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Financial
Socialism
As the world financial system entered a state of collapse,
commentators said that Russia had traded shortages of socialism for
the bank runs and financial panics of capitalism. In fact, modern
finance and banking are built on unstable, socialistic foundations.
Central Banking. Earlier in this century, Western
nations established a cartel-like arrangement among their largest
banks and the government. From the bankers' point of view, these
mutual protection rackets were a way of collectivizing their risk of
runs and making imprudent credit expansion permanently possible.
Governments liked having their favorite non-tax revenue regularized
(coin clipping having become a political problem).
Bad economists were there to claim that the financial system
required constant injections of "liquidity," and that central banks
would abolish financial panics. In fact, they eliminated crucial
competitive forces that would otherwise force banks to lend
prudently. When trouble comes, they rely on the money-creation
powers of the central bank as the lender of last resort. In
contrast, a market-driven banking system would be wholly private and
responsible solely to its depositors' demand for sound lending
policies.
Fractional-Reserve Banking. A competitive banking
system would constantly face the threat of runs and would therefore
be forced to stay heavily capitalized to meet its obligations.
Depositors would retain title to their deposits, which could only be
lent out on a contractual basis. Checking accounts (demand deposits)
would therefore be backed by I 00 percent reserves.
Today, fractional-reserve banking is the norm all over the
world. But it still takes people by surprise when they discover
this. In Russia, dollar-denominated accounts were held fractionally
so people could not withdraw their money when they wanted it. They
rightly called this robbery. What they didn't know is that it is the
established practice in all countries.
Deposit Insurance. This was a New Deal invention, a
Band-Aid to patch up a system fatally flawed by the existence of
central banking and fractional reserves. So rather than bring more
stability, deposit insurance permits banks to act even less
responsibly.
The banks are rewarded for performing loans, but are allowed
to slough off their losses on non-performing loans to society at
large.
Banking is an entrepreneurial business which, like other
speculative activities, is inherently uninsurable, as Mises
explained. That's why there can only be government "insurance,"
which is socialism disguised by the language of commerce.
The IMF. Created after World War II to become a new
global central bank, the IMF of Keynes's dream didn't workout. But
instead of closing shop, the IMF has become a cash cow for
undercapitalized banking systems and profligate governments. For
example, just prior to Russia's banking crisis, the IMF promoted a
lending package worth $23 billion. It was not only a waste; it
encouraged destructive behavior. When the U.S. bailed out Mexico
three years ago, supporters said greater monitoring would prevent
the problem from spreading. Instead, it made more bailouts an
inevitability.
Floating Exchange Rates. In a sound money system,
there is a tendency toward the creation of a single money in all
countries. Before 1973, the single money was a gold-backed dollar.
Before World War I, all civilized countries based their currencies
directly on gold. But since the advent of pure paper money,
currencies have traded against each other in a system of floating
exchange rates that has only created new instabilities and new
inefficiencies.
The world dollar standard helps mitigate such problems, but
this system also contains a crucial flaw. If the dollar falls, it
will take down the world economy with it. The solution isn't to fix
exchange rates or to hope for new competitors to the dollar like the
Euro. It is to base currencies on a fixed gold standard that deters
all manner of political manipulation.
FURTHER READING: Ludwig von Mises, The Theory of
Money and Credit (Indianapolis: LibertyClassics, [1912]
1980); Murray N. Rothbard, The Case Against
the Fed (Auburn, Ala.: Mises Institute, 1994); Murray N.
Rothbard, The
Case for a 100 Percent Gold Dollar (Auburn, Ala.: Mises
Institute, [1962] 1991); and Murray N. Rothbard, What Has
Government Done to Our Money? (Auburn, Ala.: Mises
Institute, [1963] 1990). |