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Monetary reform

Monetary reform is any movement or theory that proposes a system of supplying money and financing the economy that is different from the current system.

Monetary reformers may advocate any of the following, among other proposals:

Common targets for reform

Of all the aspects of monetary policy, certain topics reoccur as targets for reform:

Reserve requirements

Banks typically make loans to customers by crediting new demand deposits to the account of the customer. This practice, which is known as fractional reserve banking, permits the total supply of credit to exceed the liquid legal reserves of the bank. The amount of this excess is expressed as the "reserve ratio" and is limited by government regulators not to exceed a level which they deem adequate to ensure the ability of banks to meet their payment obligations. Under this system, which is currently practiced throughout the world, the money supply varies with the quantity of legal reserves and the amount of credit issuance by banks.[citation needed]

Several major historical examples of financial regulatory reform occurred in the 20th century relating to fractional-reserve banking, made in response to the Great Depression and the many bank runs following the crash of 1929. These reforms included the creation of deposit insurance (such as the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation) to mitigate against the danger of bank runs.[12] Countries have also implemented legal reserve requirements which impose minimum reserve requirements on banks.[13] Mainstream economists believe[12] that these monetary reforms have made sudden disruptions in the banking system less frequent.

However, some critics of fractional reserve banking[who?] argue that the practice inherently artificially lowers real interest rates and leads to business cycles propagated by excessive capital investment and subsequent contraction.[14] A small number of critics, such as Michael Rowbotham, equate the practice to counterfeiting, because banks are granted the legal right to issue new loans while charging interest on the money thus created. Rowbotham argues that this concentrates wealth in the banking sector with various pernicious effects.[11]

Money creation by the central bank

Some critics[who?] discuss the fact that governments pay interest for the use of money which the central bank creates "out of nothing".[15][non-primary source needed] These critics claim that this system causes economic activity to depend on the actions of privately owned banks, which are motivated by self-interest rather than by any explicit social purpose or obligation.

International organizations and developing nations

Some monetary reformers[who?] criticise existing global financial institutions such as the World Bank, International Monetary Fund, Bank of International Settlements and their policies regarding money supply, banks and debt in developing nations, in that they appear to these writers to be "forcing" a regime of extortionate or unpayable debt on weak Third World governments that do not have the capacity to pay the interest on these loans without severely affecting the well-being or even the viability of the local population. The attempt by weak Third World governments to service external debt with the sale of valuable hard and soft commodities on world markets is seen by some to be destructive of local cultures, destroying local communities and their environment.[8][11][16]

Arguments for reform

Among the arguments for a transition to full-reserve banking or sovereign money are as follows:

  • Money are created when a loan is made and this money disappear when the loan is paid down.[vague] The central banks cannot control the money supply when private banks are creating credit money. Credit money can be converted to reserve money in various ways so that there is no practical limit to the amount of credit money that can be created by private banks.[17][18] This increases the risk of economic crises, unemployment, and bank bailouts or bank runs.[19][20]
  • Less than 6% of the money in circulation in the world is coins and bank notes, the rest originates from bank credit, carrying interest. This interest allows banks to earn rents from the mere fact that money exist. Reformers do not think it fair that the whole society is paying rents to the banks just for having money to circulate.[18][19][21]
  • The total amount of public and private debt in the world is now between two and three times the amount of broad money in circulation.[22] This is a result of the accumulated compound interest of credit money.[citation needed] This counterintuitive fact makes it virtually impossible to repay all debt.[citation needed] The mathematical consequence is that somebody will have to go bankrupt even if they have done nothing wrong. It seems unfair[to whom?] that somebody will become destitute as a consequence of the money system rather than because of their own reckless behavior.[18][20][23]
  • It is not only individual persons and businesses that go bankrupt as a consequence of the fact that there is more debt than money in circulation. Many states have gone bankrupt and some states have done so many times. The debt problem is particularly severe for developing countries that have debt in foreign currencies. The International Monetary Fund and the World Bank have been promoting loans to resource-rich developing countries for the expressed purpose of promoting economic growth in these countries, yet these loans were denominated in foreign currencies and most of the money were used for paying transnational entrepreneurs without ever entering the local economy. These countries have been forced to sell off national assets in order to service the debt.[17][23][20] Also a number of countries in the European Union are affected when a large part of the money circulating in the country originates from banks in other member countries. The spiraling, unpayable national debt has led to social chaos and even war in some cases.[19][24]
  • A major part of all new credit money that is created is spent on changing the ownership of existing assets rather than creating new assets. This process inflates the prices of assets, including real estate, factories, land, and intellectual rights. This makes living unnecessarily costly for everybody. It contributes to growing inequality and it makes the economy unstable because of the creation of asset bubbles.[25][21][26][20]
  • The exponentially increasing debt in society can only be serviced as long as the rate of economic growth exceeds the interest rate. This creates an imperative for perpetual growth in production and consumption. This leads to overconsumption and overexploitation of resources.[27] The technological progress in labor-saving technologies has not given us more leisure as we expected, because of the necessary growth in consumption.[24][21][26][20]

