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How did THAT get in here??

ON MONEY CREATION

In terms of a complete understanding of money creation, there is too much time, energy and discussion given to analyzing, describing and criticizing the activity inside the economy – once the money has already been created and becomes active in the economic system – and never enough time given to understanding the consequences of how money enters the economy.  It matters.  A lot.

 

STOP THE PRESS!

Everyone likes to use the terms “they print it”, or “the Fed prints it up” (Never mind that the Federal Reserve does not print our money, instead, it’s the Bureau of Printing and Engraving, selling to the Fed at cost so that they can loan it back to the same government that printed it.) or “they just turn on the printing press”.  It is utterly insignificant whether or not “they print it”, but rather, what they do to get it into the economy after that. 

In fact, even once the bills are printed, they are not yet “money”.  Not until they are “monetized” by extension of credit (a loan).  Even then, it is not possible to have the bank teller at the window count out your loan, in bills, without that new loan first going through a demand deposit account (checking account) and you writing a check on that account to “buy” some paper currency.  

So, let’s not get sidetracked by - “they print it”.

 

HOW DID THAT GET IN HERE?

Consider this, there are only three ways to get money into the economy:

1) Gift it 

2) Loan it and 

3) Spend it. 

Each method has its own set of consequences.

 

First, suppose that money is gifted in.  Gifting the money in means that they print up a bunch and give it away.  They might place a pallet of the green stuff down on the street corner so that you can come grab a chunk of it.  Or they might electronically deposit the new money into your checking account.  If you did not produce anything in order to facilitate the new money creation, then there would eventually be an excess of money in relation to the amount of goods you could buy.  Economists assure us that that is what causes inflation – “too much money chasing too few goods”.   Later we’ll discuss the bigger cause of inflation.  But, that’s gifting.  Making it and giving it away.

 

Second, new money can be loaned in.  That’s how we do it now.  New money is created when a loan is made. 

When you go into a merchant and use your credit card to buy a pair of shoes, you get the shoes and the merchant gets the money.  New money!  It was not in anyone’s savings account and it did not exist prior to your purchase.  The bank handling your card did not lend anyone’s savings so that you could walk out with the new shoes.  No.  Rather, the bank “monetized” your “promise to pay” (look at the receipt next time you sign for a purchase using your credit card) and created the new money on the spot.  PROBLEM: They only create the money for the shoes; yet, it’s likely that you owe some interest on the borrowed money - they failed to create that.  That money does not exist.  If you pay it, you will have “captured” someone else’s loan principal.  No new money is created to pay interest – only the principal is created.

If only principal is created at the time the loan is made, and you need to capture someone else’s loan principal, in commerce, to pay your loan plus interest.  An unworkable system of ever increasing compound debt with no way to ever pay it all off.

 

Third, newly created (“coined”) money can be spent into circulation, paying for roads, bridges and other infrastructure, necessary for commerce and beneficial to all US citizens.

Using infrastructure is in keeping with the spirit of the US Constitution, in terms of gold and silver. 

·       Debt free

·       Interest free

·       Inflation free

·       Tax free

 

If we do nothing, instead demanding to have a gold standard, one will have to answer this question: where do we get all of the gold?  At the time of this printing there is a mild shortage – you have to lock in at today’s spot price and then wait three weeks.  How will you “back” $53 trillion in debt plus $50 trillion in unfunded obligations?  If we go to a gold standard, so few people will have gold that it will make the great depression look mild.  But we could use the same principal as gold!  Wealth.  Same idea.  There’s plenty of infrastructure to rebuild. 

State funding of infrastructure rebuild, by spending new, wealth based money, into the system, is the way out of this economic mess.



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Wealth Defined

Wealth = Raw Resources + Labor + Innovation

Gold worked as "money" because it was wealth based; not because it was shiny, heavy or was interesting in color, but because one had to work in order for it to exist, not just borrow it.  That's also why silver worked; as well as sea shells, coffee beans or tobacco.  They were wealth.  

