What is Fractional Reserve Banking, and is it Fraud?

in bitcoin •  7 years ago  (edited)

Hi everyone. In this article, I wanted to talk about Fractional Reserve Banking, which is a controversial method banks use to, literally, create money out of thin air.

In the past month, Jamie Dimon (JP Morgan Banking CEO) sparked a frenzy by referring to Bitcoin as a "fraud," but there are many risky and questionable practices central bankers use frequently that many are unaware of, and one of the most popular methods is Fractional Reserve Banking (FRB). Let's dive in to what FRB is, and why it's so controversial, and then talk about how cryptocurrencies solve this problem so well.

magic-money_featured copy.jpg

We'll approach this in a few different sections, as outlined below:

  • 1. What is Fractional Reserve Banking?
    • Simple Example
  • 2. Effects and Perceptions of FRB
  • 3. How Cryptocurrencies Solve The Problem

What is Fractional Reserve Banking?

In a "textbook definition" sense, FRB is a system where a bank is only required to actually have a fraction of the assets they are given through deposits.


This means only a portion of bank deposits are actually backed by cash or are available for withdrawal.


Though this makes Fractional Reserve Banking sound like a sort of "legal fraud/counterfeit," let's go through a full example to figure out why that perception of FRB is exactly right.

Central Bank Creates the Money

First, let's start at the top of the chain— with central banks. In most economies, including the United States, there exist central banks, whose main power is to have the ability to create money. Whether that's printing cash or creating electronic funds, they are the ones who create the money, though they're generally monitored and controlled by the Federal Government.

When the Central Bank wants to create money, they can literally just create it.

Let's say that our central bank decides to go ahead and print $5.


Now the Central Bank has to answer a crucial question: "How do we get this money into circulation?" The answer to that question, is that rather than loading the cash onto a plane and flying across the US, dropping cash wherever the plane flies, the central bank does something a bit more clever: it buys securities.


The securities or bonds the Central Bank trades/buys are generally very stable, and in exchange for the securities, the Central Bank pays the seller the newly created $5.

The Central Bank has just fulfilled its goal of circulating the money, by exchanging the money with a seller for stable securities. Now, someone (the seller) now has these newly created bills ($5), and this person will either directly deposit these $5 into a private bank, or trade it / transfer it to someone else. Whatever happens, eventually the money will usually end up being deposited to a private bank.

Private Bank Receives Deposit

Now, we're at the stage of the private bank. Someone, let's say a man named Jacob, just deposited $5 into the private bank. The private bank assures Jacob:

Don't worry, Jacob. We've got your money for you, and you can trust us completely. You can withdraw your money at any time, and you never have to be nervous or worried about your money.

Hypothetical Private Bank

However, now we get into FRL, or Fractional Reserve Lending. The reality is that the bank is actually fully permitted to keep just a fraction of Jacob's deposit (generally 10%), or his reserves. Even more, they can then actually lend the rest of his deposit out to other customers.

The Private Bank decides to keep some of Jacob's money in safe reserves, in this case $0.50, just in case Jacob comes for a withdrawal, and realizes the probability of an overwhelming amount of their customers coming one day and asking for all of their withdrawals is very low.

This means they can just keep a little bit of money for whoever does come, and lend the rest out (in this case $4.50), even though they promised all of their customers that all of their money is available.

Private Bank Lending

Now, the private bank has some money (a fraction of Jacob's deposit) to lend out, and eventually when they are in contact with someone who wants a loan with a decent risk, they'll lend that money out. Let's say the person who requested the loan from the Private Bank is Karen. Karen now has a share of Jacob's initial deposit, loaned to her by the Private Bank.

Now, usually Karen might either immediately deposit the new loan into a bank, or she might use it to buy something. If she does the latter, the seller of whatever she bought would now have the money, and the cycle would continue until the money, eventually gets deposited into another bank.

