A wunch of bankers...
at 19:33
Sir Josiah Stamp, reckoned at the time to be the second wealthiest person in Britain, sometime Bank of England director, Chairman of the LMS railway and Liberal economist, winning a 1912 prize for an essay about taxing the "unearned increment" instead of incomes, is quoted as saying:
"Banking was conceived in iniquity and was born in sin. The bankers own the earth. Take it away from them, but leave them the power to create money, and with the flick of the pen they will create enough deposits to buy it back again. However, take it away from them, and all the great fortunes like mine will disappear and they ought to disappear, for this would be a happier and better world to live in. But, if you wish to remain the slaves of bankers and pay the cost of your own slavery, let them continue to create money ."
Particularly apt this week I should say. You see, what's been happening this week should make most of us take to the streets in demonstration and revolt; if only we understood our unwitting role in the gargantuan pyramid selling fraud that's been playing out in global financial markets this last few weeks and who, ultimately, is going to pay in the fall out.
Follow the money trail...
The economy needs money to function just as we need air to breathe. The more we produce, the more money we need circulating to consume that production. That production is our collective creditworthiness - the measure of how much wealth we are all creating and swapping with each other. We trust the money that facilitates those swaps because we are told to. The green/blue/purple crinkly stuff, of which there exists less than £50 billions' worth, says on it "I promise to pay the bearer on demand the sum of..." as that most potent national icon, the monarch, smiles benignly up at us in reassurance.
So, do we have a benign national institution that keeps watch on economic activity and creates the currency to match our national creditworthiness? Do we hell. We have an Old Lady that the monarch once gave a monopoly to to create money and sell it back to him who can no longer be bothered to do the job and has subcontracted it to private banks. She keeps an eye on all the economic activity and so on, she has all the figures and tools needed to do as good a job as anyone else, but instead of actually creating money into productive circulation she lets that cartel of private bankers know how much she thinks should exist by telling them the rates of interest they should be charging for actually lending the money into circulation. They create nothing except numbers. Pixels on a computer screen that we all trust we will be able to turn into those "promises to pay" whenever we need it.
These bankers, being a conservative breed at heart, not wishing to lose their investment, look to lend to those most likely to pay them back with interest. But even making such a risk calculation based on the prospective borrower's ability to repay, they look also to take some security, something they can sell to get as much of their money back as they can if the borrower finds he can no longer repay. And what's the safest security? Safe as houses? Well, houses of course, or more particularly the land value it sits on (a house, like any other capital good depreciates and needs constant maintenance to hold its value).
There's very little, in the ordinary course of things, less likely to go south in value than land, except perhaps very small specialized bits of land like gold and other rare natural resources. Keeping those rates low makes the money borrowed more affordable. More people think they can afford it. The banks lower the interest cover they're prepared to take by increasing the multiples of income people can borrow. Still the insatiable economy needs more money circulating, so the banks, usually not the front liners with big reputations to keep, go chasing more and more marginal borrowers. The house price/land value increases make people who don't own nervous that they never will if they wait as prices rise, so the age old human natural inclination to want to "own" the place you live in takes over and you stake more than you could comfortably afford in less benign economic conditions on getting your foot on that housing ladder.
The more front liner banks are however prepared to back up this borrowing with "managed risk" packages of these loans. But when the Old Lady gets a bit nervous about inflation at the centre of this web and decides money should be more expensive and the cartel operators duly follow suit, whilst those of us with enough simply cut down on spending now to afford the higher interest payments, those of us who were only just able to afford to get on the ladder at the lower rate now find it impossible and stop paying. The image from "Life in the Freezer" comes to mind of chin-strap penguins trying to get ashore on a south Atlantic rocky crag where the unfortunates that only slightly mistime the wave scrabble about and fall back into the thrashing ocean.
The security, the house and its land value, takes a while to turn into liquid cash, the buyers of the "managed risk" packages that back up those loans see the prospect of getting the yield they expected diminishing and tighten their belts. This whole house of cards rests on every card in it honouring their obligations every night and so suddenly the Old Lady awakes, reaches over to the button that is all it takes to create credit into the system and rather than the private bankers see their stockholders losing their investment the retail debts of dubious morality they marketed and created are magically covered.
Excuses, excuses...
Of course the banks and monetary authorities give out all sorts of excuses that, because of the mystery they have created of smoke and mirrors and the awe with which we will believe the sort of people who are obviously so brilliant they merit multi-million pound a year bonuses and management fees, us mere mortals swallow out of fear of recession, slump, unemployment, meltdown...
The "sub-prime" market is made up of feckless folk who really should have known better that they really couldn't afford to borrow. They fail to explain that it is being relentlessly sold to them through aggressive marketing and in the hype that they might miss the bandwagon if they don't sacrifice now to get on the rapidly rising housing ladder, rising of course because of the amounts of money they've created over the past few years chasing the monopoly of desirable locations. Not only are these sub-prime chin-straps cast back into the tumultuous briny, but they are pulled down by the under-tow. Not only have they lost their home, and whatever credit rating they had achieved, but now they probably also owe money on something they no longer own. They are not just back at square one, but off the game board for a good long while.
The liquidity injection protects the creditworthiness of the pound in your pocket. They fail to tell you that its creditworthiness has only been compromised because the subcontractors that actually create the vast majority of it took bad investment decisions in the pursuit of ever more profit for their shareholders.
That we're all protected because we are all, or nearly all, shareholders in banks through our pension funds. They fail to tell us that the vast majority of non-housing financial assets are held by a tiny minority of the wealthiest people on the planet and that the bottom third or so of folk, including, most likely, the hapless sub-prime mortgage market, do not own any financial assets. Besides, the propensity in the UK for pension funds to hold bank shares comes at least in part because through all the special privileges involved in creating our money stock out of nothing and the protectionism in having a sugar daddy in the form of a lender of last resort that will ensure the whole thing doesn't go down the tubes they are usually a pretty dependable investment.
