Ron Paul
Infowars.com
July 12, 2012
Last week my subcommittee held a
hearing on fractional reserve banking and the moral hazard created by
government (taxpayer) insured deposits. Fractional reserve banking is the
practice by which banks accept deposits but only keep a fraction of those
deposits on hand at any time. In practice, nearly 100% of deposits are loaned
out, yet depositors believe that they can withdraw the full amount of their
deposit at any time. Loaned funds are then redeposited and reloaned up to the
limit of the bank’s reserve requirements, compounding the effect.
As
Murray Rothbard put it, “Fractional reserve banks … create money out of thin
air. Essentially they do it in the same way as counterfeiters.
Counterfeiters, too, create money out of thin air by printing something
masquerading as money or as a warehouse receipt for money. In this way, they
fraudulently extract resources from the public, from the people who have
genuinely earned their money. In the same way, fractional reserve banks
counterfeit warehouse receipts for money, which then circulate as equivalent to
money among the public. There is one exception to the equivalence: The law
fails to treat the receipts as counterfeit.” *
While mainstream economists extol
this “money multiplier” as a nearly miraculous process that results in a robust
economy, low reserve requirements actually enable banks to create trillions of
dollars of credit out of thin air, a process that distorts the structure of
production and gives rise to the business cycle. Once the boom phase of
the business cycle has run its course and the bust commences, some people will
naturally look to hold cash. So they withdraw money from their bank accounts in
order to hold physical currency. But bank deposits consist of a huge amount of
credit pyramided on top of a small of amount of original cash deposits. Each
dollar of cash that is withdrawn unwinds the multiplier, resulting in a
contraction in credit. And if depositors en masse attempt to withdraw more
funds than are available in reserves, the entire of house of cards comes
crashing down. This is the very real threat facing some European banks today.
Since the amount of deposits
always exceeds the amount of reserves, it is obvious that fractional reserve
banks cannot possibly pay all of their depositors on demand as they promise –
thus making these banks functionally insolvent. While the likelihood of all
depositors pulling their money out at once is relatively rare, bank runs
periodically do occur. The only reason banks are able to survive such
occurrences is because of the government subsidy known as deposit insurance,
which was intended to backstop the stability of the banking system and prevent
bank runs. While deposit insurance arguably has succeeded in reducing the
number and severity of bank runs, deposit insurance is still an explicit bailout
guarantee. It thereby creates a moral hazard by encouraging bank deposits into
fundamentally unsound financial institutions and contributes to instability in
the financial system.
The solution to the problem of
financial instability is to establish a truly free-market banking system. Banks
should no longer have a government backstop of any sort in the event of
failure. Banks, like every other business, should have to face the spectre of
market regulation. Those banks which engage in sound business practices, keep
adequate reserves on hand, and gain the confidence of their customers will
survive, while others fall by the wayside.
Banking, like any other financial
activity, is not without risk – and the government should not continue its vain
and futile pursuit of trying to eliminate risk. Get government out of the way
and allow the market to function. This will result in a more stable system that
meets the needs of consumers, borrowers, and investors.
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