Arguments against reform

Among the arguments for keeping the current system of money creation based on the credit theory of money or fractional reserve banking are as follows:

  • Switching to an untested banking system that differs from that of other countries would lead to a situation of extreme uncertainty.[28][29]
  • A reform would make it difficult for the central bank to implement a monetary policy that secures price stability.[29]
  • The creation of money free of debt would make it difficult for the central bank to later reduce the money supply.[29]
  • The central bank would quite likely be subjected to political pressures for producing more money for whatever purpose is high on the political agenda. Giving in to such pressures would lead to inflation.[29]
  • The finance sector would be weakened because its profit is reduced.[29]
  • A reform would not offer complete protection against financial crises abroad.[29]
  • A reform would lead to an unhealthy concentration of power at the central bank. Critics doubt that the central bank can determine the required money supply better than the private banks can.[28][30]
  • The central bank may have to provide credit to commercial banks and accept the accompanying risk.[28]
  • A sovereign money system would stimulate the creation of shadow banking and alternative means of payment.[31]
  • In the traditional banking system, the central bank controls the interest rate while the money supply is determined by the market. In a sovereign money system, the central bank controls the money supply while the market controls the interest rate. In the traditional system, the need for investments determines the amount of credit that is issued. In a sovereign money system, the amount of saving determines the investments. This change of influences will generate a new and different system with its own dynamics and possible instabilities. The interest rate may fluctuate as well as the liquidity. It is not certain that the market will find an equilibrium where the liquidity is sufficient for the needs of the real economy and full employment.[32][33]

Alternative money systems

Government Control vs Central Bank independence

To regulate credit creation, some countries have created a currency board, or granted independence to their central bank. The Reserve Bank of New Zealand, the Reserve Bank of Australia, the Federal Reserve, and the Bank of England are examples where the central bank is explicitly given the power to set interest rates and conduct monetary policy independent of any direct political interference or direction from the central government. This may enable the setting of interest rates to be less susceptible to political interference and thereby assist in combating inflation (or debasement of the currency) by allowing the central bank to more effectively restrict the growth of M3.[34]

However, given that these policies do not address the more fundamental issues inherent in fractional reserve banking, many suggest that only more radical monetary reform such as government directly taking over central banks such as the China or Swiss models can promote positive economic or social change. Although central banks may appear to control inflation, through periodic bank rescues and other means, they may inadvertently be forced to increase the money supply (and thereby debase the currency) to save the banking system from bankruptcy or collapse during periodic bank runs, thereby inducing moral hazard in the financial system, making the system susceptible to economic bubbles.[35]

International monetary reform

Theorists such as Robert Mundell (and more radical thinkers such as James Robertson) see a role for global monetary reform as part of a system of global institutions alongside the United Nations to provide global ecological management and move towards world peace, with Robert Mundell in particular advocating the revived use of gold as a stabilising factor in the international financial system.[36][37] Henry Liu of the Asia Times Online argues that monetary reform is an important part of a move towards post-autistic economics.[38]

While some mainstream economists[who?] favour monetary reforms to reduce inflation and currency risk and to increase efficiency in the allocation of financial capital, the idea of all-encompassing reform for green or peace objectives is typically espoused by those[who?] on the left-wing of the subject and those associated with the anti-globalization movement.[citation needed]

Social credit and the provision of debt-free money directly from government

Still other radical reform proposals emphasise monetary, tax and capital budget reform which empowers government to direct the economy toward sustainable solutions which are not possible if government spending can only be financed with more government debt from the private banking system. In particular, a number of monetary reformers, such as Michael Rowbotham, Stephen Zarlenga and Ellen Brown, support the restriction or banning of fractional-reserve banking (characterizing it as an illegitimate banking practice akin to embezzlement) and advocate the replacement of fractional-reserve banking with government-issued debt-free fiat currency issued directly from the Treasury rather than from the quasi-government Federal Reserve.[citation needed] Austrian commentator Gary North has sharply criticized these views in his writings.[39]

Alternatively, some monetary reformers such as those in the social credit movement, support the issuance of repayable interest-free credit from a government-owned central bank to fund infrastructure and sustainable social projects. This social credit movement flourished briefly in the early 20th century, but then became marginalized. In Canada, it was an important political movement that ruled Alberta through nine legislatures between 1935 and 1971, and also won many seats in Québec. It died out in the 1980s.

