RupertofOZ wrote:
To have a truely "free market" in money Tamo... would mean that anyone could print and issue their own currency....
Yep. Just like with any other product, there would be different people trying different things. Over time, there will be winners and losers in terms of acceptance, and most likely we'd end up with 1 or 2 or 3 "standard" currencies.
The major difference between fiat currency issued by force, and a free-market currency is that the consumers who use the currency would be much more concerned about the value-backing of the free-market currency. If another party is not forced to take it, I need to make sure that my value is protected.
Some examples would be actual precious metal coins. The precious metal in the coin would be its own store of value, and no additional backing is required.
Another example would be a note issued by banks against reserves the bank holds in a vault. This was actually common in the US during the late 1800s. In such a bank, it is likely that the depositors would make sure that the bank actually kept those reserves on hand so they could redeem their money. This observation by consumers and potential banking competitors would require the banks to keep those reserves of value (usually gold) on hand. Prior to the invasion of Nanking by the Japanese at the beginning of WWII this was actually the case. Banks would redeem the notes of competitor banks to make sure they weren't loaning out more reserves they had, which would be a competitive advantage to the competitor. This mutual checking kept them all solvent.
RupertofOZ wrote:
Neither the banks or governments would/will ever allow that to happen.... and the whole "free market" economy as we know it would collapse if we did allow it....
I agree that banks and governments wouldn't allow it. It takes power away from them. I personally don't think the economy would collapse. If we imagined a free-market monetary system, it's seems likely to me that the US dollar and the Australian dollar wouldn't go away. The central bank printing machines would go on printing. Over time, people would stop using them though because they have no backing by real value.
RupertofOZ wrote:
But within the "current" banking system... and globalised "free market" economy..... it was the banks lassiez faire attitude and belief that their was a free market in terms of creation, issuance of money/debt....
That has led to the current global "financial crisis".... just as it did in 1929.... surely you don't dispute this....
Well, it's true that the banking system has led to the current crisis, as it did in 1929. It's just not a laissez-faire system. A given bank on the corner only keeps a small percentage of reserves on hand because they can always just get more from the central bank should a large number of customers want their money at any given time. This fractional reserve system encourages a bank to loan out more money than it has. After all, why not? The bank earns money on interest from loans. The more loans out there, the more money it makes. If it can make more loans than it has money and not worry (because it can always get more from the central bank), why wouldn't it? As long as the loans are good, the bank makes more and more and more.
Of course, over time, the managers at these banks want to make more and more loans because they get paid better if they do. And what's the harm? They can always get more cash from the central bank. So the requirements on borrowers become less and less strict. Eventually, the banks are just giving loans away. So people borrow and borrow. Whatever it is they're buying goes up because demand goes up. And then the other shoe drops, and enough of these new borrowers can't repay the loans. The bank can only collect on whatever collateral it got for the loan in the first place. So now the bank has some asset that it can't sell. All that demand that came from the easily available money is gone. The asset is now worth substantially less than the loan was for. The bank has a huge loss. All the cash borrowed from the central bank doesn't help since nobody is borrowing to keep feeding the cycle.
This time around it was real estate. In 1929 it was stocks. All of this stems from the central reserve creating more and more money which creates this mindset that the bank can make loans without having actual money itself.
RupertofOZ wrote:
The corrollary is that the current crisis would not, or may not have occurred if the financial system was, or had been more regulated.... hardly something the neo-liberal/neo-cons fo the "free market" philosophy were going to spruik or encourage...
I'd agree that a great deal more regulation is one option. We could make banking rules saying they need to keep 100% reserves on hand instead of 5%. We could say borrowers must meet certain standards.
The problem with central planning is not that it isn't logical from a certain viewpoint. The problem is that it isn't adaptable to an ever-changing marketplace and stifles innovation. The world changes, and pretty quickly. If a whole sector or a whole economy is mandated by a small group of people, then those people cannot react to those millions of changes in different geographical areas at different times, each with their own local conditions. In an information-theory context, a distributed network of less powerful processors is vastly more powerful than a seemingly powerful central processor. The Internet is the quintessential example of this. There is no central server, which is why it works.
In addition to the adaptability, I personally find central planning of any kind an immoral violation of my natural-born freedom. To me, government exists solely as an agency to protect my rights. Any laws tha t go beyond that role are evil in the same way slave holding is evil. I also find telling adults what to do because the person/group making the rules knows better the height of arrogance. But that is a philosophical and moral argument rather than an economic one.
RupertofOZ wrote:
The banking sector has IMO operated totally within, and on, the philosophy the there was a "free market".... and created debt accordingly.... and unsustainably....
Agree with the creating unsustainable debt part. Again, it's just not laissez-faire. It's that "mixed economy" bit that has a central planner core.
RupertofOZ wrote:
And IMO... allowing that sort of lassiez fare "free market" philosophy within financial systems ... will always, when taken to extremes by rampant greed and ideology, result in an inevitable failure of the system...
The beauty of competition is that the competing players force each other to be limited. If Bank A were to start creating unsustainable debt, a competing bank (or depositors -- us!) could simply redeem the notes issued on Bank A and cause Bank A to collapse. Bank A doesn't want that to happen, and the threat of such a possibility prevents Bank A from creating the unsustainable debt in the first place.
I realize that my opinions are relatively unpopular in the world today, and current trends are going much more strongly in the stronger regulation direction than in the complete freedom direction. But that's OK. Someday I'll have my AP farm, and I won't care about the monetary policy of governments one way or the other.