And now, this new bank (let's call it "Other Private Bank", or OPB for short) has Karen's funds ($4.50) and they might also decide to participate in Fractional Reserve Lending and only keep a fraction of her reserves on hand (10%, or $0.45).

As usual, they lend the rest ($4.05) to another customer, and eventually, these funds end up in yet another bank.

This vicious cycle continues on and on, with money being transferred and lended through a large number of banks.

Creating Money Out Of Thin Air

We know that the central bank started off by creating $5 and depositing that into the system or getting it circulated. But just how much money has been "created" from those initial $5?

Well, Jacob, our first bank customer of the first Private Bank, thinks he has $5 in the bank he can access at any time. Karen, the customer who took a loan out from the first Private Bank, thinks she has $4.50 in her own Private Bank (OPB). And the next person who takes a loan out may think they have $4.05 in their own private bank, and on, and on, and on.

If we sum up this series mathematically, we actually get a whopping total of $50 being created from the original $5, which is ten times the original amount!

This means $45 has just been created, completely out of thin air. The actual numbers in real world banks may vary, but these numbers assumed a 10% fractional reserve, which is what most American banks use. The only difference is that this calculation assumed the money switched from bank to bank or owner to owner an infinite or near-infinite amount of times, though in real life this can't actually happen.

Even assuming the money switched hands just a few times, a huge amount of money is created along the way. We see that even in just the first part of the cycle, $4.50 got created instantly. This means that, in general, private banks have the ability to spontaneously "create" new money whenever they want.

Effects/Perceptions of Fractional Reserve Banking

In the last section, we covered a top-down example of Fractional Reserve Banking, but now let's dive into the effects and perceptions of this system.

Effects of FRB

One of the first results of money creation in general, is inflation.

Money just keeps devaluing, and is worth much less now than it was ten or a hundred years ago.


According to estimates published by the Bureau of Labor Statistics, $180 in 1789 is roughly equivalent to over $4660 in 2016, which is more than enough to buy an entire bitcoin at today's price.

That's a difference of almost 2500%! A couple decades ago, ten to twenty bucks was enough to buy your entire family's worth of groceries for over a week. Money is devaluing and inflating, and this spontaneous "creation" of money is only worsening this process.

Perceptions of FRB

Fractional Reserve Banking is somewhat perceived as a fraudulent practice. Even to those who know little about it, just telling them that private banks can randomly create money out of nothing is sure to cause a reaction— it sounds absurd!

Many investors and economists think so too:

It should be clear that modern fractional reserve banking is a shell game, a Ponzi scheme, a fraud in which fake warehouse receipts are issued and circulate as equivalent to the cash supposedly represented by those receipts.

Murray Rothbard, American Economist

This notion that FRB is similar to a Ponzi Scheme is actually pretty common. Ponzi Schemes are illegal systems to churn out money from unsuspecting investors, and though FRB isn't exactly a Ponzi Scheme, the results are very close.

With FRB, we're essentially "borrowing money from the future," effectively making our future a little bit shorter and our money a little bit more worthless.

Cryptocurrencies to the Rescue: How Cryptos Solve The Problem

Finally, we enter the solution to this fraudulent system. Cryptocurrencies.

Almost any cryptocurrency would be a better substitute for this system, from Bitcoin to Steem, because of the fundamental property of cryptos: they're decentralized.


What this means is that no central authority has power or governance over a cryptocurrency. No government or central bank can just spontaneously start printing new cryptocurrency or Bitcoin, and no authority could govern the blockchain. This is one of the key ideas that sparked Satoshi Nakamoto's greatest invention— the idea of a currency for the people that would be impossible to govern by a single entity.

Critics sometimes argue that, through the usage of block/mining rewards, Bitcoin does "create money out of thin air," though this approach is wrong. Bitcoin is actually a deflationary currency, meaning its value tends to rise, because these block rewards keep halving every 4 years. Eventually, mining a block will merit little to no block reward, meaning the amount of Bitcoin being created will slow down over time.