Both these groups (those who advocate the replacement of fractional-reserve banking with debt-free government-issued fiat, and those who support the issuance of repayable interest-free credit from a government-owned central bank) see the provision of interest-free money as a way of freeing the working populace from the bonds of "debt slavery" and facilitating a transformation of the economy away from environmentally damaging consumerism and towards sustainable economic policies and environment-friendly business practices.[citation needed]

Examples of government issued debt-free money

Some governments have experimented in the past with debt-free government-created money independent of a bank. The American Colonies used the "Colonial Scrip" system prior to the Revolution, much to the praise of Benjamin Franklin. He believed it was the efforts of English bankers to revoke this government-issued money that caused the Revolution.[40][unreliable source?]

Abraham Lincoln used interest-free money created by the government to help the Union win the American Civil War. He is sometimes quoted (probably apocryphally) calling these 'Greenbacks' "the greatest blessing the people of this republic ever had."[41]

Local barter, local currency

Some[who?] go further and suggest that wholesale reform of money and currency, based on ideas from green economics or Natural Capitalism, would be beneficial. These include the ideas of soft currency, barter and the local service economy.

Local currency systems can operate within small communities, outside of government systems, and use specially printed notes or tokens called scrips for exchange. Barter takes this further by swapping goods and services directly; a compromise being the Local Exchange Trading Systems (LETS) scheme: a formalised system of community-based economics that records members' mutual credit in a central location.

Commodity money

Some proponents of monetary reform[who?] desire a move away from fiat money towards a hard currency or asset-backed currency, which is often argued to be an antidote to inflation. This may involve using commodity money such as money backed by the gold, silver or both, commodities which supporters argue possess unique properties: their extraordinary malleability, their strong resistance to forgery, their character as stable and impervious to decay, and their inherently limited supply.[42][non-primary source needed]

Digital means are also now possible to allow trading in hard currencies such as gold, and some believe a new free market will emerge in money production and distribution, as the internet allows renewed decentralisation and competition in this area, eroding the central government's and bankers' old monopoly control of the means of exchange.[43][44]

Free banking

Some monetary reformers[who?] favour permitting competing banks to issue private banknotes whilst also eliminating the central bank's role as lender of last resort. In the absence of these factors, they believe a gold standard or silver standard would arise spontaneously out of the free market.[citation needed]

