So far, so good.
And here is the problem. When the dollars were exchange silver, this was just an asset swap. Silver assets were credited by .5 trillion and dollar assets debited by .5 trillion. You snuck an extra transaction in here by adding to bank reserve liabilities. Bank reserve liabilities wouldn't exist with my system. Why should the Fed record this as a liability? If YOU buy a t-bill, do you consider your dollars spent a liability to the vendor? Certainly, the Fed needs to keep track of the location of electronic dollars (by there very nature being electronic). But in a manner more analogous to an air-traffic controller keeping track of incoming and outgoing planes, not as being on the balance-sheet.
All banks' reserves are held with Fed as reserves, for reserve-requirement calculations as well as for check-clearance, interbank transfers & such; it's a liability because it doesn't belong to Fed
And since the seller of silver isn't going to give it for free, he'll need to be paid into his bank account, which will be one of the banks directly or indirectly located under "All banks' reserves"
If I buy a T-bill, I don't need to record it as a liability because firstly, the seller doesn't hold his bank A/c with me but every seller has an direct or indirect bank A/c with Fed; secondly, I will be paying with money that I got by selling my goods & services, of course, Fed doesn't necessarily do that & hence it's considered a "loan" from the people
Why should the Fed record this as a liability? If YOU buy a t-bill, do you consider your dollars spent a liability to the vendor?
I've posted the following a couple of times already, here it is again for the third time, please read it
http://www.currency-news.com/articles/the-value-of-seigniorage-december-2008
In a nutshell, central banks have the statutory right to issue banknotes, that is, in an accounting sense functioning as a debtor for the value of banknotes in circulation. The face value of the notes will be recorded as a liability on the central bank's balance sheet, matched by a corresponding asset; in other words the community provides an interest free loan to the central bank, which in turn invests these funds in income producing assets
The issue seems to be that you base your views on conspiracy theories that Fed is "evil", etc etc & therefore you're unwiling to look at the issue objectively, yes, they are misguided, yes, there are special interests involved as they are wherever government is involved but the system, as it is today, isn't designed or always run to be "evil" even Ron Paul understands that much
SO even the central-bankers understand that whenever they buy something with newly created money, be it T-bills, silver or whatever, they are essentially taking it for free so it is in essence a "loan" from the people & that's why it's recorded as a
liability to the "community" (remember, the banks' reserves essentially belong to depositors, that is, to the people as a whole)