Читать книгу NoNonsense The Money Crisis - Peter Stalker - Страница 9

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Introduction

Sellers of Situation Sthlm, Sweden’s street newspaper sold by the homeless, have now been given credit-card readers so that they can accept electronic payments instead of cash. Another step forward in what is already the world’s most cashless society. The purchasers no longer have to contribute spare change, but what exactly are they offering? A few borrowed seconds of plastic, a sudden burst of digits across the ether, critical information about their whereabouts and their lifestyle choices, a new entry in a database, another line in a bank account? The answer is all of these things and more – all of which could be summed up as ‘money’.

What exactly is money? Truth be told, there is no definitive answer. Clearly it is much more than coins in your purse or notes in your wallet, or even gold bars in a bank vault. But after that things get much fuzzier. Money is what money does. Ultimately, it is a system for measuring social relationships – helping define mutual rights and obligations. The cash and coins that we exchange are just tokens of that trust. Seen in this way, money and the monetary system that we use ought to be an essential element of the ‘public realm’.

This principle of money as a ‘public good’ is reflected in the symbols of our currencies, reassuringly embossed as they are with the heads of monarchs and presidents and ornate national symbols. But what about a payment for Situation Sthlm? No sign of King Gustaf VI Adolf or any other Swedish notable. Instead you will probably have to make do with the logos of Visa or Mastercard, or maybe your bank. At this point money glides into the private realm. Not only is the payment a personal transfer, it has gone into a commercial money system.

This has long been the case. Money has evolved differently in many societies, but has always involved complex interlocking roles and responsibilities combining public and private action. Nowadays we might assume that governments print or stamp out the money and that the banks then manage this, principally by taking savings and passing these on as loans. This is far from the case. In fact, most of the money circulating in our economies has been created by banks out of thin air.

We went along with this system while it appeared to work. We trusted our governments to control the money supply and regulate the banks. We trusted the banks to act legally and responsibly. Our faith was shattered by the 2008 global financial crisis. Governments and central banks struggled to manage flows of money, and greedy and incompetent financiers triggered a global economic crisis – plunging millions of innocent families into the misery of public austerity programs. Not everyone suffered. By and large the money men survived and prospered. Indeed they brazenly paid themselves even larger bonuses.

We cannot even rely on bankers for basic honesty. Banks around the world have been caught in a series of scandals ranging from abuse of power to malpractice to fraud. Between 2009 and 2013, a group of international banks were fined a total of $267 billion. This included rigging foreign-exchange markets, lying about interbank lending rates and mis-selling insurance.

These and many other banks were also implicated in the global financial crisis. In fact, however, this was as much a money crisis – which exposed fundamental flaws in our monetary systems. Worse, in trying to revive national economies by encouraging banks to lend more, we are now piling up more of the private debt that led to the crisis in the first place.

Instead we should pay more attention to money itself. Generally we take it for granted. We might worry about not having enough, but we do not worry about what money is or what it does. We need to pay closer attention because there is more going on than meets the eye. For example, when readers buy Situation Sthlm with a credit card they are not using existing Swedish kronor. Instead they will be transmitting new kronor generated by the credit-card company’s computer. Buyer and seller might be satisfied with the transaction, but they have also unwittingly boosted the number of kronor in circulation, and thus the Swedish money supply.

The purpose of this book is to show why this matters, and why money should be created and controlled only by governments.

NoNonsense The Money Crisis

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