See also

References

  1. ^ Sound Money 23 April 2009 at the Wayback Machine, Lew Rockwell
  2. ^ Our Money Madness, Lew Rockwell
  3. ^ The Case for a Gold Dollar, Murray Rothbard
  4. ^ What has Government done to our money?, Murray Rothbard
  5. ^ The Case for a 100% Gold Dollar, Murray Rothbard
  6. ^ Free Banking and the Free Bankers, Jörg Guido Hülsmann, Quarterly Journal of Austrian Economics (Vol. 9, No. 1)
  7. ^ "Sovereign Money". Retrieved 13 September 2018.
  8. ^ a b Brown, Ellen H. (2007). Web of Debt. Baton Rouge, Louisiana: Third Millennium Press. ISBN 978-0-9795608-0-4. Retrieved 15 December 2007.
  9. ^ . Archived from the original on 28 August 2018. Retrieved 22 September 2008.
  10. ^ As an example of such groups, see Douglas Social Credit and the Social Credit School of Studies
  11. ^ a b c Rowbotham, Michael (1998). The Grip of Death: A Study of Modern Money, Debt Slavery and Destructive Economics. Jon Carpenter Publishing. ISBN 978-1-897766-40-8.
  12. ^ a b Mankiw, N. Gregory (2002). Macroeconomics (5th ed.). New York: Worth Publishers. p. 489. ISBN 0-7167-5237-9.
  13. ^ Mankiw, N. Gregory (2002). Macroeconomics (5th ed.). New York: Worth Publishers. p. 487. ISBN 0-7167-5237-9.
  14. ^ Murray Rothbard, The Mystery of Banking
  15. ^ For an example of the public criticism of the current monetary system, see the speech of the Earl of Caithness in the British House of Lords on 5 March 1997 ["The Economy - Wednesday 5 March 1997 - UK Parliament". Hansard. 5 March 1997. Retrieved 20 April 2021.]
  16. ^ As an example of groups critical of the World Bank, see the Whirled Bank website.
  17. ^ a b Werner, Richard A. (2016). "A Lost Century in Economics: Three Theories of Banking and the Conclusive Evidence". International Review of Financial Analysis. 46 (July): 361–79. doi:10.1016/j.irfa.2015.08.014.
  18. ^ a b c d Benes, Jaromir and Michael Kumhof (2012). "The Chicago Plan Revisited". IMF Working Paper, no. 202.
  19. ^ a b c Zarlenga, Stephen (2002). The Lost Science of Money: The Mythology of Money – The Story of Power. American Monetary Institute. ISBN 1-930748-03-5.
  20. ^ a b c d e Di Muzio, Tim; Robbins, Richard H. (2017). An Anthropology of Money: A Critical Introduction. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-138-64600-1.
  21. ^ a b c Jackson, A. and Dyson, B. (2012). Modernising Money: Why our Monetary System is Broken and how it can be Fixed. London: Positive Money.
  22. ^ Data sources: CIA. . Central Intelligence Agency. Archived from the original on 1 June 2007. Retrieved 6 September 2018.. Desjardins, Jeff. "All of the World's Money and Markets in One Visualization". The Money Project. Retrieved 6 September 2018.
  23. ^ a b Brown, Ellen Hodgson (2012). Web of Debt: The Shocking Truth about Our Money System and How We Can Break Free. Third Millennium Press. ISBN 978-0983330851.
  24. ^ a b c Eisenstein, Charles (2011). Sacred Economics: Money, Gift, and Society in the Age of Transition. North Atlantic Books. ISBN 978-1-58394-397-7.
  25. ^ Bezemer, Dirk, and Michael Hudson (2016) "Finance Is Not the Economy: Reviving the Conceptual Distinction." Journal of Economic Issues, vol. 50 (3), pp. 745–768.
  26. ^ a b Korten, David C. (2010). Agenda for a New Economy: From Phantom Wealth to Real Wealth. Berrett-Koehler Publishers.
  27. ^ Mellor, Mary (2010). The Future of Money: From Financial Crisis to Public Resource. London.
  28. ^ a b c Thomas Jordan, "How money is created by the central bank and the banking system", Swiss National Bank, 16 January 2018
  29. ^ a b c d e f Schneider-Ammann, Johann N.; Thurnherr, Walter (2016). Botschaft zur Volksinitiative "Für krisensicheres Geld: Geldschöpfung allein durch die Nationalbank! (Vollgeld-Initiative)" (PDF). Schweizerischer Bundesrat.
  30. ^ Birchler, Urs (1 November 2017). Vollgeld-Leitfaden (PDF). Institut für Banking und Finance, Universität Zürich. Retrieved 11 September 2018.
  31. ^ Fontana, Giuseppe; Sawyer, Malcolm (2016). "Full Reserve Banking: More 'Cranks' than 'Brave Heretics'". Cambridge Journal of Economics. 40 (5): 1333–1350. doi:10.1093/cje/bew016. Alt URL See also Dyson, Ben; Hodgson, Graham; van Lerven, Frank (2016). "A Response to Critiques of 'Full Reserve Banking'". Cambridge Journal of Economics. 40 (5): 1351–1361. doi:10.1093/cje/bew036. and Fontana, Giuseppe; Hodgson, Graham (2017). "A Rejoinder to 'A Response to Critiques of "Full Reserve Banking"" (PDF). Cambridge Journal of Economics. 41 (6): 1741–1748. doi:10.1093/cje/bex058.
  32. ^ Margeirsson, Olafur (2014). Financial Instability and Foreign Direct Investment (PDF). Doctoral dissertation, University of Exeter. pp. 251–264.
  33. ^ Dittmer, Kristofer (2015). "100 percent reserve banking: A critical review of green perspectives". Ecological Economics. 109: 9–16. doi:10.1016/j.ecolecon.2014.11.006.
  34. ^ Manipulating the Interest Rate: a Recipe for Disaster, by Thorsten Polliet, December 2007
  35. ^ Moral Hazard Effects of Central Bank Intervention 24 March 2008 at the Wayback Machine, by Nouriel Roubini
  36. ^ Uses and Abuses of Gresham's Law, by Robert Mundell
  37. ^ The Role of Money, James Robertson
  38. ^ The Road to Hyperinflation Archived 29 June 2012 at archive.today, Henry C.K. Liu
  39. ^ Gertrude Coogan's Bluff, Greenback Populism as Conservative Economics
  40. ^ America Created its Own Money in 1750, by Congressman Charles G. Binderup
  41. ^ Carr, William R. (2 December 2000). "Lincoln, Money, Greenback, JFK, Kennedy, Edmund D. Taylor and C". Heritech.com Index Page. Retrieved 20 April 2021.
  42. ^ Theory of Money and Credit, Ludwig von Mises 1953
  43. ^ Not Losing Your Head 16 April 2009 at the Wayback Machine, Speech by Lew Rockwell
  44. ^ Free Market Money System by F.A. Hayek

