Building a just and environmentally sound economy. Marco Vangelisti Essential Knowledge for Transition

Similar documents
Marco Vangelis. Essen%al Knowledge for Transi%on. knowledge > empowering > change

ECOS2004 MONEY AND BANKING LECTURE SUMMARIES

Topic 8 : The Interwar Globalization Backlash

Lecture 12: Too Big to Fail and the US Financial Crisis

How has money changed over the centuries? What are the functions of money? Where does our money come from?

I. Learning Objectives II. The Functions of Money III. The Components of the Money Supply

The Monetary System CHAPTER. Goals. Outcomes

b. Financial innovation and/or financial liberalization (the elimination of restrictions on financial markets) can cause financial firms to go on a

A SCOTTISH CURRENCY? 5 Lessons from the Design Flaws of Pound Sterling

The Great Depression: An Overview by David C. Wheelock

Multiple Choice Identify the letter of the choice that best completes the statement or answers the question.

The Monetary System: What It Is and How It Works

ECON 3010 Intermediate Macroeconomics. Chapter 4 The Monetary System: What It Is and How It Works

Banking, Liquidity Transformation, and Bank Runs

The Federal Reserve System and Open Market Operations

The Monetary System. Economics CHAPTER. N. Gregory Mankiw. Principles of. Seventh Edition. Wojciech Gerson ( )

THE FINANCIAL CRISIS AND THE GREAT RECESSION

THE MEANING OF MONEY. Chapter 29. The Monetary System

The Financial Sector Functions of money Medium of exchange Measure of value Store of value Method of deferred payment

Taxing Risk* Narayana Kocherlakota. President Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Economic Club of Minnesota. Minneapolis, Minnesota.

Financial and Banking Regulation in the Aftermath of the Financial Crisis

The Great Recession How Bad Is It and What Can We Do?

The Federal Reserve and Open Market Operations PRINCIPLES OF ECONOMICS (ECON 210) BEN VAN KAMMEN, PHD

Economic History of the US

CHAPTER 10: MONEY, BANKS AND THE FEDERAL RESERVE

The Monetary System P R I N C I P L E S O F. N. Gregory Mankiw. What Money Is and Why It s Important

2010 Pearson Addison Wesley CHAPTER 1

Chapter8 3/5/2018. MONEY, THE PRICE LEVEL, AND INFLATION Part 1. In this chapter: Define money and its functions

Chapter 29: The Monetary System Principles of Economics, 8 th Edition N. Gregory Mankiw Page 1

Economic Theory and Lender of Last Resort Policy

CPW2A THEORY OF MONEY AND BANKING. Unit : I

HISTORY OF BANK INDONESIA : BANKING Period from

For instance, some societies used cows as money 1 cow = 2 goats 1 cow = 5 blankets 1 cow = 3 chairs 1 cow = 50 loafs of bread

International Finance

The Federal Reserve System and Open Market Operations

Chapter 11. Economic Analysis of Banking Regulation

Banking union: restoring financial stability in the Eurozone

Banking Chapter 3 Study Guide

Section 5 - The Financial Sector

The Way Forward: A Framework for Policy Analysis

Did Banking Reforms of the Early 1990s Fail? Lessons from Comparing Two Banking Crises

Session 12. The New Normal. Deflation and Zero Lower Bound.

Money, Banking, and the Financial System CHAPTER

Lessons Learned? Comparing the Federal Reserve s Response to the Crises of and

CHAPTER 31 Money, Banking, and Financial Institutions

MONEY, THE PRICE LEVEL, AND INFLATION

MONEY & BANKING. Samir K Mahajan

The Public Bank Alternative: Recapturing the Money Power Ellen Brown, JD Public Banking Institute

Money and the. Financial System 14

Slides for International Finance Financial Globalization (KOM 21)

Money and banking (First part) Macroeconomics Money and banking Money and its functions Different money types Modern banking Money creation

Ethic Token Generation Event Paper

CH Lecture. McGraw-Hill/Irwin Colander, Economics 1-1

Financial Crises and the Great Recession

Money and the Monetary System

EC248-Financial Innovations and Monetary Policy Assignment. Andrew Townsend

Introduction. Learning Objectives. Chapter 15. Money, Banking, and Central Banking

Quantitative Easing and the implications for Actuaries & Economics Discussion

Unit 5 Financial Literacy

GOVERNMENT GUARANTEES AND CONTINGENT CAPITAL: CHOOSING GOOD SHOCK ABSORBERS MOTIVATION

Macro Money and Banking Essentials WCC

Chapter 20 (9) Financial Globalization: Opportunity and Crisis

Money and the Banking System

1 U.S. Subprime Crisis

Introduction and road-map for the first 6 lectures

This article courtesy Caseyresearch.