Additionally, Bitcoin and cryptocurrencies have open-source protocols that all of their users agree with, while users of the US Dollar or other currencies will probably not agree to practices such as Fractional Reserve Banking if they learn more about them.

And so, I'd like to congratulate you for reading this entire post. You should now hold a much more advanced view of banking systems and are probably much more educated about practices such as fractional reserve banking.

Hopefully, you now see why decentralized cryptocurrencies are the solution to systems such as these.


Thanks for reading,
@mooncryption

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standard disclaimer: All opinions in this article reflect my own opinions, and nobody else's. Please do not act based on any of the information in this article and do the appropriate research before making any public actions or investing in a cryptocurrency.

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Fractional reserve is also what is causing SILVER and GOLD price suppression which is why you should buy physical bullion that you can keep yourself. Those exchanges operate on fractional reserve as well for precious metal trading.

Great post!

Dante

Thanks! Yes, you're right, some exchanges do operate that way.

This post received a 2.11% upvote from @randowhale thanks to @mooncryption! To learn more, check out @randowhale 101 - Everything You Need to Know!

This is an eye opener for us. I will withdraw what I deposited in the bank and buy more Steem.. thanks @mooncryption...

Good decision :) I'm sure you won't regret it.

If you'd like, you can also read my article on why STEEM happens to be one of the best investments possible this year. Check it out if you have the time!

What is Fractional Reserve Banking, and is it Fraud?
Yup..it sure is.

Haha, I didn't want to lead into that with my post, so as not to force my opinion on anyone, but you can guess my opinion on Fractional Reserve Banking from this line:

Though this makes Fractional Reserve Banking sound like a sort of "legal fraud/counterfeit," let's go through a full example to figure out why that perception of FRB is exactly right.

Federal Reserve notes are debt.
The US (or the world?) hasn't used money this century.

Exactly Mr. Mickey. Cryptocurrencies will likely be the solution to baseless money like this in the future.

I call fraud.

I have studied the esoteric topic of "money" for close to 10 years, myself. I think you did an outstanding write-up.

Money is ...

Exactly.

A necessity noose? One few have but a faint hint of an idea of what it is?

Haha, you actually got the point of my previous comment. It's hard to define exactly what money is.

You probably realized during your studies how complex banking and money is, and sometimes how ethically challenging these things can be ;)

It's been quite a discovery that is constantly in a sort of flux. Fascinating stuff.

It is simply a form of energy. All energy operates on specific principles, as science has demonstrated.

Modern Money Mechanics is a pamphlet anyone can find online, for free.

It's an excellent leapoff point, to understand it better. What is funny is how few would even attempt to read it.

Thanks for sharing this with the community.... Cryptocurrency rules all the way.

I agree, cryptos are great.

Thanks for the perfect post! @mooncryption

Thanks for the perfect comment! :)

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Great post!

Thanks!

Fractional Reserve Banking uses the devils calculator.
It is beyond a fraud it is more immoral and evil.

Just my two STEEMS Worth X 1/9.

totally agree.

Wow, I was just sitting down to write this post. You have done a much better job than I would have. I would like to add that prior to 1973 The dollar was still backed by gold. Nixon took us off the gold standard when the federal reserve started printing more dollars, than there was gold toback it up. The purchasing power of the dollar is about 4% today compared to 1917.

You're completely right. Prior to 1973, you could walk into a reserve with a dollar and come out with a dollar's worth of gold. Due to inflation these days, the dollar is worth much less than before, as you pointed out.

Thanks for your comments!

Great post@mooncryption

Thank you.

Hi, good post!
I've made a community allegory on this issue which helps to explain why certain groups are so hated:
http://andrewmarkmusic.com/?p=1363

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Yes, yes, it is a fraud. Anytime that you don't have the complete balance in fiat money, and can create money out of thin air, it's a fraud.
But, that's just my thoughts.

Not just you thoughts :) Many other people (including myself) agree.

