I have stated my view on fractional reserve banking. It originated as a secret, fraudulent method of self-enrichment on the part of bankers. At its heart, it is fraud to print paper titles to money without real money, the same way that it is fraud to print paper titles to cars without real cars.
Except that's not what fractional reserve banking is about. The bank loans money from its deposit reserves to others to, say, create businesses, they pay for the loan plus interest from the profits from those business, and the interest payments are split between the bank and the account holders.
As mentioned before, without this system the bank would likely charge you to hold your money, and not offer interest on your deposits.
The "evil greedy bankers" thing is largely a self-serving myth on the part of conspiracy theorists. You're free
not to put your money in the banking system. I do because it provides security, easy access, and earns me a reasonable rate of return. I understand that some of "my" money is, at a given time, being lent to people for various reasons. I also understand that some of the interest will go to make the bank some money, which is how they stay in business.
Without that profit motive, why would anyone want to run a bank? Similarly, if you feel you can do better lending your money yourself, you could always start lending it. Others have done so, sometimes very profitably.
Your talk of a free market does not mesh with your apparent desire to eliminate fractional reserve banking. Do you have any proof it hurts the customer?
Again, it is not simply "printing money" as you seem to believe. Your understanding of the process is flawed.
On a free market, if a bank wanted to honestly and openly offer fractional reserve banking to their customers, customers would be free to choose that. What happened in history, however is quite different. See my article.
Uh, you are free to choose. If you want banking without fractional reserve, then buy a safety deposit box or safe and lock your money up. Everything else about banking is basically the product of fractional reserve and banking investments.
A sustained drop in prices can only be explained by an increase in the supply of goods, or a decrease in the supply of money.
It can also be explained by decreased costs involved in production, or through competition. A decrease in the supply of money will not necessarily result in reduced prices, at least not at first. Prices of goods move a bit differently than the money supply, because they tend to "stick."
Free market money prevents inflation, because on the market, money is a commodity. There is just as much incentive to expand the supply of money as there is any other good, no more no less. The rate of profit tends to be equal in all industries. Whenever any industry becomes more profitable than average, capital is withdrawn from less profitable industries and invested there.
Please cite a source for the bolded statement and clarify. Do you mean average rate of return?
The money supply doesn't quite function like "any other good" because the supply and demand factors are different. Yes, the money supply is valuable because people are willing to pay for it, but that value is underwritten by the backing of the government that issues it - their ability to control the supply so that the market isn't flooded with privately issued currency.
Of course, this is beside the point as our money supply
is traded on the free market. The government regulation comes in with controlling the initial supply. I'll assume that you mean "gold backed" when you say "free market," as that's what you've been talking about up until now.
Backed currency doesn't prevent inflation because it's a commodity, it prevents it because you can't easily create more currency, as long as you play by your original rules about gold backing.
However, inflation is caused not just by having more physical money, but by having more on the market. If, for example, banks release gold-backed currency from reserves, it will cause inflation.
Free market money prevents deflation, because once money comes into existence, it stays in existence.
I will again assume you mean "gold backed" when you say "free market."
You appear to be conflating real existence with "existence" on the market. As I alluded to above, the market value of something is based on how much of it is
on the market, not
in physical existence. The reason that inflation reduces when the Fed increases reserve ratios is because money is being pulled out of the market and into the bank reserves, reducing the actual money supply available on the market.
There is nothing in a gold backed currency that stops a bank, individual, or government from taking the currency off the market and holding it in reserve.
Ironically, what you said before about it "coming into existence" would, if true, mean that your ideal currency would be highly inflationary in nature. You really can't have it both ways. If a currency is impossible to "create" more of through printing (as with a controlled backed currency), then it will be highly subject to deflationary pressure through reserve holding. If it is easy to create more through printing, it will be potentially subject to inflationary pressure.
Any money supply is optimal (see Reisman, Hoppe).
Only using an overly simplified, naive model. I'm quite familiar with the ways that a free market will adjust to any money supply, through value and supply adjustments, blah blah blah. Unfortunately, the market doesn't react instantaneously, and the supply is never perfectly distributed.
You can reason this out for yourself. If increasing the money supply could increase real wealth, then all any nation had to do to make itself rich, is print paper money. Give everyone a million dollars and be done with it.
I never said increasing the money supply would increase real wealth. However, due to discrepencies in terms of prices, wages, money value, etc. it is useful to have a money supply that is protected against catastrophic market failures.
But don't think that I am demonizing backed currency, or saying that either form of currency is immune to problems. Like I said, non-backed currency
tends to inflate more, and backed currency
tends to deflate more. Either one can do either... you need to understand that the money supply (in any meaningful sense) doesn't just refer to how much currency has been physically printed, it primarily refers to how much is actually in the economy.