Globalization and Economic Crises in the Asia-Pacific: Imperatives on Statistics Management

The Financial System: Opportunities and Dangers

The Great Recession. ECON 43370: Financial Crises. Eric Sims. Spring University of Notre Dame

Bank Resolution Powers and Tools. Oana Nedelescu Senior Financial Sector Expert IMF

What is Money? Gregory La Blanc

Mongolia The SCD-CPF Engagement meeting with development partners September 1 and 22, 2017

1. Under what condition will the nominal interest rate be equal to the real interest rate?

Table Of Contents. Foreword. Chapter 1: Global Financial Crisis Basics. Chapter 2: Using Bonds. Chapter 3: Cashing In On Precious Metals

The lender of last resort: liquidity provision versus the possibility of bail-out

Following a decade of neglect, the Bush administration and Congress moved

PART X: MONEY AND PRICES IN THE LONG RUN. The Monetary System. Chapter28

Whither IMF Reform? Barry Eichengreen January So too, predictably, is the debate over whether that institution does more to enhance or

The Benefits of World Capital Flows

Stability and Competition in UK Banking

Waiting for Basel? Next steps for Canada's bank capital regime

Three Crashes: 1907, 1929, What can we learn? Presented by Miguel Cantillo Nov 11, 2008

Chapter 3: Diverse Paths to Growth

29 THE MONETARY SYSTEM

John Maynard Keynes. ''The difficulty lies not so much in developing new ideas as in escaping from old ones'' Dr David Rees

Lecture 6. The Monetary System Prof. Samuel Moon Jung 1

Global Financial Crisis. Econ 690 Spring 2019

International Finance

Outline of the Business Revitalization Plan

MONEY, BANKS, AND THE FEDERAL RESERVE*

To view this PDF as a projectable presentation, save the file, click view in the top menu bar, & select full screen mode. Upon completion of the

The Macro-economy and the Global Financial Crisis

Coordination Problems

DEVELOPMENT OF THE U.S. BANKING SYSTEM

Printable Lesson Materials

Chapter Fourteen. Chapter 10 Regulating the Financial System 5/6/2018. Financial Crisis

Reading Essentials and Study Guide

Coordination Problems

Globalization. International Financial (Chap. 8) and Monetary (Chap. 9) Relations

10/30/2018. Chapter 17. The Money Supply Process. Preview. Learning Objectives

Transcription:

Building a just and environmentally sound economy Marco Vangelisti Essential Knowledge for Transition

Ambitious Agenda What s possible Motivation The punch lines (hold on to your seat!) Definition and brief history of money Understanding money creation System design and key questions Bail-out and bail-in (lesson from Cyprus) Problems with the current system The systemic solution and new possibilities 2

System Hierarchy Biosphere / Ecosystem Social System Economic System Financial System 3

New Possibilities: Massive government employment program to Rebuild our infrastructure Improve the education system Improve health care and prevention Climate adaptation Environmental restoration Rebuild the local food system infrastructure Repopulate rural areas and transition to organic agriculture 4

Motivation We are running our society and the economy on a faulty operating system The design of the money and banking system is directly implicated in all the largest problems we face: Increasing levels of debt (public and private) Economic instability Concentration of wealth (video) Loss of democracy Environmental and climate disruption 5

Motivation We cannot solve those problems without a radical redesign of the money and banking system Prior to the next banking crisis we need: A correct understanding of the systemic problem A wide awareness of the systemic solution A political movement demanding its implementation 6

The Punch Lines All money is created as debt No money is created to repay the interests on the debt The private banking sector has the monopoly on money creation Money is an agreed upon fiction The debt-based money system is in the process of collapsing 7

8

Key Questions Who creates money? By what authority? Who captures the seignorage? What is money backed by? Who benefits and who bears the risk? Who controls the quantity of money? What incentives drive money creation? 9

Definition and Brief History of Money 10

What is money? Money is a commonly accepted means of exchange Its primary function is to facilitate economic transactions 11

The three main types of money Commodity money Representative money Fiat money 12

1. Commodity Money 13

2. Representative Money Commodity receipts Gold receipts US $ prior to 1933 ($20.67 per oz.) Postal stamps 14

3. Fiat Money Shells Tally sticks Colonial scrip Continentals US $ after August 15, 1971 Most modern national currencies 15

Three Ways a Sovereign Government Issues Fiat Money Spend it into existence (e.g. Roman metal coins prior to Caesar, tally sticks in England, Continentals, Greenbacks) Lend it into existence (e.g. Colonial scrip in Pennsylvania pre 1765) Borrow into existence (US and most modern governments with a private central bank!) 16

