this post was submitted on 30 Dec 2025
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[–] workerONE@lemmy.world 1 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago) (1 children)

I didn't consider that you could still classify banking as fractional reserve banking even though there are no fractional reserve banking requirements. In my mind the concept was one of regulatory oversight.

Do you think that when a bank loans money to another bank they are creating money out of thin air? If they can do that then why do they need to borrow money?

I think you're doing a good job interpreting and explaining modern monetary theory, I just don't agree with all of it, although I agree with the concept.

Do you believe that the US government must collect taxes before it can spend money? Or do you agree that government spending is self financed and money creation (in spending by the US government) is only limited by concerns of inflation?

Do you believe that Banks hold digital money in their reserves? I do. Who do you think created that money?

[–] booly@sh.itjust.works 2 points 1 day ago (1 children)

In my mind the concept was one of regulatory oversight.

No, the core concept is one of whether a bank has full reserves, sufficient to cover all of the deposit liability. If the bank keeps only a fraction of the total liability in reserves, then that's a fractional reserve.

Do you think that when a bank loans money to another bank they are creating money out of thin air?

Yes, that creates money.

If they can do that then why do they need to borrow money?

They need to borrow money for liquidity, to cover the payments they owe to others. An IOU isn't money, so having a bunch of IOUs in the asset column may require a bank to pledge those IOUs to borrow some money from someone else, maybe even another bank. Then, with money in hand, they can make payments to fund their own operations (pay employees, rent, vendors, taxes, etc.) and pay depositors on demand.

And as a financial institution borrows too much and pays that interest, or is overextended without enough assets to remain solvent/liquid to be able to make payments as they're due, they may find themselves with insufficient creditworthiness to be able to borrow freely (as other banks are wary of lending to someone who might not pay back). And they might fail. So that general concern always provides a limit on how much they can borrow from other private entities.

They can borrow from the central bank as a lender of last resort, but that carries a cost (and can still only borrow as much as their assets can support). If they're paying more interest to their creditors than they're collecting from their borrowers, they're gonna fail.

Do you believe that the US government must collect taxes before it can spend money? Or do you agree that government spending is self financed and money creation (in spending by the US government) is only limited by concerns of inflation?

No, the government can (and does) borrow money to finance its operations, as well. For the U.S., the sheer amount of government spending is such a high percentage of economic activity that it would be highly inflationary to combine the fiscal power of spending money with the monetary power of controlling the money supply (through creation of base currency, influencing private transactions and interest rates to control bank-created money, and buying/selling securities on the open market).

I think if we lived in a different system without an independent central bank, we'd see a lot of different things going on, including a temptation to elected officials to just create money without regard to inflationary effects. But in the current system, most of the money is created by banks.

Do you believe that Banks hold digital money in their reserves? I do.

Yes, that's what we've been talking about the whole time. When a commercial bank creates a loan, that's just a ledger that creates an asset in one column and a liability in another column. It could be paper, or it could be digitally stored. If the funds are transferred electronically to another bank, that's often an electronic record with no physical movement of anything. So yes, those are effectively digital dollars that can be withdrawn as paper money on demand at any given time.

[–] workerONE@lemmy.world 1 points 1 day ago

Really interesting. I just read the Bank of England's companion article: Money in the modern economy, an introduction https://www.bankofengland.co.uk/quarterly-bulletin/2014/q1/money-in-the-modern-economy-an-introduction