| by
John H. Hotson
An
understanding of the true nature
of money is essential for those
seeking economic reforms toward
the creation of sustainable
societies. People today have more
erroneous ideas about money than
Victorians had about sex, so
please read the following with
care.
Let's
begin with the distinction between
"legal tender" money
which only the government or its
agency, the Bank of Canada in the
case of Canada, can create, and
the "money" created by
private banks-and increasingly by
"near banks". If you
happen to have a Bank of Canada
note, on it you will read the
words "This note is legal
tender."
These
notes, and checks drawn on the
Bank of Canada, are the only legal
money in Canada. What that means
is that if you owe someone $20 and
you give him a $20 bill he is paid
and if he refuses payment in this
form you are absolved of the debt.
By contrast, he does not have to
accept your check drawn on a
private bank, or even a certified
check of a private bank. Money
issued by the Bank of Canada is
sometimes called "Right of
Purchase" money to
distinguish it from "Promise
to Pay" money created by
private banks.
While
private banks are in effect
creating money out of nothing,
they are providing an important
service as their "promise to
pay money" is for many
purposes safer and more convenient
to use and store than actual cash.
Furthermore, it costs the banks
billions of dollars to maintain
the payments system that clears
your check back to your account
and to keep the necessary records.
All those nice, or not so nice,
people who work in those banks,
deciding who gets a loan and what
happens if they can't pay have to
be paid their salaries. Banks also
have to pay phone bills,
electricity, heat and so on. What
they create is intangible, but at
the same time very real.
Essentially, the bank is
substituting its promise to
pay-which is accepted as money-for
your promise to pay, which is not.
Today
only about 4 percent of the money
in circulation in Canada is Bank
of Canada legal tender. In other
words, 96 percent of our money is
created by private banks. In 1945
the Bank of Canada accounted for
27 percent of our money. At that
time the bank rate of interest was
only 1.5 percent and the Canadian
economy boomed.
Some
96 percent of the
"money" we are now using
is not Bank of Canada "legal
tender," but rather the
promise of private banks to pay
the bearer Bank of Canada legal
tender on demand. This promise is
what a private bank provides for
you when you take out a loan with
the promise to repay it with
interest. The bank knows that
mostly you don't want legal
tender. What you want is a
checking account or a bank issued
check for the amount borrowed so
that you can send the bank's
promise-to-pay to folks you owe
money to-folks who also don't want
legal tender, but do want to
deposit your check in their own
bank account.
The
money supply of Canada increases
at the moment a bank issues you a
loan. As you repay your loan the
money supply shrinks. So money is
being created and destroyed every
day.
Banking
came into existence as a fraud.
The fraud was legalized and we've
been living with the consequences,
both good and bad, ever since.
Even so it is also a great
invention-right up there with
fire, the wheel, and the steam
engine.
In
the 16th century as the gold and
silver the Spanish had stolen from
the American Indians poured into
Europe, coins grew larger, more
plentiful and heavy. Merchants
needed a safe place to keep them
when they weren't needed. The
goldsmiths had large safes and
fierce dogs and it became
customary to leave coins on
"safe deposit" with
them. Next people saw that a
"gold certificate" or
warehouse receipt signed by the
goldsmith was more convenient to
circulate than those heavy coins
made of soft metals that quickly
wore out if they passed hand to
hand. So the smiths printed up
receipts in convenient
denominations promising payment in
gold to whomever presented the
receipt. Some people took to
writing notes to the smith
ordering him to transfer the
ownership of some of their coins
to someone else. Thus the personal
check was born.
Then
one day one of the smiths had a
brilliant, and wholly dishonest,
idea. He noticed that people so
much preferred his paper money to
its "gold backing" that
the gold in his vault hardly
circulated-some of it hadn't moved
in years. So he thought, "I
could print up some extra gold
certificates and lend them out to
gain the interest." The idea
was irresistible, and thus banking
was born!
Just
300 years ago, in 1694, William
Patterson talked King William III
into chartering a private bank
with the official sounding title
of "The Bank of
England." The King had
another war to fight with France's
King Louis XIV and not much money
to pay for it. Being a Dutchman,
he was unpopular with the British
Parliament and it balked at voting
the needed taxes. The royal credit
was zilch because of his
predecessors' extravagance. What
to do?
He
jumped at Patterson's promise to
lend him lots of "Bank of
England Notes"-which had
little or no gold
"backing"-at a
reasonable sounding 3 percent
interest. Thus national debt was
born.