The tally stick system England (1100 AD to 1834) knowledge > empowering > change 17

Colonial Scrip in Pennsylvania March 2 nd 1723 PA assembly issues 15,000 colonial scrip Lends 11,000 into the economy at 5% interest Spends 4,000 for public works and to pay for government administrative expenses No more than 100 loaned to a single person 18

Colonial Scrip in Pennsylvania In December 1723 another 30,000 are issued 26,500 loaned at 5% interest and 3,500 spent Similar process repeated over following 50 years The period between 1721 and 1775 was the period with the most stable prices in any period of same length 19

Continentals (currency) 20

Greenbacks 21

A Recent Proposal 22

Banking and Money Creation 23

Why Bother with Bank Accounting? It turns out, we need to know (very basic) bank accounting if we want to understand Our money supply The money creation process Our system of payments 24

Let s start simple -- A brand new bank! Assets BANK ONE Liabilities Cash $500K Bank Building $500K Equity Capital $1M 25

First customer arrives! Deposits $200K in cash Assets BANK ONE Liabilities Cash $500K Bank Building $500K Equity Capital $1M 26

First customer arrives! Deposits $200K in cash Assets BANK ONE Liabilities Cash $700K Bank Building $500K Checking Account A $200K Equity Capital $1M 27

First borrower arrives Borrows $300K Assets BANK ONE Liabilities Cash $700K Bank Building $500K Checking Account A $200K Equity Capital $1M 28

First borrower arrives Borrows $300K Assets BANK ONE Liabilities Loan to B $300K Checking Account B $300K Cash $700K Bank Building $500K Checking Account A $200K Equity Capital $1M 29

Bank One Deposits Cash with Federal Reserve Assets BANK ONE Liabilities Loan to B $300K Checking Account B $300K Cash $700K Bank Building $500K Checking Account A $200K Equity Capital $1M 30

Bank One Deposits Cash with Federal Reserve Assets FED Liabilities Cash $500K Fed Fund Dep. Bank One $500K Assets BANK ONE Liabilities Loan to B $300K Checking Account B $300K Federal Fund deposit $500K Cash $200K Bank Building $500K Checking Account A $200K Equity Capital $1M 31

How Much Money can a Bank Create by Lending? Assets BANK ONE Liabilities Loan to B $300K Checking Account B $300K Federal Fund deposit $500K Cash $200K Bank Building $500K Checking Account A $200K Equity Capital $1M 32

How Much Money can a Bank Create by Lending? Fractional reserve system reserve requirements Reserves need to be at least 10% of demand deposits Assets BANK ONE Liabilities Reserves Loan to B $300K Checking Account B $300K Federal Fund deposit $500K Checking Account A $200K Cash $200K Equity Capital $1M Bank Building $500K Demand Deposits 33

How Much Money can a Bank Create by Lending? $700K of reserves can support $7M of demand deposits This bank could make $6.5M of additional loans and created an additional $6.5M of electronic money! Assets BANK ONE Liabilities Reserves Loan to B $300K Checking Account B $300K Federal Fund deposit $500K Checking Account A $200K Cash $200K Equity Capital $1M Bank Building $500K Demand Deposits 34

Aggregate Balance Sheet Commercial Banks in US 7/10/13 (in $ billions) Assets Liabilities Treasury Bonds, MBSs, CDOs and other securities $2,700 Commercial loans $1,600 Demand Deposits $7,900 Real Estate Loans $3,500 Consumer loans $1,100 Other assets $2,400 Cash and Federal funds $2,200 Time Deposits $1,600 Other borrowed funds $1,500 Other Liabilities $1,000 Equity Capital $1,500 Source: Federal Reserve H.8 35

Federal Reserve Balance Sheet 3/31/2013 (in $ billions) Assets Liabilities Treasury Securities $1,950 Federal Fund Deposits $1,800 Federal Agency MBS $1,100 Federal Reserve Notes Outstanding $1,100 Other Liabilities $250 Other assets $150 Equity Capital $50 Source: Federal Reserve 36

Key Questions Who creates money? By what authority? Who captures the seignorage? What is money backed by? Who benefits and who bears the risk? Who controls the quantity of money? What incentives drive money creation? 37

Who creates our money? coins Government Private Sector US Treasury Banking Sector Office of Printing and Engraving ~ 0.1% Federal Reserve 38

Who creates our money? paper cash Government Private Sector US Treasury Banking Sector Office of Printing and Engraving ~ 0.1% Federal Reserve ~ 3% 39

Who creates our money? electronic cash Government Private Sector US Treasury Banking Sector Office of Printing and Engraving ~ 0.1% Federal Reserve ~ 97% ~ 3% 40

