Francesca R
Girl
Well to some extent, anti fractional reserve lending goons merely mistake their ignorance and inability to understand, for someone else's conspiring. 
Which is true. But for some (most?) people, things must be black and white: because conspiracy theorists tend to latch themselves to this and other problems and wrongly ascribe conspiratorial malevolence to them, these problems must not exist at all! I believe the root of this thinking is simple intellectual laziness; it's just easier to classify oneself as being in the "right" group, and others as being in the "wrong," and not making much distinction beyond that (see: every post by The Central Scrutinizer).recently i met a CS banker, and he also said, Fractional reserve banking is a problem, but no conspiracy involved.
Francesca actually it is all wrong...banks dont lend money, they create it. They actually dont really have the money to lend.
SOYLENT in your illustrious sample you stated that:
Assets: $10 reserves, $90 loans. Liabilities: $100 deposits. What you failed to mention is that while the $90 dollars is in a loan, the $10 dollars is now high powered money in a central bank....BUT THE DEPOSITOR CAN WITHDRAW FROM HIS CHECKBOOK ACCOUNT.
Now they cannot possibly mean that they can withdraw from their checkbook account when they have most of it in loans, now can they?
in the banks check book balance the deposit is both an asset and a liability.
Privatized competing monies would be such a calamity...![]()
They do both.Francesca actually it is all wrong...banks dont lend money, they create it.
You don't need to "have" (own?) money to lend it.They actually dont really have the money to lend.
What's a "free market currency"? Disney dollars would be a type of private currency whose value is backed by the expected ability of Disney to earn fiat dollars in the future.Why not? I'm not disagreeing here, I honestly don't know.
Doesn't Disney World take those Disney dollars instead of US dollars and can set any value they want in US dollars to use them?
I can't imagine much take-up if the company offered to pay employees, creditors, bond interest and shareholder dividends and buybacks in Disney dollars. Its own ability to generate future value in fiat dollars is never likely to be more credible than (or even as credible as) the store-of-value credibility of those fiat dollars themselves.If other people outside of Disney world decided to take Disney dollars couldn't Disney set up its own central bank?
Why not? I'm not disagreeing here, I honestly don't know.
Doesn't Disney World take those Disney dollars instead of US dollars and can set any value they want in US dollars to use them? If other people outside of Disney world decided to take Disney dollars couldn't Disney set up its own central bank?
I am constantly correnting people here.
Why not? I'm not disagreeing here, I honestly don't know.
Doesn't Disney World take those Disney dollars instead of US dollars and can set any value they want in US dollars to use them?
It's not a conspiracy. How the banking system works is public knowledge. Nobody's trying to hide it.I am constantly correnting people here. Specially those that claim there is no conspiracy. Many people come here presenting the arguments for a conspiracy and they just get laugh at. There is no reason for these hecklers to be laughing because they dont appear to see a scam even if their whole life savings were taken. Okay let me get on with the correction:
SOYLENT in your illustrious sample you stated that:
Assets: $10 reserves, $90 loans. Liabilities: $100 deposits.
What you failed to mention is that while the $90 dollars is in a loan, the $10 dollars is now high powered money in a central bank....BUT THE DEPOSITOR CAN WITHDRAW FROM HIS CHECKBOOK ACCOUNT. Now they cannot possibly mean that they can withdraw from their checkbook account when they have most of it in loans, now can they? in the banks check book balance the deposit is both an asset and a liability.
That's not why the ideas are dismissed. Look around some more at older threads. The below is quoted from a similar riposte some time back in another thread that was recently resurfaced:Don't dismiss the ideas just because a few crazy people talk about them.
-It is not. If the response to anti-FRB [fractional reserve banking] enthusiasts on this forum was nothing more than "that is stupid" and the argument in favour of FRB was mothing more than "it's the best" your question would have relevance here. But the truth is far from that. On several threads it has been argued in great detail *why* full-reserve lending and a gold-backed currency is a thoroughly dreadful idea in comparison to the system we have. In my view the opposing side has had every argument it has made dismantled and has provided feeble or no responses to any challenge levelled at it. So I suppose after a while you get posts where such ideas are simply ridiculed. But at that point, the complaint of "you are just calling it a meme" is invalid.
Can't speak for everyone but several members are familiar enough with the Von Mises Institute to know that, being a rare "hardcore Austrian school" joint, it has little beyond sprawling internal inconsistencies to contribute to mainstream economic thought and is firmly on the fringe.I suggest some people check out the Von Mises Institute [ . . . ] to learn more about fractional reserve systems.