This is from South Africa's Mail and Guardian Newspaper. Thanks again to "African Kabuki" for bringing this to my attention!
http://mg.co.za/article/2012-07-06-modern-bankings-fatal-flaw
Modern banking's fatal flaw
Mail and Guardian
06 JUL 2012 12:00 - RUSSEL LAMBERTI
Economic events around the globe over the past five years have revealed one important fact: the modern banking system is fundamentally dysfunctional.
Does this surprise you? It should not. It has been this way since 1844.
In that fateful year, the British Parliament passed the Bank Charter Act, an attempt to bar commercial banks from engaging in fractional reserve lending.
Back then, people would deposit gold (the money of the day) for safekeeping in bank vaults. The banks would issue depositors with a signed contract stipulating that the bank was obliged to hand over, on demand at any time in the future, a specified weight of gold to the bearer of the contract. These contracts became known as “banknotes”. Because banknotes were a legal claim to ownership of real money in bank vaults, the banknotes of the most trusted and respected banks came to circulate as money substitutes and were hardly ever redeemed for actual gold.
These banks soon realised they could create banknotes that looked just like the original banknotes, with the same contractual stipulations (that is, a claim on gold) and lend them out to merchants at interest. Because hardly anyone actually redeemed their gold, no one realised initially that the banks had created more contractual notes (banknotes) than there was actual gold in the vaults. There was now a pile of new banknotes circulating in the economy, mimicking real banknotes backed by gold.
This was fractional reserve lending.
Creating economic havoc
The injection of excessive monetary liquidity into the economy fuelled euphoric speculative bubbles in asset markets. When these unsustainable bubbles inevitably burst, confidence rapidly deteriorated and people rationally rushed to hold real gold instead of paper claims on gold. Of course, as people flooded the banks with contractual claims on gold, it was quickly discovered that most banks did not have enough gold in their vaults to meet all the claims. This caused even more panic and the resultant run on the banks forced many to declare bankruptcy.
The unredeemable banknotes immediately lost all their value. Huge piles of banknotes stopped circulating, causing monetary liquidity to dry up, leading to further declines in previously overinflated assets and a painful deflationary economic depression – a hangover from the preceding euphoric paper-note inflation and asset bubble.
British legislators rightly wanted to avoid these unnecessarily destructive cycles. The banks’ ability to create banknotes out of thin air and lend them out to merchants was the chief cause of the resulting and destructive boom-bust, inflation-deflation cycle. The Bank Charter Act of 1844 correctly declared this type of lending illegal and barred banks from defrauding the public by issuing banknotes posing illegitimately as gold substitutes.
A loophole
However, despite the noble intentions of the Bank Charter Act of 1844, it contained a fatal flaw, a flaw that still torments the financial system in 2012. For although the Act forbade the creation and lending of counterfeit banknotes, it failed to prohibit another form of unbacked lending that in effect allowed the banks to continue doing what they had been doing before.
Banks carried on lending out more than the actual value of gold in their vaults, but now, instead of issuing physical banknotes, they simply loaned “money” by entering values into borrowers’ personal account records on which cheques could be written for payment. The banks had found a loophole.
These new loans, which reflected as mere entries in cheque accounts, falsely posed as gold substitutes in the same way, though more difficult to detect, as banknotes once had. Destabilising paper-banknote inflation had been stopped, but it had merely been replaced by destabilising check-account inflation.
Put simply, banks continued to lend more money than actual gold on deposit, rendering the financial system as unstable as before.
This practice of inflating cheque or deposit account entries out of thin air remains the modus operandi of all commercial banks to this day. In addition, the very purpose of the central bank – and the monopoly currency production privilege it enjoys through legal tender laws – is to absolve commercial banks from the responsibility of holding real gold money in their vaults and to print paper money when commercial banks are threatened with bank runs and solvency crises.
Unfortunate mistake
The Bank Charter Act of 1844, therefore, was almost the greatest legal advance in the history of modern banking, but it failed to deal with the fundamental problem: fractional reserve lending.
The result of this unfortunate legal mistake in the United Kingdom well over 150 years ago is that today’s banking system remains fundamentally dysfunctional. The best we can expect is incessant financial volatility and uncertainty, if indeed we manage to avoid outright financial and fiscal calamity.
The nub of the problem stems from the symbiosis between politics and banking. Politicians seek access to easy channels of finance; bankers seek favourable regulatory regimes and protections to continue the lucrative yet inherently unstable practice of fractional lending. The central bank, a unique quasi-private/quasi-public institution contrived by politicians and bankers, is the bridge between the two, legislatively authorised to print paper money out of thin air in order to bail out irresponsible banks and governments.
However, as our current global financial crisis demonstrates, central-bank oversight of the fractional banking system does not prevent crises it guarantees them. The central bank’s role as liquidity provider of last resort encourages commercial banks to engage in even riskier fractional lending, inevitably leading to greater illusory euphoria and subsequent solvency crises.
The two greatest economic crises in American history – the Great Depression of the 1930s and the current Great Recession starting in 2008 – have occurred since the creation of the United States Federal Reserve Bank in 1913. The crises that occurred before 1913 were usually the result of legal privileges granted by government to one or more fractional-reserve banks that led to unsustainable lending booms and busts. Moreover, economic crises and painful recessions have occurred in every decade since 1913 and have been particularly severe since 1971 when the US government severed all official links between the US dollar and gold.