Further reading

External links

monetary, reform, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, some, this, article, listed, sources, reliable, please, help, this, article, looking, better, more, re. This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages Some of this article s listed sources may not be reliable Please help this article by looking for better more reliable sources Unreliable citations may be challenged or deleted April 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article relies excessively on references to primary sources Please improve this article by adding secondary or tertiary sources Find sources Monetary reform news newspapers books scholar JSTOR April 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message Monetary reform is any movement or theory that proposes a system of supplying money and financing the economy that is different from the current system Monetary reformers may advocate any of the following among other proposals A return to the gold standard or silver standard or bimetallism 1 2 3 non primary source needed Abolition of central bank support of the banking system during periods of crisis and or the enforcement of full reserve banking for the privately owned banking system to remove the possibility of bank runs 4 5 6 possibly combined with sovereign money issued and controlled by the government or a central bank under the direction of the government 7 There is an associated debate within Austrian School whether free banking or full reserve banking should be advocated but regardless Austrian School economists such as Murray Rothbard support ending central bank bail outs ending the Fed The issuance of interest free credit by a government controlled and fully owned central bank Such interest free but repayable loans could be used for public infrastructure and productive private investment This proposal seeks to avoid debt free money causing inflation 8 9 The issuance of social credit debt free or pure money issued directly from the Treasury rather than the sourcing of fresh money from a central bank in the form of interest bearing bonds These direct cash payments would be made to replenish or compensate people for the net losses some monetary reformers who believe they suffer in a fractional reserve based monetary system 10 11 Contents 1 Common targets for reform 1 1 Reserve requirements 1 2 Money creation by the central bank 1 3 International organizations and developing nations 2 Arguments for reform 3 Arguments against reform 4 Alternative money systems 4 1 Government Control vs Central Bank independence 4 2 International monetary reform 4 3 Social credit and the provision of debt free money directly from government 4 4 Examples of government issued debt free money 4 5 Local barter local currency 4 6 Commodity money 4 7 Free banking 5 See also 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksCommon targets for reformOf all the aspects of monetary policy certain topics reoccur as targets for reform Reserve requirements Main article Fractional reserve banking Banks typically make loans to customers by crediting new demand deposits to the account of the customer This practice which is known as fractional reserve banking permits the total supply of credit to exceed the liquid legal reserves of the bank The amount of this excess is expressed as the reserve ratio and is limited by government regulators not to exceed a level which they deem adequate to ensure the ability of banks to meet their payment obligations Under this system which is currently practiced throughout the world the money supply varies with the quantity of legal reserves and the amount of credit issuance by banks citation needed Several major historical examples of financial regulatory reform occurred in the 20th century relating to fractional reserve banking made in response to the Great Depression and the many bank runs following the crash of 1929 These reforms included the creation of deposit insurance such as the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation to mitigate against the danger of bank runs 12 Countries have also implemented legal reserve requirements which impose minimum reserve requirements on banks 13 Mainstream economists believe 12 that these monetary reforms have made sudden disruptions in the banking system less frequent However some critics of fractional reserve banking who argue that the practice inherently artificially lowers real interest rates and leads to business cycles propagated by excessive capital investment and subsequent contraction 14 A small number of critics such as Michael Rowbotham equate the practice to counterfeiting because banks are granted the legal right to issue new loans while charging interest on the money thus created Rowbotham argues that this concentrates wealth in the banking sector with various pernicious effects 11 Money creation by the central bank Some critics who discuss the fact that governments pay interest for the use of money which the central bank creates out of nothing 15 non primary source needed These critics claim that this system causes economic activity to depend on the actions of privately owned banks which are motivated by self interest rather than by any explicit social purpose or obligation International organizations and developing nations Some monetary reformers who criticise existing global financial institutions such as the World Bank International Monetary Fund Bank of International Settlements and their policies regarding money supply banks and debt in developing nations in that they appear to these writers to be forcing a regime of extortionate or unpayable debt on weak Third World governments that do not have the capacity to pay the interest on these loans without severely affecting the well being or even the viability of the local population The attempt by weak Third World governments to service external debt with the sale of valuable hard and soft commodities on world markets is seen by some to be destructive of local cultures destroying local communities and their environment 8 11 16 Arguments for reformAmong the arguments for a transition to full reserve banking or