I would just be curious how the interest paid on the Fed loans factors into your example.
It would of been nice to demonstrate what happens when we do pay interest on that initial bond and how we actually are losing wealth the longer we stay in a debt based monetary system.
I'd like to do a whole separate video about the Fed.
Interest paid to the Fed on the national debt is rebated to the Treasury, which has the effect of causing loans that the government makes to itself to have zero interest. It's not quite that simple, but that's the gist of it.
Also, the lowest reserve ratio that banks can actually hold here in the U.S. is 3%, but there are limits on the actual size of the funds in that case.
Minimum reserves are based on a sliding scale, based on the total amount of deposits held by the banks. Smaller banks actually have a 0% reserve requirement. Banks are also not required to hold reserves on "time deposits", like CDs or savings accounts.
Lower reserves for smaller banks might seem paradoxical at first (smaller banks would seem to have a higher risk of failure). It was set up that way to entice small banks to become members of the Federal Reserve system.
Nice, simply put and easy to understand. I demand more!
Thanks. I was thinking I might do a series of videos. Maybe something like this:
1. How money is created and destroyed
2. The impact of inflation
3. All about the Federal Reserve
4. How the dollar changes in value
5. How government financing works
6. How the IMF and the World Bank work
7. How the military industrial complex works
If you have any suggestions for specific content or issues that you'd like to see addressed, please let me know.