Where did the banks directed the money they created? (UK 97-07) 41 Source: Positive Money Institute, UK

42

Rescuing the Banks from their own Mistakes: Bail-outs and Bail-ins 43

Not your typical pinko 44

Rescuing the Banks after their foolish lending TARP Government bailout Bail-out 2.0: Cyprus style bail-in 45

A Bank Gets in Trouble Assets Liabilities Loan to C $300K Loan to B $200K Loan to A $100K Cash $100K Bank Building $100K Checking Accounts $600K $200K Equity 46

A Bank Gets in Trouble Assets Liabilities Borrower A defaults Loan to A $100K Loan to C $300K Loan to B $200K Cash $100K Bank Building $100K Checking Accounts $600K $200K Equity 47

A Bank Gets in Trouble Assets Liabilities Borrower A defaults Loan to A $100K Loan to C $300K Loan to B $200K Cash $100K Bank Building $100K Checking Accounts $600K $100K Equity 48

A Bank Gets in Worse Trouble Borrower C defaults Assets Liabilities Loan to C $300K Loan to B $200K Loan to A $100K Cash $100K Bank Building $100K Checking Accounts $600K $200K Equity 49

L > A = Bank is Insolvent! Borrower C defaults Assets Liabilities Loan to C $300K Loan to B $200K Loan to A $100K Cash $100K Bank Building $100K Checking Accounts $600K 50

TARP: Government to the Rescue Assets Liabilities Loan to C $300K? Loan to B $200K Loan to A $100K Cash $100K Bank Building $100K Checking Accounts $600K $200K Equity 51

TARP: Government to the Rescue TARP fund Loan to C $300K? Assets Cash $300K Loan to B $200K Loan to A $100K Cash $100K Bank Building $100K Liabilities Checking Accounts $600K $200K Equity 52

Government Recapitalizes Bank Borrower C defaults Assets Liabilities Loan to C $300K Loan to B $200K Loan to A $100K Cash $100K Bank Building $100K Checking Accounts $600K $200K Equity 53

Government Recapitalizes Bank Borrower C defaults Assets Liabilities Loan to C $300K Cash $300K Loan to B $200K Loan to A $100K Cash $100K Bank Building $100K Checking Accounts $600K $100K Government Equity $100K Equity 54

Cyprus Bail-out 2.0: Bail-in Assets Liabilities Bad asset $300K? Loan to B $200K Loan to A $100K Cash $100K Bank Building $100K Checking Accounts $600K $200K Equity 55

Cyprus Bail-out 2.0: Bail-in Assets Liabilities Bad Asset $300K? Loan to B $200K Loan to A $100K Cash $100K Bank Building $100K Checking Accounts $300K $100K Marked down deposits $100K Depositors Equity Equity 56

System Design Flaws and Solution 57

Problems with Current Monetary System Money is created with issuance of debt but no money is created to repay interest on that debt Impossible contract Debt repayments/defaults shrink money supply Money is created by unaccountable private entities, its quantity driven by profit motive We the people, through the taxing power of our government, are ultimate backers of money created and directed by banks 58

Problems with Current Monetary System Our money = banks IOUs Banks IOUs backed by banks risky assets Payment system linked to credit and investment risk Government on the hook when those risks blow up Bailouts require additional borrowing by government Moral hazard and perverse incentives FDIC Too-big-to-fail 59

Our debt IS our Money Supply! 60 Source: Positive Money Institute, UK

What We Need National Currency ($) Source: Positive Money Institute, UK 61

How do we get out of this pickle? Remove the power of private banks to create money Return that power to a transparent and accountable process Create money free of debt Create money only when inflation is low and stable Make sure that new money goes into the real economy instead of financial market (or real estate speculation) 62

Path toward the Solution Build understanding and awareness Build on public banking movement Nationalize too-big-to-fail banks (at the next crash) Break them apart and turn them and the rest of the banks into financial intermediaries Nationalize the Federal Reserve (branch of US Treasury) depository of electronic money De-link money and payment system from assets of banks Promote a diversity of local monetary systems 63

New Possibilities: Reduce power of private banks and money on government Remove artificial scarcity in the money system Government as employer of last resort National dividend until we reach Full employment Full capacity utilization Reduce government and private debt 64

New Possibilities: Massive government employment program to Rebuild our infrastructure Improve the education system Improve health care and prevention Climate adaptation Environmental restoration Rebuild the local food system infrastructure Repopulate rural areas and transition to organic agriculture 65

66

Marco Vangelisti Essential Knowledge for Transition Website: ek4t.com Contact: ek4t.com/about/contact/ FB: www.facebook.com/essentialknowledge4transition 67