sovereign money are as follows Money are created when a loan is made and this money disappear when the loan is paid down vague The central banks cannot control the money supply when private banks are creating credit money Credit money can be converted to reserve money in various ways so that there is no practical limit to the amount of credit money that can be created by private banks 17 18 This increases the risk of economic crises unemployment and bank bailouts or bank runs 19 20 Less than 6 of the money in circulation in the world is coins and bank notes the rest originates from bank credit carrying interest This interest allows banks to earn rents from the mere fact that money exist Reformers do not think it fair that the whole society is paying rents to the banks just for having money to circulate 18 19 21 The total amount of public and private debt in the world is now between two and three times the amount of broad money in circulation 22 This is a result of the accumulated compound interest of credit money citation needed This counterintuitive fact makes it virtually impossible to repay all debt citation needed The mathematical consequence is that somebody will have to go bankrupt even if they have done nothing wrong It seems unfair to whom that somebody will become destitute as a consequence of the money system rather than because of their own reckless behavior 18 20 23 It is not only individual persons and businesses that go bankrupt as a consequence of the fact that there is more debt than money in circulation Many states have gone bankrupt and some states have done so many times The debt problem is particularly severe for developing countries that have debt in foreign currencies The International Monetary Fund and the World Bank have been promoting loans to resource rich developing countries for the expressed purpose of promoting economic growth in these countries yet these loans were denominated in foreign currencies and most of the money were used for paying transnational entrepreneurs without ever entering the local economy These countries have been forced to sell off national assets in order to service the debt 17 23 20 Also a number of countries in the European Union are affected when a large part of the money circulating in the country originates from banks in other member countries The spiraling unpayable national debt has led to social chaos and even war in some cases 19 24 A major part of all new credit money that is created is spent on changing the ownership of existing assets rather than creating new assets This process inflates the prices of assets including real estate factories land and intellectual rights This makes living unnecessarily costly for everybody It contributes to growing inequality and it makes the economy unstable because of the creation of asset bubbles 25 21 26 20 The exponentially increasing debt in society can only be serviced as long as the rate of economic growth exceeds the interest rate This creates an imperative for perpetual growth in production and consumption This leads to overconsumption and overexploitation of resources 27 The technological progress in labor saving technologies has not given us more leisure as we expected because of the necessary growth in consumption 24 21 26 20 The unpayable debt leads to bankruptcies of homeowners and foreclosure of their homes This allows banks to replace their virtual assets in the form of money created out of thin air with physical assets in the form of real estate 18 24 In 1968 a court in Minnesota decided that this practice was unconstitutional because the process by which the bank had created money from nothing was fraudulent see First National Bank of Montgomery v Daly Arguments against reformAmong the arguments for keeping the current system of money creation based on the credit theory of money or fractional reserve banking are as follows Switching to an untested banking system that differs from that of other countries would lead to a situation of extreme uncertainty 28 29 A reform would make it difficult for the central bank to implement a monetary policy that secures price stability 29 The creation of money free of debt would make it difficult for the central bank to later reduce the money supply 29 The central bank would quite likely be subjected to political pressures for producing more money for whatever purpose is high on the political agenda Giving in to such pressures would lead to inflation 29 The finance sector would be weakened because its profit is reduced 29 A reform would not offer complete protection against financial crises abroad 29 A reform would lead to an unhealthy concentration of power at the central bank Critics doubt that the central bank can determine the required money supply better than the private banks can 28 30 The central bank may have to provide credit to commercial banks and accept the accompanying risk 28 A sovereign money system would stimulate the creation of shadow banking and alternative means of payment 31 In the traditional banking system the central bank controls the interest rate while the money supply is determined by the market In a sovereign money system the central bank controls the money supply while the market controls the interest rate In the traditional system the need for investments determines the amount of credit that is issued In a sovereign money system the amount of saving determines the investments This change of influences will generate a new and different system with its own dynamics and possible instabilities The interest rate may fluctuate as well as the liquidity It is not certain that the market will find an equilibrium where the liquidity is sufficient for the needs of the real economy and full employment 32 33 Alternative money systemsGovernment Control vs Central Bank independence To regulate credit creation some countries have created a currency board or granted independence to their central bank The Reserve Bank of New Zealand the Reserve Bank of Australia the Federal Reserve and the Bank of England are examples where the central bank is explicitly given the power to set interest rates and conduct monetary policy independent of any direct