Fractional reserve banking is theft on a grand scale, and guaranteed to send money to the top.
There is no other end to this model.
It is system for the rich to extract the value (labor), from those below.

This is one of the key ideas that sparked Satoshi Nakamoto's greatest invention— the idea of a currency for the people that would be impossible to govern by a single entity.

Commendable but naive.
Government legislation could change everything.
(making owning gold in the US for example. One day it was legal, and the next day, illegal)

The theory of crypto is the way forward.
Whether you think the banks, and employees of the banks - governments - will just aloow this to happen, is a different matter.

The naive say they have no choice, the more worldly wise, see how government (banks) change the rules to suit themselves.

I sincerely hope I am wrong in my view....

Thanks for your elaborative comment. I think crypto will probably turn out to be the only "solution" to this monstrous problem.

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"Somewhat largely perceived as a fraudulent practice"

That was a mouthful of fluffy nothingness, sometimes referred to as shiiiiit sandwich. Was it somewhat? or was if largely?

And it is not fraudulent practice when you are following the laws of the land. Fraud is specifically scamming someone by not following the law.

There are valid concerns with FRB. But you can't call it fraud.

Need to tighten up the writing a bit. Read a few articles from the Economist. Good pointers on a crisp writing style.

Sorry for that vague sentence, I think a proofreading mistake happened there. My apologies!

Additionally, I thought "fraud" referred to deception of any kind. I personally believe FRB is deceptive because of many reasons, the most important one being that when you deposit money into such a bank, you're under the impression that all of your money is being kept safely at the bank— yet the opposite is really going on.

But you do bring up a valid point— FRB is fully legal. I think that's a problem as well. If the definition of "fraud" involves illegality, then you're right, FRB doesn't satisfy that.

I'm not perfect, and I'm still learning so I'd like to thank you for your feedback. I'll make sure to read some articles from the Economist, as you suggested. Criticism and feedback will only help make my articles better in the future :)

Thank you so much for caring about others enough to give honest feedback. We need more people like you on Steemit!

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I never thought about this and how it became the crypto's edge. Great post!

Thanks!

It is an ABSOLUTE fraud, by every measure one may wish to use. Excellent article, by the way.

Cheap money at very low interest rates will lead to booms and busts in the economy, otherwise known as the "business cycle". Dr. Rothbard was very aware of this. If it weren't a fraud, there wouldn't be a need for governments strongarming their citizens to accept this scrip by enacting "legal tender" laws.

Additionally, fiat currency, 10% fractional reserve banking system loans have interest which must be paid back with "REAL" tax money and if the only money in circulation is the very money produced at an earlier time by the same thieves, it is a never ending, downward spiral into massive debt.

I would refer you to a couple of articles I wrote on Gresham's Law, not too long ago. There is some interesting history to be learned when "authorities" start playing with the markets.

They can be found here: https://steemit.com/cryptocurrency/@getmgt/gresham-s-law-gold-and-cryptocurrency-1-of-2

and here: https://steemit.com/cryptocurrency/@getmgt/gresham-s-law-gold-and-cryptocurrency-2-of-2

Thanks for your comment, Dr. Giordano.

The notion that "bad money drives out good money" is a very powerful one, and as you say, it can be applied to the current conditions of gold, Bitcoin, Steem, and dollars/fiat.

Great post! It is laid out well and extremely informative. I wish more people would read this and learn how shit really works. Keep it up.

Thanks for your feedback!

Fractional-reserve banking operates much differently now a days. For a start, modern banks are much more restricted via capital requirements rather than liquidity requirements. As long as a bank is solvent, it can issue as many deposits as it likes.

It's not in any way a fraudalent practice - all it is an instuition holding long-term debts and financing them with short-term debts (i.e. bank deposits).

My post might help clear things up - https://steemit.com/bitcoin/@mooncryption/what-is-fractional-reserve-banking-and-is-it-fraud