you a bunch of Monopoly money and clearly states what it is, and you're totally okay with that fact, they are not defrauding you. It then becomes your responsibility to be up front with whoever else you're dealing with not to trick them into thinking that the Monopoly money is "real" cash. As long as they're not being tricked, it would then be their decision whether or not to accept Monopoly money as payment, just as it would be to accept any other commodity as payment. IOU's work the same way...they're just a bit closer to being redeemable in cash than Monopoly money is.

In a free market, money is really whatever people want it to be, i.e. whatever is most widely accepted and trusted as a medium of exchange. As long as nobody is being misled into thinking Monopoly money, an IOU, or a bushel of corn is something it is not - i.e. gold, silver, or whatever - then nobody is being defrauded. Fraud only occurs when someone intentionally tricks someone else, i.e. by blurring the distinction between Monopoly money and an ounce of gold. That's the kind of thing that's going on today in our banking system, but it's not an inherent, inseparable property of fractional reserve banking.
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