That we need to prevent a run on equity markets becoming a rout. Of course they tend not to point out that the underlying business prospects of the companies facing huge write-downs in their values because of the "dash to cash" to shore up the credit markets have usually not changed. That these values are being slashed by large volume gamblers for whom the shares in those companies are little more than poker chips to buy and sell, swap into other assets and so on in technical trading, game theory scenarios and arbitraging between all but unrelated markets.
And that, dear reader, is why the collective noun for bankers is "wunch".
A call to arms...
This kind of money system, based on debt and causing the very asset price bubble that brings about its own collapse is first and foremost unsustainable. Every time there's an expansion it's the big players, those on the inside of that smoke and mirror fraternity, that gain by skimming off the cream from their ever increasingly precarious plate spinning, and those on the outside, with everything to lose, who get dumped on. And our governments collude in this iniquity.
If it weren't for this last fact, that it's always the little man that loses in this, I'd be hoping and praying this weekend that the whole house of cards does collapse this time and we are forced to find a different way to monetize our national creditworthiness for the future without creating these artificial asset bubbles and mountains of debt.
Yet there are a couple of ways to use the current turbulence to effect far-reaching changes so that our money system becomes more stable. Depending largely on whether you view the world from the market or the state point of view:
We could on the one hand break the link between the state and the real creators of credit, the commercial banks, by refusing to be the lender of last resort, by completely privatising currency so that what and whose money we use and trust most will be down to which of the commercial banks are best managed. Instead of Dollars and Yen, Pounds and Euro we might use Barcs or Honkers, BOSses, AirMiles or CitiCash right around the globe. Those with a favour for market solutions would point out that this removes the state protectionism, removes trade tariffs (by abolishing national currencies in favour of competing, global, commercial currencies) and crucially does not involve anything that could be connected to government.
On the other hand, for those of a more statist constitution, or perhaps just too timid to sever the ties between crown and the "coin of the realm", there's another possibility - the C H Douglas style national credit authority. Controlled by statute rather than by government, such a body would do as the Bank of England does now in monitoring economic indicators and deciding whether there should be more or less money in the system to cope with the economic climate. But instead of subcontracting the power of new money creation to a cartel of commercial interests, they would create all new money and be the lender of first resort to a banking system reduced to brokering loans between people who have cash to invest and people who need that investment. The national credit authority makes a profit as it does so on the lending of newly created money that costs it little or nothing to produce that can then go to its shareholders - the people of Britain, as a dividend, or our representative, the government, as money to spend.
And we could begin to make this latter change right now, with no legislation needed and no expenditure required. Instead of buying back all the liquidity central bankers have put into the system these past few days when markets stabilize, they could just increase the reserve requirements by the same amount, forcing the commercial banks to keep the debt-free money and restricting the new debt-money they can create on the back of it. Over time this reserve requirement could be increased until the majority of money is created by the national credit authority in response to economic growth needs.
But in order for there to be a will for such a thing to happen, people need to understand how skewed towards those who already wield wealth and power the current protectionist system is, and who loses...us. Nearly all of us. So why aren't we marching? We aren't even daring to discuss it. We're accepting that the situation financial markets are in today is because of feckless borrowers wanting to better themselves beyond their means. And that we all have to take a bit of pain for the irresponsibilities of our fellow borrowers.
And THAT, dear reader, is also why the collective noun for bankers is "wunch".
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Comments
Bravo
Someone who "gets it".Why aren't we marching? Why aren't we shouting that our salaries and wages are being devalued by 14% per year? (Bank of England M4 figures)Nobody understands.99.9% have no idea what money is. They have no idea:
- That our money is based on debt.
- That banks create money from nothing when a loan is taken out.
- That booms and busts are built into the system.
- That exponentially increasing debt is a requirement just to keep the system running.
- That inflation moves value from cash to assets; From the poor to the rich (the widening poverty gap... doh!).
- That house price and stock market increases are just as much inflation as bread prices.
- That inflation centralises power in the hands of relatively few banks and politicians.
Those who do understand have taken precautions, they are in the markets, and are doing well from the status quo.The best educational video I've seen on the subject is the "Money as Debt" animated video on Google Video. It summarises most of the problems in a 45 minute video which everyone should watch. Primarily focused on the US it's just as applicable here though It doesn't spend quite enough time on the implications of inflation, and decides on socialised rather than a free monetary system.Of course all of this goes against the interests of the banks and the owners of the banks, which now make up 33% of the UK economy.As to the amount of money needed... Well you need just enough to pay a penny for a penny chew.
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Wow, I actually feel
Wow, I actually feel slightly worn out after reading all that, a fine (if maybe long) piece indeed. The problem of money supply is one which is of the upmost importance, and yet due to its dry nature arouses little passion until of course things start to collapse as they have recently. The old economic way of supply, demand and philip's curves are gone, we now have what I could best describe as a confidence economy, one based mainly on services which require consumer confidence. Bubbles in areas like housing are pretty much inevitable if we allow the house market to function in such a situation where prices are dictated by confidence rather than value; where the winner's curse triumphs (where the value of goods is dictated by the over confident and optimistic and are hence over valued) and reality can be easily left behind in the pursuit of profits.
I would not argue for monetary changes (although that is more due to my ignorance than any opinion) but I would argue that the housing market needs far stricter regulation in terms of what people can borrow, a situation where banks are knowingly lending people more than they can pay back is unnacceptable and has led to the situation we have today. If you want to see more on the subject, Jim Cramer has recently done an interview on the colbert report (you can find the video on the colbert report website at comedy central).