Surprise! Return to RT Boom/Bust

After almost three years, I returned to RT Boom/Bust on Tuesday.? There are many changes at RT.? Many new people, and a growing effort to put together an alternative channel that covers the world rather than just the US or just the developed world.? They are bursting at the seams, and their funding has doubled, so I was told.

I get surprised by who watches RT and sees me.? My? congregation is pretty conservative in every way, but I have some friends working in intelligence come up to me and say, “Hey, saw you on RT Boom/Bust.”? And then there is my friend from Central Africa who says, “The CIA has you on their list.? Watch out!”? He’s funny, hard-working, but very earnest.

I’ve never seen anything in what I have done where there is any hint of editorial control.? Maybe it is there, but I think I would be smart enough to see it.

Anyway, the topic at hand was alternative monetary systems, and the thing that kicked it off was the Vollgelt in Switzerland, where they are trying to create a monetary system where the banks can’t lend against deposits.? Here were my notes for the show, with a little more to fill in:

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  1. Mr. Merkel, what exactly is a sovereign money system?

The banks can?t lend against deposits.? Deposits are segregated, and wait for the depositor to use them.? The deposits no longer can be used by the bank but only the depositor.? There would be no need for deposit insurance, because deposits are off of the bank?s balance sheet.

  1. What is the difference between a sovereign system and the way banks handle your money now?

You would have to pay for your transactional account, because the bank can?t make money off of lending against the deposits. Banks would no longer do ?maturity transformation? by lending long against short-term deposits.? Long-term lending would have to be other entities in the economy, such as insurance companies, pension funds, endowments, private individuals, foreign lenders, mortgage REITs, and banks funded by matching sources like CDs, bonds, and equity.

  1. Switzerland is poised to vote on a sovereign money system, or Vollgeld in German. How likely is this vote to pass?

Not likely for three reasons.? First, the Swiss turned down a proposal to back the Swiss Franc with 20% gold.? Not one canton voted for it.? Only 22% of the electorate voted for it.? Second, things aren?t that bad now, and the financial system isn?t that levered.? ?If it ain?t broke, don?t fix it.?? Third, this is a total experiment with no real world precedents.? Many criticize economists for imagining what the world should be like and then proposing policy off their unrealistic idealized models.? This is another example of that.? We don?t know what the unintended consequences might be.

Some unintended consequences might be:

  • Transition would be difficult
  • Recession during the transition, because middle and small market lending would likely suffer
  • Pay for transactional accounts ? no interest even if inflation is high.
  • Increase in savings accounts, which might be short-dated enough to be transactional
  • Gives a lot of power to the SNB, which might be halfhearted about implementation (Regulators dislike change, and risk).
  • Could be subverted if Government becomes dependent on free money, leading to inflation
  • Moves monetary policy from rate targeting to permanent quantitative monetary adjustment. Unclear how the SNB would tighten policy; maybe issue central bank bonds to reduce money supply?
  1. Could something like this rein in credit bubbles? Are we facing another credit bubble?

Yes, it could.? Most credit bubbles result from short-term lending funding long-term assets.? This would rein it in, in the short-run, but who could tell whether it might come back in another unintended way?? If some new class of lender became dominant, the threat could reappear.

We aren?t facing a credit bubble now, because the last crisis wiped away a lot of private debt, and replaced it with public debt.? Perhaps some weak nations with debts not in their own currency could be at risk, but right now, there aren?t any categories of private debt big enough and misfinanced enough to create a crisis.? That said, watch margin loans, student loans, and auto loans in the US.

  1. Are there any modern day equivalents we can compare Vollgeld to?

None that are currently being used.? There are a lot of theoretical ideas still being tossed around, like 100% reserving, lowering bank leverage, strict asset-liability matching, disallowing banks from lending to financial companies, etc.? These ideas get a lot of press after crises, but fade away afterward.? Most of them would work, but all of them lower bank profits.? Concentrated interests tend to win against general interests, except in crises.

  1. You mentioned there is a similar concept for derivatives that no one is talking about. How exactly would that work?

Derivatives are functionally equivalent to insurance contracts, but they are not regulated.? I believe they should be regulated like insurance contracts, and require that those seeking insurance have an ?insurable interest? that they are trying to hedge.? Only direct hedgers could initiate derivative transactions, and financial guaranty insurers would compete to fill the need.

This would prevent the unintended consequences of having multiples of protection written on a given risk, where a weak party like AIG is incapable of making good on all of the derivative contracts that they have written, which could lead to its own systemic risk if other derivative counterparties can?t absorb the losses.

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I know that is over-simplified, but I read through the papers of both sides in the debate, and I thought both overstated their cases significantly.

I know fiat money has its problems, and so does fractional reserve banking, but if you are going to propose a solution, perhaps one that fits the basics of how a well-run bank at low leverage would work would be a good place to start.

3 thoughts on “Surprise! Return to RT Boom/Bust

  1. We understand that you want media exposure, but RT is nothing else than the propaganda branch of a murderous mafia state.

    Shame on you.

    1. I don’t need media exposure. I did it as a service. I had a number of friends who created Boom/Bust. They have total editorial control. No one from Russia is telling them what to do. They are providing a service to those of us that want another less US-centric news source. And, one that accepts opinions don’t toe the purple party line in the USA.

      Is Russia more murderous than the US? Yes. Are both murderous? Yes. Ask those affected by our drone strikes what they think. The rest of the world has a mixed opinion of the US, and rightly so. Yes, we have often used our strength for the good of others, but even prior to Trump, they know that we act when we think our interests are threatened, like any empire would.

      By historical standards, the US is one of the nicest empires that ever existed. It’s still an empire, and it rubs a lot of people in a lot of countries the wrong way.

      That’s why my patriotic friends in the intelligence establishment don’t disapprove of me being on RT Boom/Bust. It does not promote Russia.

      THanks for writing me. I was wondering when someone would say something like you did.

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