The Mother of All Free Lunches

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by Peter on October 23rd, 2009

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Let me introduce you to “the money power,” which is the right to create new money and be the first one to spend it. The money power confers all of the marvelous, obvious benefits of counterfeiting—without the downside, because in a democracy, it’s legal!  It is truly the mother of all free lunches.

Any economy that aspires to more complexity than barter needs money.  Any country with a growing economy and a desire for price stability needs new money. (If an economy grows but the supply of money doesn’t, then the same amount of money chases more goods and services, and the price of almost everything drops; this is the classic definition of deflation. There are those, particularly among the Austrian economists, who think deflation is actually desirable, but we at EconomicStability advocate a reformed monetary system that is managed with the goal of being neither inflationary nor deflationary.)

One of the key concepts students of the monetary system encounter sooner or later is seigniorage (SEN-yer-idge), defined by Merriam Webster asrevenue from the manufacture of coins, calculated as the difference between the face value and the metal value of the coin.”

If it costs the mint five cents in metal and manufacturing to make a quarter, then the entity with the right to create that quarter gets a twenty cent windfall profit when it spends it the first time!  The concept applies in spades to paper money which has an even lower production cost relative to its face value.  Think of the windfall in printing $100 bills.  And today, banks create money digitally, so there is no production cost at all.  Hence the name money power.

In feudal times, the King had the money power and he ate plenty of lunch.

But the feudal era passed; in certain countries, democracy, or valiant attempts at it, took its place.

Now that democracy has replaced the King, who should get the free lunch that comes with the money power?

Isn’t it obvious that the people should?  I don’t mean some socialistic concept; I mean all of the taxpayers who get up every day and create the economy. The same people who are on the hook financially if the whole affair goes horribly wrong, which it seems to be doing right now.  Shouldn’t they get the free lunch?  After all, the US Constitution gives it to them in Article 1 Section 8.

Guess what.  They don’t.

How big of a free lunch would the people of the US get if we adopted monetary reform?

I am no economist, so please correct me if I’m wrong here, but consider this: as the graph shows, under our current money system, the Fed and the banks increased the money supply by almost $6 Trillion between 1995 and 2005.  In other words, the money supply grew by an average of $600 Billion dollars per year (as measured by M3.)

(Many would argue that $600 Billion a year is too much to add to the money supply; we experienced inflation rates of about  3%/year during those years. I’m not going to touch that right now.  But that’s how much the money system did create, so that’s the figure I’m using here.)

What if the US government, not the banks, had created $6 Trillion between 1995 and 2005? Any money it creates it doesn’t have to borrow.  As the Fed’s Flow of Funds Report shows, Federal Government Debt (only) grew $1.1 Trillion during that ten year period.  So, if the Government had created the money (just like Lincoln did, with the original “capital G” Greenback) it could have done all of the things it did do during those years (as inefficiently as it did them) without adding to the national debt, and the American public would have saved $4.9 TRILLION in taxes.

Here’s another way to look at it:  our national debt stands today just shy of $12 Trillion.  If the US Government had created the $6 Trillion dollars the banks did between 1995 until 2005, our current national debt would be half of what it is today. If we (our government) had created all of the money the banks created since 1960, there would be virtually no national debt!

This is truly the mother of all free lunches!  And the Fed and the banks have been eating it since our Congressgave it to them in 1913.

To be fair, defenders of the Fed point out that it remits its profits to the US Treasury after it deducts its expenses. To quote a recent Fed release: ”The Reserve Banks transferred $31.7 billion to the U.S. Treasury in 2008…”  But don’t count on it.  As Fed Vice-Charman Donald Kohn intimated this summer in Jackson Hole , the payments to Treasury are not reliable, especially now when we need them most.

…even in the unlikely event that a sharp rise in interest rates forced us to suspend remittances to the Treasury temporarily, we would still maintain our ability to implement monetary policy to foster our statutory objectives of maximum employment and stable prices.  (emphasis mine)

Which would you choose?  The money system that confers hundreds of billions of dollars a year to the benefit of the U.S. taxpayer and leaves us with no national debt, or Mr. Kohn’s, that confers $31 Billion a year, maybe, and helped to create our $12 Trillion national debt?

