Title: Banks don
1Banks dont lend money, they create it
Deobfuscating monetary and banking terminology
7th Critical Finance Studies ConferenceCBS,
Copenhagen, August 20-21, 2015 Ib Ravn Research
Program on Organization and Learning,
Department of Education, Aarhus University,
Denmark
21. The problems
- Problems
- What does a bank do when it lends?
- Three theories of bank lending (Werner, 2014).
Which is true? Or when? - Why do terms like lending seem like
obfuscation? - My presentation
- How banks create money (account money).
- The three theories of bank lending fit three
different monetary and banking systems. - Some money and banking terms that need to be
deobfuscated and a few hypotheses as to why
they havent been already.
32. When a bank lends? It creates money
- Bank of England paper, Money Creation in the
Modern Economy Banks do not act simply as
intermediaries, lending out deposits that savers
place with them (McLeay et al., 2014, p. 14). - Hugo Frey Jensen, (Deputy) Governor, Danmarks
Nationalbank "Banks create deposits, and thus
money when providing loans (Jensen, 2013, p. 1). - Example Loan 800,000 DKK. Entered into my
current account (a bank liability)A new loan
account -800,000 DKK. My debt to the bank (a
bank asset). The banks balance has been
extended. No transfer of funds. No
intermediation. - Michael Kumhof, Senior Research Advisor, Bank of
England whenever a bank makes a new loan to a
non-bank customer X, it creates a new loan entry
in the name of customer X on the asset side of
its balance sheet, and it simultaneously creates
a new and equal-sized deposit entry, also in the
name of customer X, on the liability side of its
balance sheet. The bank therefore creates its own
funding, deposits, in the act of lending. (Jakab
Kumhof, 2015, p. 3).
43. Lending clearing gt money creation
- When loan has been made, the borrower spends it
payment, a transfer to another account. Doesnt
that require the bank to cough up the money? - No, because millions of payments the national
payment system (in DK Nets). Clearing (Norman et
al., 2011). Only small net amounts are
transacted. A payment system facilitates money
creation. - Loans increase deposits. Increases money supply
money creationLoan repayments deduct from
deposits. Decreases money supply money
destruction - Consequence In good times, banks over-lend and
feed bubbles in fixed assets, driving
boom-and-bust rollercoaster. - Unchecked bank lending (money creation) is the
main cause of the business cycle (Werner, 2005).
54. The term lending confuses
- Strange terminology. What lawn mower do you
create in the act of lending it? - And when you return it, does it cease to exist?
- Why has this term persisted?
- To justify the charging of interest? (Savers
must be compensated for theunavailability of
their funds, right?)
65. Three theories of bank lending (Werner, 2014)
- The financial intermediation theory A bank
gathers deposits and lends them. - The fractional reserve theory of banking A bank
retains a fraction (10) of every deposit and
lends the 90. - The credit creation theory Bank creates new
(account) money by bookkeeping (adding digits to
customer accounts). - Werner (2014) finds overwhelming evidence for
no. 3. - Ill argue they are suitable for three different
banking systems (Weberian types)
Money. Jens Overgaard Bjerre
Money. Jens Overgaard Bjerre
76. (1) The intermediation theory fits a warehouse
bank
- True when banks accepted gold and valuables for
safekeeping (de Soto, 2012) - The gold coins were lent, with or without
depositors knowledge. - This theory has survived later developments in
banking and remains the popular theory of banks. - Theory 1 is true for that type of bank
(historically very rare).
87. (2) The fractional reserve theory fits a bank
with reserves
- Theory was invented for a gold-type banking
system - Here, deposit slips circulate as money (bank
notes) and depositaries write fake deposit
slips, passing them off as loans (Ravn, 2014). - Reserves are banks and nations safeguards
against bank runs. - Reserve only makes sense here (not in warehouse
bank no new money, thus no need for reserves). - In the 1700-1900s this theory was a fair fit (if
we ignore account money!)
98. (3) Credit creation theory fits pure
account-money bank
- Theory A bank credits the borrowers account
with the deposit and enters a corresponding
asset (the value of the loan) on the other side
of the ledger. No funds transferred. Deposit is
created from scratch. - Suitable for a banking and monetary system where
all money is account money (no gold or cash)
(Jakab Kumhof, 2015) - Bookkeepers discovered they could lend by
adding numbers to a borrowers account, without
honestly subtracting the same number from some
other account. - When many amounts are transferred between
accounts, they tend to clear. In the clearing of
matching loans lies money creation. - As loans are not given as cash/gold today, this
theory fits current banking system.
109. The three theories evaluated
- Suitable to historically different banking
systems. - Past economists confused about bank lending?
