I understand all of the differences of what you are propsoing, you are arguing that fraudulent activities are harmless and actually beneficial investment opportunities. When in fact they are harmful and deceptive, and there is no defending them at all. If someone sold you a car without an engine would that be fair? How about only 5% of the cars sold at this place had no engines despite claiming to be selling quality cars?
That's a strawman, and it is not fraud as long as depositors understand that their deposits are not guaranteed on demand. How many other ways can I explain this to you?
Look, this is where you are going wrong. You're conflating property rights with contract rights. If I gave a bank money to hold (as in a lock box) then it would be outright theft if the bank let out my mother's jewelry in some form. But if I contract with a bank (by depositing cash in a savings account),then I have full knowledge (or should have if I read bank policy) that my money *will be lent out*. I accept those terms in return for interest. Of course, the bank promises to redeem my principle upon demand and if it cannot, then I should be able to sue it in exactly the same manner as I would sue anyone else who breached a contract. However, banks do not promise to redeem principle on demand (in their contracts), and if they did, and a bank run happened, they should then rightly be sued for fraud.
Ok first the anaology is not too simplistic you simply get confused when money is used a a substitute in barter. Just because we start using money as a substitute to goods and services does not mean it can suddenly change the physical limitations of this world allow the simotaneous use and accounting for physical goods and services.
If you really feel that your analogy is not a simplistic representation of how FRB works, then it is not I who am confused. I also never said in any way that using money as a substitute 'changes' the physical limitations of this world', and if you interpret my arguments as such, then it further shows your misunderstanding of FRB.
Well now you have "magical assets" that are always available to cover the shortfalls. This is not very intellectually honest. If banks had additonal assets and wealth that could cover the gaps in their reserves, then there would be NO NEED to engage in fractional reserve banking. You also refuse to admit that when a bank creates credit it creates inflation. You want to say you can expand the ratio of money to goods and services and see no inflation....this is not logical whatsoever.
Huh? "Magical assets"? I spoke directly of what assets could be sold in order to cover *some* deposits in the case of a bank run, and how it would be handled through a "come back later" policy. "Always able to cover the shortfalls"? Did you not read, "There is of course some (although very minimal) risk involved that you may not get your deposit back."? You seem to stating and believing two different things at the same time here...
1) That simply increasing the money supply no matter what results in inflation. This is absolutely 100% *not* true. If the money supply grows/contracts *WITH* capital goods and production in an economy, you have monetary equilibrium, and the price of a dollar will remain stable (ie, NOT inflate). Of course, if you believe that capital and production does not grow in an economy, you would not have much real growth. Is this what you believe? Because if capital does not grow, *then* you would be correct, and any additional growth of the money supply would result in inflation. However this is just not the case.
and 2) "expand the ratio of money to goods and services and see no inflation". I never said nor advocated *any* such thing, so this is yet *another* strawman. Expanding the ratio of money to an economy would, yes result in inflation. *As I said* - this is *EXCESS* creation of money. However, under a 'Free Banking' FRB system, the market would determine appropriate interest rates which would contribute to the growth/contraction of money based on the circumstances in the market.
Once again, I cite the USD under our old relatively free banking system, in which the dollar remained pretty stable (outside times of war) while our economy grew and banks added notes into circulation, backed by gold. There are also other examples in history that support this - Scotland, and Canada come to mind. So economic theory, logic and history has proven you wrong - FRB under Free Banking, in and of itself did and does *not* lead to inflation. BTW, banks failed during this time for govt intervention distortions, though such as laws against diversification and expansion.
I don't know what to do with you really, if you cannot admit that increasing credit realtive to goods and services does not create inflation. This is simple supply and demand. Inflation is a manifestation of fraudulent accounting. You lack a severe understanding of money and how it's most valuable service is being a tool for accounting for all the goods and services in our economy.
Well, for starters, you could actually read and follow my posts and understand how FRB actually works under a Free Banking system.
And here you sound like a Kensyian or a Chicago school hack. Why should people be robbed the benefits of increased efficiency and hard work? You argue that there is no inflation when effieciency is increasing and the money supply/credit increases enough to cause no rise in prices. However you fail because of a lack of understanding of what inflation is. It is an increase in the money supply not an increase in prices.
A Keynesian or Chicago school 'hack'? You must be kidding! F.A. Hayek, Ludwig Von Mises, Peter Schiff, George Selgin, Steve Horowitz, Larry White and MANY other notable Austrian Economists have *NO* problem with Free Banking, and *NONE* of them have said that it would lead to anything you're describing. Now I'm getting irritated with your arrogance and ignorance and will simply have to debunk you here and now...
