Full-reserve banking
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Full-reserve banking is a theoretically conceivable banking practice in which all deposits, banknotes, and notes in a financial system would be backed up by assets with a store of value.[1] This does not imply the existence of a government body (such as a central bank) that would convert currency to a more stable type of asset if requested to do so. A bank could engage in full reserve banking by issuing private currency backed by a commodity. It requires that the resources available to the banks issuing credit money and demand deposits would be sufficient to convert all currency at once if so required. It was a central component in Social Credit proposals.[2]
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[edit] Reserve ratio
The reserve ratio of all banks operating in such a system would be 100%, making the deposit multiplier equal to zero. In such a system, commercial banks would have no obvious incentive to offer savings or checking accounts, unless users paid a fee for those services. The opposite of this system is fractional-reserve banking, in which the bank would hold only a fraction of all client deposits as reserves with the remainder used to supply loans.
A system in which all currency is backed by another asset and commercial banks are required to maintain a 100% cash reserve ratio has never been implemented in any actual economy. The closest system is that of a currency board, in which commercial banks are not required to maintain a 100% cash reserve, but all of the money in circulation is backed by another asset held by the central bank. This system is in use in Hong Kong where the Hong Kong dollar is backed by United States dollars deposited in the Exchange Fund of the currency board. Today, newly independent states such as Lithuania, Estonia and Bosnia have implemented currency board-like systems (local currencies are anchored to the euro). Argentina had a currency board-like system (anchored to the U.S. dollar) up until 2002, and many Caribbean states have used this kind of system up until today.
[edit] Examples
[edit] Islamic banking
In theory, Islamic banking should be synonymous with full-reserve banking, with banks achieving a 100% reserve ratio.[3][4] However in practice this is rarely the case.
[edit] Digital gold
Since 1996, a form of private currency called digital gold currency has been in circulation. Many of these currency providers act like full-reserve "private banks" with a one to one ratio of the currency they issue and the hard asset, usually gold or silver, that they store as reserves. The most prominent examples are e-gold, e-Bullion and GoldMoney. Also available are physical gold exchangers and storage providers, such as BullionVault.
[edit] Terra
The Terra initiative by Bernard Lietaer will introduce a reference currency that is fully backed by a dozen or so of the most important commodities and services in the global market, thereby providing, for the first time since the gold-standard days, an international standard of value that is inflation-resistant. "[5]
[edit] Monetary reform
- A monetary reform for the information age on a full-reserve base is proposed by Joseph Huber and James Robertson.[6] The fruit of collaboration between a German academic and a British economic writer, they argue for one reform: the reappropriation by governments of the right of seigniorage now possessed by private banks. About 95% of new money currently issued takes the form of loans made by private banks to their customers. Huber and Robertson want to make this illegal. The creation of new money, both cash and non-cash, should be the exclusive prerogative of the central bank. The latter should determine how much it creates in the light of the objectives chosen for the country's monetary policy, and credit the new money to the government, who will then put it into circulation by spending it.[7]
[edit] See also
[edit] External links
[edit] References
- ^ Full-reserve banking: Theory, fact and policy
- ^ Social credit a distributist reform of the financial system by Oliver Heydorn
- ^ A MONETARY SYSTEM WITH 100-PER CENT RESERVE REQUIREMENT AND THE GOLD STANDARD: THEORY, FACT AND POLICY
- ^ Siegfried, NA (April 2001). "Concepts of Paper Money in Islamic Legal Thought". Arab Law Quarterly 16 (4): 319-332. ISSN 0268-0556. Retrieved on October 16, 2006.
- ^ Terra TRC
- ^ Creating New Money (PDF Format)
- ^ "Social Currency" a website dedicated to the Huber and Robertson proposal