political interference or direction from the central government This may enable the setting of interest rates to be less susceptible to political interference and thereby assist in combating inflation or debasement of the currency by allowing the central bank to more effectively restrict the growth of M3 34 However given that these policies do not address the more fundamental issues inherent in fractional reserve banking many suggest that only more radical monetary reform such as government directly taking over central banks such as the China or Swiss models can promote positive economic or social change Although central banks may appear to control inflation through periodic bank rescues and other means they may inadvertently be forced to increase the money supply and thereby debase the currency to save the banking system from bankruptcy or collapse during periodic bank runs thereby inducing moral hazard in the financial system making the system susceptible to economic bubbles 35 International monetary reform Theorists such as Robert Mundell and more radical thinkers such as James Robertson see a role for global monetary reform as part of a system of global institutions alongside the United Nations to provide global ecological management and move towards world peace with Robert Mundell in particular advocating the revived use of gold as a stabilising factor in the international financial system 36 37 Henry Liu of the Asia Times Online argues that monetary reform is an important part of a move towards post autistic economics 38 While some mainstream economists who favour monetary reforms to reduce inflation and currency risk and to increase efficiency in the allocation of financial capital the idea of all encompassing reform for green or peace objectives is typically espoused by those who on the left wing of the subject and those associated with the anti globalization movement citation needed Social credit and the provision of debt free money directly from government Still other radical reform proposals emphasise monetary tax and capital budget reform which empowers government to direct the economy toward sustainable solutions which are not possible if government spending can only be financed with more government debt from the private banking system In particular a number of monetary reformers such as Michael Rowbotham Stephen Zarlenga and Ellen Brown support the restriction or banning of fractional reserve banking characterizing it as an illegitimate banking practice akin to embezzlement and advocate the replacement of fractional reserve banking with government issued debt free fiat currency issued directly from the Treasury rather than from the quasi government Federal Reserve citation needed Austrian commentator Gary North has sharply criticized these views in his writings 39 Alternatively some monetary reformers such as those in the social credit movement support the issuance of repayable interest free credit from a government owned central bank to fund infrastructure and sustainable social projects This social credit movement flourished briefly in the early 20th century but then became marginalized In Canada it was an important political movement that ruled Alberta through nine legislatures between 1935 and 1971 and also won many seats in Quebec It died out in the 1980s Both these groups those who advocate the replacement of fractional reserve banking with debt free government issued fiat and those who support the issuance of repayable interest free credit from a government owned central bank see the provision of interest free money as a way of freeing the working populace from the bonds of debt slavery and facilitating a transformation of the economy away from environmentally damaging consumerism and towards sustainable economic policies and environment friendly business practices citation needed Examples of government issued debt free money Some governments have experimented in the past with debt free government created money independent of a bank The American Colonies used the Colonial Scrip system prior to the Revolution much to the praise of Benjamin Franklin He believed it was the efforts of English bankers to revoke this government issued money that caused the Revolution 40 unreliable source Abraham Lincoln used interest free money created by the government to help the Union win the American Civil War He is sometimes quoted probably apocryphally calling these Greenbacks the greatest blessing the people of this republic ever had 41 Local barter local currency Some who go further and suggest that wholesale reform of money and currency based on ideas from green economics or Natural Capitalism would be beneficial These include the ideas of soft currency barter and the local service economy Local currency systems can operate within small communities outside of government systems and use specially printed notes or tokens called scrips for exchange Barter takes this further by swapping goods and services directly a compromise being the Local Exchange Trading Systems LETS scheme a formalised system of community based economics that records members mutual credit in a central location Commodity money Some proponents of monetary reform who desire a move away from fiat money towards a hard currency or asset backed currency which is often argued to be an antidote to inflation This may involve using commodity money such as money backed by the gold silver or both commodities which supporters argue possess unique properties their extraordinary malleability their strong resistance to forgery their character as stable and impervious to decay and their inherently limited supply 42 non primary source needed Digital means are also now possible to allow trading in hard currencies such as gold and some believe a new free market will emerge in money production and distribution as the internet allows renewed decentralisation and competition in this area eroding the central government s and bankers old monopoly control of the means of exchange 43 44 Free banking Some monetary reformers who favour permitting competing banks to issue private banknotes whilst also eliminating the central bank s role as lender