- Keynes did little to enhance clarity in this
debate, as it is possible to cite him in support
of each of the three hypotheses, through which he
seems to have moved sequentially (Werner, 2014,
p. 12). - British banks in 1925 were a combination of
warehouse banks, gold-reserve banks, and
account-money banks. - Theory 3 holds today (Werner, 2014 Benes
Kumhof, 2012). Our banking system is evermore
account-based. For the other banking systems the
other theories are fine. - When banks use theory 1 concepts today it is
misleading and self-serving - - It justifies the charging of interest (no
lender forgoes the use of their money) - - It hides banks enormous power to create money
and control the money supply - - It portrays banks as humble servants of
societys needs when pursuing own profits
1110. Example Theory 1 used for public
communication
- Finansrådets hjemmeside Banker skaber kontakt
mellem de, der vil låne penge, og de, der ønsker
at spare op. Bankernes unikke rolle som
pengeformidlere skaber blandt andet værdi ved
at gøre det nemmere og billigere at låne og spare
op. Bankerne leder pengene i samfundet derhen,
hvor de gør størst gavn. - http//www.finansraadet.dk/Tal--Fakta/Pages/banker
nes-betydning-i-samfundet/bankerne-og-vaekst/uddyb
ning-om-ind--og-udlaan.aspx - Translation The Danish Bankers Association
website - Banks establish contact between those who want
to borrow money and those who wish to save. The
banks unique role as money intermediators
creates value by making it easier and cheaper to
borrow and save. The banks channel the money
in society to where it does the most good.
1211. Theory 1 terms that obfuscate
- Lending, loan. Warehouse terms conceal that banks
create money - Loanable funds funding. Suggest lent money
derives from funds - Make a deposit. Nothing is deposited. Its all
numbers. No gold rarely cash. - Repayment of a loan. No such thing. You dont
repay freshly created money. - Business cycle as if the boom-bust economy is
normal, not preventable. - Create money Id like you create 200,000 for a
new home for us. - Money creation. Unethical to pretend otherwise.
Truth in advertising? Illegal? - Coordinate numbers. Would you jiggle some
numbers in my accounts? - Destruction. Let me destroy 500 a month. Erase
it from my account. - Money bubbles to underscore the money-created
origins of boom-bust
1312. Possible reasons why no change in terminology
- Ignorance When early trading houses allowed
customers to go into debt and still trade, they
didnt know they were creating money. - Gradual awareness of deception E.g., goldsmiths
writing fake deposit slips. - Deliberate silence for gain. Why call attention
to a fraud by naming it so? - Bankers responsibility to guard the publics
trust (Nielsen, 1930, s. 59) - Scholars unaware. Money and banks virtually
absent from economics. Neutral veil can be
ignored.Highly convenient for bankers. Shared
interests? - Major failing
- Bankers practical use extant concepts
- But finance scholars and economists should have
updated theory (from no. 1 to 3) and
reconceptualized ages ago.
www.tinyurl.com/keen-krug
1413. Conclusions
- Lending and other terminology hidden behind a
veil.Not veil of neutrality, but a veil of
deception (Häring, 2013) - Three banking systems overlap, as do three models
of lending. - (1) The warehouse theory legitimizes the charging
interest and glorifies banks role (2) Banks
seen as having gold reserves fractional reserve
banking(3) Best fit today banks add to the
money supply when lending money creation - Responsibility of academics in (critical)
finance This really matters. Business cycles
concentrate wealth at the top and deprive
millions of their just share. - If we dont understand this causal factor,
bubbles will return. The nature of bank lending
needs to be clear banks money creation feeds
bubbles and crises. - Help design a more equitable monetary system
which controls bank credit creation (Werner,
2005) or strips banks of their power to create
money (Wolf, 2014 Jackson Dyson, 2012
Sigurjónsson, 2015)
1514. References (a)
- Benes, J., Kumhof, M. (2012). The Chicago Plan
revisited. IMF Working Paper WP/12/202. - De Soto, Jesús Huartes (2012). Money, bank
credit, and economic cycles. 3rd edn. Auburn, AL
Ludwig van Mises Institute. - Häring, Norbert (2013). The veil of deception
over money How central bankers and text-books
distort the nature of banking and central
banking. Real-world economics re-view, 62 2-18
(25 March). - Jackson, Andrew, Dyson, Ben (2012). Modernising
money. London Positive Money. - Jakab, Zoltan, Kumhof, Michael (2015). Banks
are not intermediaries of loanable funds and
why this matters. Working paper No. 529, Bank of
England, May. - Jensen, Hugo Frey (2014) Money at the bank is
also good money. Danmarks Nationalbank, Press
Release, Sept. 23, www.tinyurl.com/hugo-money - McLeay, Michael, Radia, Amar, Thomas, Ryland
(2014b). Money creation in the modern economy.
Bank of England Quarterly Bulletin, Q1, 14-27. - Nielsen, Axel (1930). Bankpolitik. Bd 2 Læren.
København Hagerups Forlag.
1615. References (b)
- Norman, B., Shaw, R., Speight, G. (2011). The
history of interbank settlement arrangements
exploring central banks role in the payment
system. Working Paper No. 412, Bank of England,
June. - Ravn, Ib (2014). Private bankers pengeskabelse
belyst ud fra en episode i 1600-tallet med
Londons guldsmede. Samfundsøkonomen, nr. 2,
april, 4-10. Money creation by commercial banks,
explained through an episode in the 1600s with
the goldsmiths of London - Sigurjónsson, Frosti (2015). Monetary reform a
better monetary system for Iceland. A report
commisioned by the prime minister of Iceland. - Werner, Richard A. (2005). New paradigm in
macroeconomics Solving the riddle of Jap-nese
macroeconomic performance. Houndmills, UK
Palgrave Macmillan. - Werner, Richard A. (2014). Can banks individually
create money out of nothing? The theories and
the empirical evidence. International Review of
Financial Analysis, 36, 1-19. A bloggers fine
summary here www.kortlink.dk/frkv - Wolf, Martin (2014) Wolf, M. (2014). Strip
private banks of their power to create money.
Financial Times, 24. April.