Ludwig Von Mises said:
"What is needed to prevent any further [monetary abuse] is to place the banking business under the general rule of commercial and civil laws compelling every individual and firm to fulfill all obligations in full compliance with the terms of contract.... Free banking is the only method available for the prevention of the dangers inherent in credit expansion.... Under free banking it would have been impossible for credit expansion with all its inevitable consequences to have developed into a regular — one is tempted to say normal — feature of the economic system. Only free banking would have rendered the market economy secure against crises and depressions."
Do you *REALLY* wish to argue with the FATHER of Austrian Economics?
As for yet your other strawman - I *never* said inflation was an increase in prices. *Inflation is a decrease in the value of a monetary unit* - which LEADS to higher prices.
The fact that such thinking has debased our dollar 95% already does not disuade you it seems. Prices should fall when products become cheaper or easier to make. There is no justifcation for saying that fraudulent bankers should be allowed to create credit to syphon off these savings. Also you miss another point. People can invest simply by not spending money, but by saving, and without the bank robbing them.
When people save in an economy without crooked bankers,there is a mild deflation in prices for every person who restrains from buying. This means that the purchasing power of all remaining money increases...which means investments using this money are increasing in purchasing power too. In short you can invest in projects more cheaply. A person who saves invests in the ENTIRE economy over all possible investments simotaneously. This person is investing in society as a whole. When this person resumes spending inflation will occur to the extent he spends, however the increased investment was accounted for correctly because there was a decrease in consumption to the exact extent consumption increased on the behalf of investors and consumers.
When banks increase credit, without a sacrifice in consumption they FORCE others to restrict their consumption so that the bank can invest in their stead. Now a bank cannot just force others to consume less and then invest their propery outright. They require a decption to do so, this is so that no one gets upset. This is inflation, it is done in secret and no one knows to what extent the inflation really is(how much the ratio to goods has changed) if it will affect them directly or if it will at all. This means people making ECONOMIC CALCULATIONS have a much harder time planning for the future. The more rampant the credit expansion the more out of whack people's economic calculations get.
Also bear in mind that in order to create credit and operate on low reserves banks require either a good reputation built on years of honest banking or an agent of force mandating the use of their fraudulent bills. The honest reputation or appearance of one is necessary for people to trust the bank enough to not withdraw their money, this is exactly when a bank strikes.
I see you here arguing for conmen and theives, you are giving moral cover to a dishonest practice that has a history of destruction throughout many countries. The system you say is harmless leads to banks collapsing and yelling for aid because they were simply engaging in honest trade(as you define it). It compels politicains to bail out these banks, leads to mergers of government and banks to inflate and rob the people. It also finds it's victims amongst those who get robbed either because a bank refuses or cannot give them back THEIR property or because the bank simply inflates or is bailed out by an authority who can debase the currency.
Your sole argument throughout has been the existence of "magical investments" and magical "liqudity" the idea that there is always another sucker to fool. Yet we have seen banks fail and explode many many times due to dishonest accounting. People lose everything, because a bank has promised people the impossible, both access to their money and simotaneously investing it.
It's basic accounting, really it is. There is nothing society can gain by purposely decieving itselfm yet you seem to perceive some benefit in doing so despite all the evidence to the contrary.
Completely irrelevant, and yet another strawman. This rant/tirade right here is not refuting FRB in and of itself, under a Free Banking system - but instead our corporatist, corrupt and govt-mandated Fed (central bank) monopoly, under a completely fiat money system backed by nothing, and under FDIC insurance and excessive govt regulation. I have not advocated for this system and am vehemently against it all. We have nothing even *remotely* close to a Free Banking system.
In the end, it comes down to this - *tons* of high-profile Austrians (along with the FOUNDER, Ludwig Von Mises) have no problem with Free Banking, and history has shown (when it was actually practiced) that is one of, if not the, most stable financial systems for money in existence. This is free-market money, through and through, and respects property rights under contract. The only way to enforce a full, 100% Reserve banking system (which, again, is not banking but warehousing) would be a VIOLATION of the free market and a VIOLATION of property rights - since you'd need a government agency to say - NO, you cannot engage in such a contract. That is ABSURD. Again, I love Rothbard to death on virtually everything else, but I - among *many* very notable Austrian economists, rightly disagree with him on this.
So I also ask - are you *for* the free-market, or against it?