of last resort In the absence of these factors they believe a gold standard or silver standard would arise spontaneously out of the free market citation needed See also nbsp Money portalList of monetary reformers Money creation Credit theory of money Money as Debt Criticisms of debt Criticism of fractional reserve banking Full reserve banking Criticism of the Federal Reserve Monetary reform in Britain Monetary reform in the United States Money Free movement Swiss sovereign money initiative 2018 Modern Monetary Theory Seignorage Money as Debt three film series Universal basic incomeReferences Sound Money Archived 23 April 2009 at the Wayback Machine Lew Rockwell Our Money Madness Lew Rockwell The Case for a Gold Dollar Murray Rothbard What has Government done to our money Murray Rothbard The Case for a 100 Gold Dollar Murray Rothbard Free Banking and the Free Bankers Jorg Guido Hulsmann Quarterly Journal of Austrian Economics Vol 9 No 1 Sovereign Money Retrieved 13 September 2018 a b Brown Ellen H 2007 Web of Debt Baton Rouge Louisiana Third Millennium Press ISBN 978 0 9795608 0 4 Retrieved 15 December 2007 Stephen A Zarlenga The Lost Science of Money AMI 2002 Archived from the original on 28 August 2018 Retrieved 22 September 2008 As an example of such groups see Douglas Social Credit and the Social Credit School of Studies a b c Rowbotham Michael 1998 The Grip of Death A Study of Modern Money Debt Slavery and Destructive Economics Jon Carpenter Publishing ISBN 978 1 897766 40 8 a b Mankiw N Gregory 2002 Macroeconomics 5th ed New York Worth Publishers p 489 ISBN 0 7167 5237 9 Mankiw N Gregory 2002 Macroeconomics 5th ed New York Worth Publishers p 487 ISBN 0 7167 5237 9 Murray Rothbard The Mystery of Banking For an example of the public criticism of the current monetary system see the speech of the Earl of Caithness in the British House of Lords on 5 March 1997 The Economy Wednesday 5 March 1997 UK Parliament Hansard 5 March 1997 Retrieved 20 April 2021 As an example of groups critical of the World Bank see the Whirled Bank website a b Werner Richard A 2016 A Lost Century in Economics Three Theories of Banking and the Conclusive Evidence International Review of Financial Analysis 46 July 361 79 doi 10 1016 j irfa 2015 08 014 a b c d Benes Jaromir and Michael Kumhof 2012 The Chicago Plan Revisited IMF Working Paper no 202 a b c Zarlenga Stephen 2002 The Lost Science of Money The Mythology of Money The Story of Power American Monetary Institute ISBN 1 930748 03 5 a b c d e Di Muzio Tim Robbins Richard H 2017 An Anthropology of Money A Critical Introduction Routledge ISBN 978 1 138 64600 1 a b c Jackson A and Dyson B 2012 Modernising Money Why our Monetary System is Broken and how it can be Fixed London Positive Money Data sources CIA The World Factbook Central Intelligence Agency Archived from the original on 1 June 2007 Retrieved 6 September 2018 Desjardins Jeff All of the World s Money and Markets in One Visualization The Money Project Retrieved 6 September 2018 a b Brown Ellen Hodgson 2012 Web of Debt The Shocking Truth about Our Money System and How We Can Break Free Third Millennium Press ISBN 978 0983330851 a b c Eisenstein Charles 2011 Sacred Economics Money Gift and Society in the Age of Transition North Atlantic Books ISBN 978 1 58394 397 7 Bezemer Dirk and Michael Hudson 2016 Finance Is Not the Economy Reviving the Conceptual Distinction Journal of Economic Issues vol 50 3 pp 745 768 a b Korten David C 2010 Agenda for a New Economy From Phantom Wealth to Real Wealth Berrett Koehler Publishers Mellor Mary 2010 The Future of Money From Financial Crisis to Public Resource London a b c Thomas Jordan How money is created by the central bank and the banking system Swiss National Bank 16 January 2018 a b c d e f Schneider Ammann Johann N Thurnherr Walter 2016 Botschaft zur Volksinitiative Fur krisensicheres Geld Geldschopfung allein durch die Nationalbank Vollgeld Initiative PDF Schweizerischer Bundesrat Birchler Urs 1 November 2017 Vollgeld Leitfaden PDF Institut fur Banking und Finance Universitat Zurich Retrieved 11 September 2018 Fontana Giuseppe Sawyer Malcolm 2016 Full Reserve Banking More Cranks than Brave Heretics Cambridge Journal of Economics 40 5 1333 1350 doi 10 1093 cje bew016 Alt URL See also Dyson Ben Hodgson Graham van Lerven Frank 2016 A Response to Critiques of Full Reserve Banking Cambridge Journal of Economics 40 5 1351 1361 doi 10 1093 cje bew036 and Fontana Giuseppe Hodgson Graham 2017 A Rejoinder to A Response to Critiques of Full Reserve Banking PDF Cambridge Journal of Economics 41 6 1741 1748 doi 10 1093 cje bex058 Margeirsson Olafur 2014 Financial Instability and Foreign Direct Investment PDF Doctoral dissertation University of Exeter pp 251 264 Dittmer Kristofer 2015 100 percent reserve banking A critical review of green perspectives Ecological Economics 109 9 16 doi 10 1016 j ecolecon 2014 11 006 Manipulating the Interest Rate a Recipe for Disaster by Thorsten Polliet December 2007 Moral Hazard Effects of Central Bank Intervention Archived 24 March 2008 at the Wayback Machine by Nouriel Roubini Uses and Abuses of Gresham s Law by Robert Mundell The Role of Money James Robertson The Road to Hyperinflation Archived 29 June 2012 at archive today Henry C K Liu Gertrude Coogan s Bluff Greenback Populism as Conservative Economics America Created its Own Money in 1750 by Congressman Charles G Binderup Carr William R 2 December 2000 Lincoln Money Greenback JFK Kennedy Edmund D Taylor and C Heritech com Index Page Retrieved 20 April 2021 Theory of Money and Credit Ludwig von Mises 1953 Not Losing Your Head Archived 16 April 2009 at the Wayback Machine Speech by Lew Rockwell Free Market Money System by F A HayekFurther readingThe Mystery of Banking Murray Rothbard The Ethics of Money Production Jorg Guido Hulsmann 2008 Ludwig von Mises Institute 100 Money and the Public Debt Irving Fisher public domain External links nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Monetary reform Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Monetary reform amp oldid 1100461982, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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