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From:
"James C.W. Ahiakpor" <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
Societies for the History of Economics <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Tue, 24 Mar 2009 22:19:21 -0400
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John Médaille wrote:
>The problem I see with a FRS is that it 
>privatizes a public power. Why should the banks 
>have the power to create money? We bail the 
>banks with borrowed money they create. Something 
>is not right about that. We will be paying 
>interest on the money they (or their Chinese 
>counterparts) lend us to give to them. What's wrong with this picture?
I wish John had paid attention to what I wrote 
earlier about the advantage of using classical 
definitions rather than those of J.M. 
Keynes.  His apparent confusion stems from ignoring my suggestion.

The modern equivalent of classical money is a 
central bank's currency or cash.  As F. A. Walker 
(1878, 405) well summarizes the classical 
definition, " Money is that which passes from 
hand to hand in final discharge of debts and full 
payment for goods.  The bank-deposit system 
allows the mutual cancellation of bast bodies of 
indebtedness which would, without this agency, 
require the intervention of an actual medium of 
exchange; but deposits, like every other form of 
credit, save the use of money; they do not 
perform the functions of money.  /Money is what 
money does/" (original italicized last sentence).

Alfred Marshall (1923, 13) says pretty much the 
same thing:  "There is ... a general, though not 
universal agreement that, when nothing is implied 
to the contrary, 'money' is taken to be 
convertible with 'currency,' and therefore to 
consist of all those things which are (at any 
time and place) generally 'current,' without 
doubt or special inquiry, as means of purchasing 
commodities and services, and of defraying 
commercial obligations. Thus, in an advanced 
modern society, it includes all the coin and notes issued by Government."

Thus, by the classical definition, banks don't 
create money.  They simply enable their 
depositors to employ the facility of money 
substitutes -- checks and electronic transfer 
systems-- to settle their indebtedness.  And when 
banks lend, it is on the basis of their 
customers' deposits that they extend such loans, 
keeping some in reserve to meet their customers' 
future demands for cash.  Keynes (1930), on the 
other hand, includes bank deposits in his 
definition of money and also insists that it is 
bank lending that actively creates deposits (1: 
25-26).  He dismisses the explanation of 
"Practical bankers, like Dr. Walter Leaf" that 
banks depend upon their customers' deposits in 
order to lend, also claiming that "economists 
cannot accept this [explanation of Dr. Leaf's] as 
being the commonsense which it pretends to be" 
(p. 25).  Of course, Keynes was not alone among 
the early neoclassicals in including bank 
deposits among constituents of "money," although 
his constituents are the largest, including "unused overdraft facilities."
In the /General Theory /he "assume[s] that money 
is co-extensive with bank deposits" (167n).

Were the Keynesian confusion not in the air, the 
notion that we have had a "credit crunch" or 
"frozen credit" system and that banks needed some 
$700 billion bail out in order to unfreeze the 
credit market and get credit "flowing again" 
would have seen as the falsehood that it is.  The 
public's savings with depository institutions 
were on the increase, and so was M2, 90% of which 
is bank credit, throughout the period that Hank 
Paulson, Ben Bernanke, and others were proclaiming a freeze of credit.
All one with a clear understanding of the 
distinction between money and credit had to do 
was check www.federalreserve.gov to find the 
data.   It was also to disabuse the public's mind 
of the falsehood in the air that Bank of America 
took out an advertisement in the second week of 
March to point out that they extended $115 
billion in new credit in  the fourth quarter of 
2008 alone, contrary to claims of no lending by the banks.

When one understands that lending or credit 
extension is to banks what breathing is to a 
living being, it is truly astonishing that 
otherwise highly placed personalities would keep 
talking about doing such and such so the banks 
"will start lending again."  What do they think 
banks do with the public's deposits, stuff them 
in their vaults?  And how would they be able to 
pay interest to their depositors?  Banks never 
stop lending.  They may be more aggressive 
(keeping less in reserves) or less aggressive 
(keeping more reserves) in lending, but lend they always do.

True, some incredibly wrong things have been done 
lately in the U.S. in the name of monetary 
policy.  But they are not to be cited as evidence 
of what is wrong with a fractional reserve system 
of banking.  Rather, they derive from the 
employment of the wrong economic concepts.

James Ahiakpor

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