King
William seems never to have asked
His Royal Self the obvious
question, "Why the hell
should I pay William Patterson
interest to print money for me?
Why don't I get a printing press
and print some money myself?"
Nor did he notice that his humble
subjects in the Massachusetts Bay
Colony, in what would one day
become the United States, had
already come to just this solution
to solve a similar problem.
In
1690, the Massachusetts Bay Colony
decided to do its bit in King
William's War by invading Canada.
The soldiers were told, "We
can't pay you, but the French have
lots of silver. So beat them out
of it and we will pay you with the
spoils." But the French won
and the soldiers came back to
Boston sore, mean and unpaid.
Necessity being the mother of
invention, a bright Yankee named
Benjamin Franklin thought of
printing up government
"promissory notes,"
declaring them "legal
tender" and using them to pay
the soldiers. That worked so well
that the other colonies copied the
idea. From that day until the
American Revolution (1775-1782)
there were no banks in the 13
British North American colonies.
By
the time of the Revolution,
Pennsylvania was the richest place
on earth. Franklin liked to boast
that part of the credit was due to
the government money he printed.
As he pointed out, the government
could spend the money into
circulation for a new bridge or
school, then tax the cost back
over the useful life of the
project. It could also lend the
money to businessmen at 5 percent
interest instead of the 10 percent
the British banks charged. Or it
could transfer the money into
circulation to take care of
widows, orphans and other
unfortunates. Pennsylvania made so
much money out of creating
money-and selling off lands stolen
from the Indians-that it hardly
had to levy any taxes.
When
word of this reached Great
Britain, the Bank of England
decided to destroy the competition
of the colonial money. It got
Parliament to forbid the colonies
to produce any more of the stuff
and the fat was on the fire. The
Continental Congress met and
defied Parliament and the King by
issuing its own currency-the
Continental. As Franklin saw it,
the attempt of Britain to restrict
the coloniess from issuing paper
money was one of the main causes
of the Revolution.
The
Continentals paid for most of the
cost of the revolution. Since they
had to be overissued, prices rose
greatly. Much of the inflation,
however, was caused by massive
British counterfeiting of the
Continentals. "You revolting
Yankees like paper money? Here!
Have lots of it!" So
Americans still have a saying.
"Not worth a
Continental." After the war
banking came to America.
Some
historians have much criticized
this method of financing the
American Revolution and held up
British practice as a model of
"sound finance."
However, as William Hixson shows
in his book, Triumph of the
Bankers, those historians have
it backwards. According to Hixson,
the total cost of the war to the
Americans was about $250 million
and much of this was financed by
the "Continentals" and
other paper monies. An additional
war debt of $56.7 million
accumulated some $70 million in
interest before it was all paid
off in 1836.
The
direct war costs to the British
government came to about $500
million. However, the British
financed their side of the war
almost entirely with borrowed
money. Since they have never since
reduced their national debt below
$500 million, they still owe this
money! Assuming a modest average
interest rate of 4 percent, the
British taxpayer has by this time
paid the British bondholder over
$4 billion in interest on the
initial $500 million loan-and is
still paying! Sound finance?
What
a pity that King William did not
have a Benjamin Franklin to advise
him! What a pity that the wisdom
of Franklin was lost and Alexander
Hamilton was able subsequently to
charter the Bank of The United
States modeled directly on the
Bank of England! What a pity that
many historians, like many
non-historians, so badly
misunderstand money and banking!
The
financial system the world has
evolved on the Bank of England
model is not sustainable. It
creates nearly all money as debt.
Such money only exists as long as
someone is willing and able to pay
interest on it. It disappears,
wholly or partially, in recurring
financial crises. Such a system
requires that new debt must be
created faster than principal and
interest payments fall due on old
debt.
A
sustainable financial system would
enable the real economy to be
maintained decade after decade and
century after century at its full
employment potential without
recurring inflation and recession.
By this standard, a financial
system that creates money only
through the creation of debt is
inherently unsustainable.
When
a bank makes a loan, the principal
amount of the loan is added to the
borrower's bank balance. The
borrower, however, has promised to
repay the loan plus interest even
though the loan has created only
the amount of money required to
repay the principal-but not the
amount of the interest. Therefore
unless indebtedness continually
grows it is impossible for all
loans to be repaid as they come
due. Furthermore, during the life
of a loan some of the money will
be saved and re-lent by individual
bond purchasers, by savings banks,
insurance companies etc. These
loans do not create new money, but
they do create debt. While we use
only one mechanism-bank loans-to
create money, we use several
mechanisms to create debt, thus
making it inevitable that debt
will grow faster than the money
with which to pay it. Recurring
cycles of inflation, recession,
and depression are a nearly
inevitable consequence.