If passed, the Fed Transparency Act (Ron Paul’s H.R. 1207), which has over 300 co-sponsors in the House, should expose the Giant Sandwich in the middle of the room.  Of course, Bernanke will fight transparency with everything he’s got, arguing once again for the Fed’s vaunted independence.

There is reason to be hopeful.  We are suffering from the proverbial hitting ourselves in the head with a hammer; all we have to do is put it down.  Fortunately, it won’t take a Constitutional Amendment as Congress reserved the right to repeal the Federal Reserve Act, in Section 31.

Last month, Dennis Kucinich announced that he will introduce a bill into Congress this fall that does just that.  This legislation is the only solution I know of that attacks the real cause of our current financial crisis , which is debt.  If debt is a hole in the ground, our stimulus of the economy over the past several years has dug it deeper.  A debt-free money system like that envisioned by this legislation, would start to fill it back in.

The Kucinich bill will based on the American Monetary Act (pdf) a draft of legislation developed over the past several years by the American Monetary Institute .

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Outside the Debt-Money Paradigm, Coffee with Joe 12-11-11

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by Peter on December 12th, 2011

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Joe and Pete discuss Fractional reserve banking again: Paul Krugman’s article from October, Bernie Sander’s inquiries into the financial crisis, and finally, some 90 year old wisdom from Frederick Soddy.

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Occupy the Money System: Coffee with Joe 12-1-11

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by Peter on December 2nd, 2011

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Joe and Pete survey the changes in the economic and political landscape since their last video; particularly the Occupy movement.

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Interview with Yamaguchi at AMI Conference

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by Peter on October 6th, 2011

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Joe Bongiovanni interviews the man behind the best economic model of a debt-free money economy, at the American Monetary Institute Conference in Chicago, 10-1-11.

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Reforming the Money System to Solve the Debt Crisis

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by Peter on September 29th, 2011

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This is a video of Joe’s presentation in Montpelier VT September 14, 2011 (44 minutes).

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Kucinich Bill Bullet Points

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by Peter on September 16th, 2011

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The three legs the Kucinich Bill: HR 6550 the National
Emergency Employment Defense Act:

1) End the private creation and destruction of money through fractional reserve banking, and replace it with full-reserve banking.
2) Replace money supply with debt-free US dollars issued by the treasury, in an amount specified by an independent monetary commission.
3) Incorporate the Federal Reserve into the US Treasury for supervisory and regulatory expertise. Fed is no longer privately owned.

Vermonters, please call Senator Sanders ((802) 862-0697) and Leahy (1-800-642-3193) and ask them to sponsor this bill in the Senate when Kucinich submits it this fall. Then, call Peter Welch (802-652-2450) and ask him to co-sponsor in the House.

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Times-Argus Article About the Institute

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by Peter on September 16th, 2011

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Dan Staples, a reported for the Barre-Montpelier, Vermont Times-Argus newspaper, attended Joe’s talk on Wednesday night, interviewed Joe and Pete the following morning, and writes about them in this article.

Unfortunately, the headline is misleading.

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Vermont, the Mouse that Could Roar; Coffee with Joe 9-8-11

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by Peter on September 9th, 2011

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Pete and Joe discuss the brief history of their monetary reform partnership.

Joe will be speaking again in Montpelier Sept. 14, 2011 at the Pavilion Auditorium, trying to get the audience to encourage the VT congressional delegation to support Kucinich’s monetary reform bill, the NEED Act.

Links:
Senf
Yamaguchi study

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A Solution to the Money Crisis: Joe to speak about Kucinich Monetary Reform Bill in Montpelier Sept. 14

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by Peter on September 9th, 2011

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Most of us are waking up to the realization that the social contract we all have around money has been trashed. The scale of proven, un-prosecuted fraud in the mortgage scam is appalling. Our major banks (who own the Federal Reserve that regulates them) are too big to fail. The world is awash in debt and all we can think of to bail it out is more debt. It is almost universally acknowledged that we have done nothing but kick the can down the road.

If having a desire for the economy to function better for the vast majority of people on this planet qualifies me as a liberal, I cherish the label. I think I share that broad goal with most of my neighbors, many of whom, for example, vote for Bernie Sanders year after year. People with this kind of community orientation tend not to organize their lives around making lots of money, and we don’t make a study of money. Most of us just need the money system to work for us and if it does then we like to go pay attention to other things we find more interesting, like, for example, art, sports, nature, or helping a neighbor recover from a flood.

