I give Roger Sandilands an F for his attempted proof that banks create money:
>A propos James Ahiakpor's latest post, banks do indeed create money,
>because indeed "money is what money does", and demand deposits are
>transferred electronically to settle debts without the
>intermediation of cash, and banks do create demand deposits. QED.
Roger arrives at his attempted proof by taking the quote I gave from
Francis Walker out of context. The first sentence from the Walker
quote is that "Money is that which passes from hand to hand in final
discharge of debts and full payment for goods." A check does not
pass from hand to hand in final discharge of debts. Rather, a check
is an order to pay money to its recipient. In commercial
transactions, the recipient first takes such precautions as obtaining
the issuer's driver's license or social security number and other
particulars before parting with the goods being purchased. This is
to enable the vendor go after the issuer in case the check turns not
to be good for the amount specified.
The recipient then deposits the check with his/her bank. The bank
may or may not grant the depositor the privilege to draw on that
deposit until the check "clears." That is, the bank sends the check
on to the drawer's bank for a transfer of money (cash) to the
depositor's bank.
If such transfer is not effected, the recipient of the check would be
so informed. If a hold had been placed on the recipient's account
for the amount of the check, that hold would be lifted only after the
recipient's bank gets payment from the drawer's bank. Thus, a check
is an instrument of credit -- a facility to make a purchase without income.
On the other hand, cash settles all debts immediately. Cash also
"passes from hand to hand in final discharge of debts." The same
dollar bill or pound sterling goes from hand to hand, to hand, to
hand, till it gets worn out and is withdrawn from circulation. Your
check, Roger, doesn't do that.
Another reason for assigning Roger an F for his attempted proof is
that he ignored Marshall's qualification of what is money that I also
provided: "all those things which are (at any time and place)
generally 'current,' without doubt or special inquiry, as a means of
purchasing commodities or services." Among friends, a check may be
accepted without "special inquiry." The request to provide a
driver's license or social security number when attempting to pay
with a check clearly shows the difference between cash and a check in
serving as a means of payment "without doubt or special inquiry."
I think Irving Fisher was wise in noting that "although a bank
deposit transferable by check is included in circulating media, it is
not money. A bank note, on the other hand, is both circulating
medium and money" (1912, 148).
Roger may have rushed to his proof on the basis of the modern
definition of money that starts with the medium of exchange
function. But the classical definition of money that F.A. Walker was
summarizing defines money as the particular commodity that serves as
a measure of value, as in money is "1st The measure by which we
compute the value of commodities (as a measure of value), and 2nd the
common instrument of commerce or exchange" (Smith, /Lectures in
Jurisprudence/). The measure of value as the primary distinction of
money from other commodities or media of exchange features in the
discussions of money in Hume, Thornton, Ricardo, and Mill. Clearly,
values are measured in a central bank's currency (cash), not in
checkable deposits.
Roger also falls bank on the typical notion of a deposit multiplier
under a fractional reserve system to insist that banks create money.
But that account can be misleading when one does not reckon that the
initial deposit is an income earner's savings deposited in
cash. That enables the bank to lend a fraction, say (1 - r)D
, where r = reserve to deposit ratio or R/D. The borrower spends
the loan amount and the bank balance sheet becomes D = R + BC, where
BC = bank credit. There is no further deposit expansion until a
recipient of the loan expenditure deposits that income (new savings)
in a bank. A new loan created on the basis of that deposit would be
in the amount of (1 - r)(1 - r)(1 - cu)D, where cu = currency drain
or currency to deposit ratio of the new depositor. In short, the
so-called bank deposit multiplier is really a savings expansion
multiplier. And it is savers or income earners' deposits that drive
the process, not the banks, as Keynes claims.
If banks could manufacture credit or loans without the public's
savings, why would they ever need to borrow from other banks (on the
Federal Funds market) or from the Discount Window (from the Fed)?
Mr. Rodney Brown, President of the California Bankers Association,
opened his letter to the editor (/San Ramon Valley Times/) on March
14, 2009, with the following: "There is no dispute that our country
is facing some of the most troubled economic times that we have seen
in decades. However, what can be disputed is the disturbing amount
of misinformation incorrectly characterizing the role of the banking
industry in the current economic crisis, providing the mistaken
impression that banks are not lending and calling into question the
safety and soundness of the nation's banking system." Had Roger
bothered to look up the data on the Federal Reserve web site I gave,
he would have found ample support for Mr. Brown's protestation
against the misleading claims that banks have not been
lending. Instead, he chooses simply to reassert the mistaken claim
"there are times, like now, when they stop relending (re-circulating)
loans as they are repaid. This takes money out of circulation as they
then hold a higher proportion of their (declining) asset base as
reserves instead of loans." How unfortunate.
James Ahiakpor
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