No accident
The current financial crisis is no accident. It is the predictable and logical result of fractional reserve banking and the political-legal privileges that make this system possible.
Only a return to legally sound banking principles, the kind the 1844 Bank Charter Act was after, can remedy this unfortunate situation. This requires the abolition of legal tender laws, a return to sound commodity money, monetary deposits to be respected as safekeeping contracts and for banks to loan only those funds previously loaned to them by yield-seeking investors prepared to forgo fully the use of their funds for the term of the loan.
Russell Lamberti is head strategist at ETM Analytics, in charge of global and South African macroeconomic, financial market and policy strategy within the ETM group.

In support of what you say, a couple of excerpts from the Overview of the book ‘Where Does Money Come From’ authored by a group of academics and banking insiders.
ReplyDeletea. This book examines the workings of the UK monetary system and concludes that the most useful description is that new money is created by commercial banks when they extend or create credit, either through making loans or buying existing assets.
b. The basic analysis of this book is neither radical nor new. In fact, central banks around the world support the same description of where new money comes from. And yet many naturally resist the notion that private banks can really create money by simply making an entry in a ledger. Economist J. K. Galbraith suggested why this might be:
The process by which banks create money is so simple that the mind is repelled. When something so important is involved, a deeper mystery seems only decent.
This book aims to firmly establish a common understanding that commercial banks create new money. There is no deeper mystery, and we must not allow our mind to be repelled.
The book explains how the banks simply create loan credit against a promissary note that is regarded as an "asset" and entering these on a ledger. That balances the ledger and the loan credit is treated as real money just like the stuff you and I go out and work for to pay the money the banks demand in exchange for creating this new money ie an amount equivalent to the principal and interest.
What I would like to know is how the banks can possibly fail when they can create money in this way.
http://www.neweconomics.org/sites/neweconomics.org/files/Where_does_money_come_from_OVERVIEW.pdf
Coming from an asian family of multimillionaire i tried explaining to my father about the secretive and deadly cabal who lorded over us for millenia and are about to be removed within this year and shortly after that we will be introduced with free energy, advance transportation, incredible medical technology, food replicators, astounding construction of house at breakneck speed, et al etc all for free that would eventually render fiat money un needed just as alien civilizations are now. It will affect alot if not all businesses rendering them obsolete.
ReplyDeleteMy father clouded with disbelief paused for a moment then said, " if what you say is true, Are you trying to tell me to sell all my stock while its hot and spend all my money on a controlled rate just in time when money goes out of fashion?"
well, I was suppose to say yes but held my words because it did indeed sound proposterous to advice something like that considering it merely were my own analyzation to begin with.......how to do reply to that question?
I don't think it matters what he does with his money or stocks or whatever. What is going "out of fashion" is not just money, it's this whole nonsense of manipulating stocks and other artificial constructs in contrived ways to gain wealth, that is going to go.
DeleteIf everything that you explained is true, then whatever he does with stocks is irrelevant, he will surely have whatever he needs anyways. Knowing what it is that makes one truly happy, however, is a skill that takes quite some time to develop, and something I'm sure everyone can benefit from thinking about now and then.
Nice article, but I don't like the way they skirt around the consequences of fractional reserve lending: just saying that it "causes financial instability" and leaving it at that. Fractional reserve lending is theft, pure and simple.
ReplyDeleteIf I convince you to borrow money that never existed, and you pay it back plus interest, all that really happened was that you just handed me your money, while I did nothing but talk.
If a bank then does this to every business in a country, that "interest" inevitably comes from either people's pay cheques or from inflated prices, as the businesses adjust to this extortion to the bank.
The bank now can now quietly suck money away from everyone in that society, and the "financial instability" simply results from the slow bleeding of the economy over time.
I'm sure this is not news to many who are reading this site, but I believe that these facts need to be clearly stated in simple terms so that everyone can understand.
Yes, it is far worse than even that, because this is just one part of a larger design implementing in numerous nations at different stages in this disease;
DeleteSo if this much required design and it only get's deeper as the math and modelling gets more advanced, then there is far more to it than just the national economic puppet show; It is consolidating ownership as well, while this whole smokescreen just now is "discovered";
Quote above: "no one realised initially that the banks had created more contractual notes (banknotes) than there was actual gold in the vaults. "
Bwaaaaahhhhhahhhhhhh ha haaa
Yeah right; These guys are so anal they have YOUR ass hairs counted, and you think "no one realised" - so they play on the stupidity that even other bankers are born into, with the lawyers, legislators and politicians who are just as crooked as the people they think "never realized" this and that;
They realize alright, the second they saw an opportunity because Homo sapien adamicus is a corrupted planetary species, 1 in 10,000 has any true morality and honesty, and that is no joke; Bankers are the top level parasites, in ties, so you know there's lies being told; Liars like ties, because people trust eyes;
And there you have it, itsy bitsy corruption in everyone will add up in time to a true catastrophic set of abruptions that no one can predict how they will unwind and what unnatural reactions they will incur;
Basically people are greedy, financiers and bankers make greed a living, and when you pay people, to rob you, they will, and when they pay themselves, they will still rob you because they are? GREEDY;
Greed kills one way or another, and this sub-species of human will not last another 4000 years that is definite;