There are other examples of wealth that could "back" our money, using the same principals that made gold work.  

Think Infrastructure.



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You've been MMIFF'd


What's a MMIFF?

Would it be interesting to you if I could create my own money, and then create my own corporations to use that newly created money to buy what I saw fit in order to influence markets?  

Whether for good or bad, left unchecked, could that process get out of hand?

Yes, they can do that.
Yes they have done that in the last few weeks.

Again, we learn that banks, the Federal Reserve and Private Banks, can and do create new money.
No one in their right mind would believe that they are loaning out grandma's savings deposit to buy up this bad "commercial paper".  
Why, granny would have a fit!



STATEMENT

The Federal Reserve Board on Tuesday announced the creation of the Money Market Investor Funding Facility (MMIFF), which will support a private-sector initiative designed to provide liquidity to U.S. money market investors.

Under the MMIFF, authorized by the Board under Section 13(3) of the Federal Reserve Act, the Federal Reserve Bank of New York (FRBNY) will provide senior secured funding to a series of special purpose vehicles to facilitate an industry-supported private-sector initiative to finance the purchase of eligible assets from eligible investors. Eligible assets will include U.S. dollar-denominated certificates of deposit and commercial paper issued by highly rated financial institutions and having remaining maturities of 90 days or less. Eligible investors will include U.S. money market mutual funds and over time may include other U.S. money market investors.

The short-term debt markets have been under considerable strain in recent weeks as money market mutual funds and other investors have had difficulty selling assets to satisfy redemption requests and meet portfolio rebalancing needs. By facilitating the sales of money market instruments in the secondary market, the MMIFF should improve the liquidity position of money market investors, thus increasing their ability to meet any further redemption requests and their willingness to invest in money market instruments. Improved money market conditions will enhance the ability of banks and other financial intermediaries to accommodate the credit needs of businesses and households.

The attached term sheet describes the basic terms and operational details of the facility.

The MMIFF complements the previously announced Commercial Paper Funding Facility (CPFF), which on October 27, 2008 will begin funding purchases of highly rated, U.S.-dollar denominated, three-month, unsecured and asset-backed commercial paper issued by U.S. issuers, as well as the Asset Backed Commercial Paper Money Market Mutual Fund Liquidity Facility (AMLF), announced on September 19, 2008, which extends loans to banking organizations to purchase asset backed commercial paper from money market mutual funds. The AMLF, CPFF, and MMIFF are all intended to improve liquidity in short-term debt markets and thereby increase the availability of credit.


Tags: FED POLICY  
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Think about it.



"They put the checkbook to my head." - The Replacements, All Shook Down

First we have to borrow, just to have a medium of exchange.  

Then, we have to borrow to pay the interest that is due on the borrowed money.

Wouldn't that make it impossible to get out of debt?
Sure it would.




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Start at the Beginning

4 of the most important quotes in economics:

 

1.  “…the actual creation of money always involves the extension of credit by private commercial banks.”

- Russell L. Munk, Assistant General Counsel, Department of the Treasury

 

2. “Money is created when loans are issued and debts incurred; money is extinguished when loans are repaid.”

- John B. Henderson, Senior Specialist in Price Economics, Congressional Research Service, Report No. 83-125 E

 

3. “Thus, the money that one borrower uses to pay interest on a loan has been created somewhere else in the economy by another loan.”

- John M. Yetter, Attornet-Advisor, Department of the Treasury

 

4. “Someone has to borrow every dollar we have in circulation, cash or credit.  If the banks create ample synthetic money we are prosperous; if not, we starve.  We are absolutely without a permanent money system.  When one gets a complete grasp of the picture, the tragic absurdity of our hopeless position is almost incredible, but there it is.  It is the most important subject intelligent persons can investigate and reflect upon.”

- Robert H. Hemphill, Credit Manager of the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta

Tags: QUOTES  
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