This doesn’t prepare us very well for when the money system fails us, as it is doing now. We drown in the complexity of trying to understand what a derivative is, let alone how it might bring down the entire economy.

This is where Joe comes in. Joe Bongiovanni, (a former resident of Marshfield and former General Manager of Washington Electric Coop) has been a monetary reformer for over 30 years. He specializes in explaining the Byzantine money system we have had since the passage of the Federal Reserve Act in 1913 in terms that we teachers, farmers, carpenters, artists, granite workers, etc.– can all understand. He explains how the money system works as a hidden tax on the people, an incessant extraction of wealth from the true economy where most of us live and work to the financial sector.

And…he dares to dream of and speak of: a money system that would halt this extraction, a money system that could support the true economy that produces our food and the things we need and want, a money system that could eliminate the National Debt entirely without austerity. That last one is too big a dream for most of us. There is no narrative that even states it as a goal, unless you heard it from a monetary reformer; indeed, I lose a lot of people as soon as I start talking about a money system that could allow us to pay off the national debt.

This coming Wednesday, September 14 at 7:30 PM, Joe will be speaking at the Pavilion Auditorium downstairs in the Pavilion Building (109 State St.) in Montpelier. The topic is “Reforming the Money System to Solve the Debt Crisis.” In the talk, Joe will introduce the audience to Dennis Kucinich’s monetary reform bill, HR 6550, the National Emergency Employment Act, and he will ask the audience to urge the Vermont congressional delegation to support the bill. In particular, Joe hopes Bernie will sponsor the bill in the Senate.

In the spirit of full disclosure, I have been of friend of Joe’s since the 1980s. In September of 2008, when the entire world economy teetered on collapse, I started listening to Joe on money. At that time I didn’t even know what a money system was, let alone what monetary reform was. Since then, I have helped Joe establish the website EconomicStability.org, and a Youtube video blog called Coffee with Joe.

I am not an economist, so after studying this with Joe for the past three years, I don’t know if the NEED Act would actually work. A debt-free money system has never really been tried on a grand scale (though Abraham Lincoln issued $450 million in debt-free US Notes during the Civil War, the original and true Greenbacks, until shut down by the money interests). It could certainly be corrupted and administered with disastrous results. It certainly does not absolve us of the responsibility of acting ethically or putting in place systems that stop unethical behavior. The likelihood of it getting any traction has always seemed incredibly low to me, because it can only come from the grassroots, and most people shut right down when you merely mention a subject like the Federal Reserve.

But those of us who dare to dream of a world without war or starvation, where humans and nature find a balance, need to listen to Joe when he says that you can’t have any of those things if you don’t fix the money system. The Kucinich bill seems to me to offer the best opportunity to transition to a money system that is not only much fairer, but one that is much less prone to crashes. But don’t take it from me; come to Montpelier Wednesday night, and hear about it from Joe.

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PDF of Yamaguchi’s “Workings of a Public Money System”

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by Peter on August 23rd, 2011

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Abstract:
Being intensified by the recent financial crisis in 2008, debt crises seem to be looming ahead among many OECD countries due to the runaway accumulation of government debts. This paper first explores them as a systemic failure of the current debt money system. Secondly, with an introduction of open macroeconomies, it examines how the current system can cope with the liquidation of government debt, and obtains that the liquidation of debts triggers recessions, unemployment and foreign economic recessions contagiously. Thirdly, it explores the workings of a public money system proposed by the American Monetary Act and finds that the liquidation under this alternative system can be put into effect without causing recessions, unemployment and inflation as well as for- eign recessions. Finally, public money policies that incorporate balancing feedback loops such as anti-recession and anti-inflation are introduced for curbing GDP gap and inflation. They are posed to be simpler and more effective than the complicated Keynesian policies.

To download a PDF (47 pp.) of: Workings of a Public Money System

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What’s the Problem for the Chartalists? Coffee with Joe, 7-12-11

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by Peter on July 12th, 2011

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Joe and Pete discuss Australian chartalist Bill Mitchell’s blog entry from last December criticizing the Kucinich monetary reform bill called the NEED Act.

Dr. Yamaguchi’s systems dynamics model.

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