If,
in the attempt to arrest the price
inflation resulting from an
excessive rate of debt formation,
the monetary authorities raise the
rate of interest, the result is
likely to be a financial panic.
This in turn may result in a sharp
cutback in borrowing. Monetary
authorities respond to bail out
the system by increasing bank
reserves. Governments may also
respond by increasing the public
debt-risking both inflation and
growing government deficits.
Governments
got into this mess by violating
four common sense rules regarding
their fiscal and monetary
policies. These rules are:
1.
No sovereign government should
ever, under any circumstances,
give over democratic control of
its money supply to bankers.
2.
No sovereign government should
ever, under any circumstances,
borrow any money from any private
bank.
3.
No national, provincial, or local
government should borrow foreign
money to increase purchases abroad
when there is excessive domestic
unemployment.
4.
Governments, like businesses,
should distinguish between
"capital" and
"current" expenditures,
and when it is prudent to do so,
finance capital improvements with
money the government has created
for itself.
A
few words about the first three of
these rules, as the fourth rule
has been discussed extensively
elsewhere.
1.
There is persistent pressure from
central bankers and academic
economists to free central banks
from the obligation to consider
the effects of their actions upon
employment and output levels so
that they can concentrate on price
stability. This is a very bad idea
indeed. Dominated by bankers and
economists, central banks are
entirely too prone to give
exclusive attention to creditor
interests to the exclusion of
worker interests. Amending central
bank charters to give them
independence from democratic
oversight, or to set up
"price stability" as
their only goal would complete
their subjection to banker
interests. Canada's own Mackenzie
King said it all, "Without
Government creation of money, talk
of sovereignty and democracy is
futile."
2.
Anyone who understands that banks
create the money they lend can see
that it makes no sense for a
sovereign government, which can
create money at near zero cost, to
borrow money at high cost from a
private bank. The fact that most
governments do borrow from private
banks is one of the greatest
errors of our times. If a
government needs money created to
pay for public spending it should
create the money itself through
its own bank; or spend the money
debt and interest free as the
United States did during the
Revolution and again during the
Civil War. If a government does
not wish to "monetize"
its deficits during periods of
unusual need such as wartime, it
should either make up the deficit
with higher taxes or borrow only
from the non-bank public-which
cannot create the money it lends
to the government.
3.
One of the most mistaken ideas,
with which Canadians especially
are cursed, is the idea that a
country should maintain its
interest rates higher than those
of its main trading partners
"to attract foreign
investment." To begin with,
high interest rates inhibit real
investment spending on new
buildings, machinery and equipment
by diverting funds to finance
government deficits. Furthermore,
the foreign funds attracted to
Canada by high interest rates
cannot be spent on Canadian
employees and products. They are
only useful for importing foreign
goods and making payments on
foreign debts. Moreover, these
funds bid up the value of the
Canadian dollar in foreign
exchange markets, giving foreign
goods a domestic price advantage
over similar goods produced in
Canada, while making it harder for
Canada to export. Thus the inflow
of foreign funds actually
contributes to a "current
account deficit" and
depresses the Canadian economy.
Those who argue that Canada must
borrow on "capital
account" because she has a
"current account
deficit" have cause and
effect totally reversed. Canada
has a current account deficit because
she is borrowing on capital
account. What she needs to do is
to stop borrowing, lower
interest rates until she stops
attracting foreign funds, and let
the Canadian dollar find its own
level in the foreign currency
markets.
When
the Bank of Canada encourages the
Canadian government, provinces,
and municipalities to borrow in
New York and Tokyo it is a
betrayal of Canada. Where should
they borrow when new money is
needed for government spending?
They should borrow at the
government owned Bank of Canada,
paying near zero interest
rates-just sufficient to cover the
Bank's running expenses.
John
H. Hotson was professor emeritus
of economics University of
Waterloo and executive director of
the Committee on Monetary and
Economic Reform (COMER), a
Canadian based network of
economists working for economic
and monetary reform. This article
is based on a series he published
in the October 1994, November
1994, and January 1995 issues of Economic
Reform, the COMER newsletter,
Comer Publications, 3284 Yonge
St., Suite 500, Toronto, Ontario,
M4N 3M7, fax (416) 486-4674. He
gave the PCDForum permission to
use this material only five days
before his untimely death on
January 21, 1996 following heart
surgery.
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