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How banks really work

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Published Date: 14 January 2009
Alistair McConnachie's eloquent description of how the banking system operates (Letters, 12 January) contrasts with the more widely held misunderstanding of how the system works, exemplified by Alan Black's letter (same day).
Mr Black, like most people, believes the money banks lend comes from our deposits and the bank's capital. In fact, these two elements are a small proportion of what they lend. The banks operate under the fractional reserve system, which allows them
to lend a multiple of their reserves (ie, capital and deposits). This multiple differs from time to time and from country to country, but is now between 5 per cent and 7 per cent.

On a reserve ratio of 5 per cent, for every £20,000 of deposits, only £1,000 need be deposited with the Bank of England and the bank can lend up to £19,000. This £19,000 will probably be spent by the borrower (eg, to buy a car) and the seller of the car will, in turn, deposit the £19,000 with his bank, which can put £950 in reserves and lend a further £18,050. Once this is repeated by the magic multiplier roundabout enough times, the original £20,000 deposit is transformed into loans of £380,000 and reserves of £20,000.

The £380,000 is created out of thin air by banks getting borrowers to sign loan agreements and then creating electronic credits in the borrowers' accounts. The debt money has cost the bank nothing to create, and if it lends it at just 5 per cent, by the end of year one, the income on the loan, if added to its reserves, will almost take the bank back to where it started. Money is debt, created by the banking system, uncontrolled by government.

DEREK BROCK

Corstorphine Road

Edinburgh






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  • Last Updated: 13 January 2009 9:47 PM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
 
1

Isonomia,

Lenzie 14/01/2009 00:31:41
Why on earth would goverment wish to control the increasing levels of debt that have made Gordon Brown's "miracle" economy.

Unless people were able to secure increasing levels of debt, there would not have been increasing levels of expenditure, and there would not have been a booming economy ..... followed, by a period when that debt has to be repaid, and an equal and opposite movement in the economy as it contracts as people are forced to pay back the debt they took on to create Gordon's miracle economy.

The only miracle was that people didn't spot this sham economy a lot earlier.
2

Isonomia,

Lenzie 14/01/2009 10:45:13
"Are we seriously going to let him get away with this?"

I'm sick and tired of the BBC asking politicians "how are you going to get spending back to 'normal'".

When will the BBC realise that 'normal' spending is still a lot less than the current rate, because 'normal' spending is paid for by 'normal' earning.

What he have had since labour "forgot" to control the financial lending of the banks, is ABNORMAL spending created by unearned borrowings. And I agree with Cynicus, the solution to a retraction in an abnormally debt-inflated economy is not to try to reflate it with more debt.

This is like trying to cool a room by opening the fridge door, the simple fact is that whilst debt can temporarily inflate the economy, like a fridge can temporily cool a room, in the long run that debt has to be paid for, as the heat in the fridge (plus that from the motors) have to go somewhere, and at the end of the day, neither the room will be colder by opening the door, nor will our economy grow by piling on debt.
3

Isonomia,

Lenzie 14/01/2009 10:46:20
So, basically until people like the BBC being to smell the financial reality that debt-induced spending is harmful HE HAS GOT AWAY WITH IT!
4

john birkett,

St Andrews 14/01/2009 12:56:17
We need realise that in this Orwellian/Lewis Carroll world, words mean what the speaker decides, not what the OED stipulates. So, often, normal means abnormal, bitterly cold means a normal -2C for the time of year, good weather means dry even when rain is needed, love-child means one not born to a Mum & Dad committed to its welfare together, life sentence means 14 years, earned means paid, liberal means illiberal, democratic means totalitarian, the Lisbon Treaty is materially different from the Constitution (despite what all the European leaders say) etc etc.........

 

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