Great Banking Confusion
Personal_Finance / Credit Crisis 2009 Jul 01, 2009 - 06:21 AM GMTBy: Mansoor_H_Khan
	
	
  
The (usually) transparent process of inter-bank  lending works so well that most of the time we don't even think about it. This  process has largely weaned the public away from physical paper money. Note that  most money (about 90%) now exists only as entries on bank ledgers, backed by  loans (debt).   Also, note that  possessing physical paper dollars is like having equity in the economic output  of the United States of America, and has no credit risk associated to it.  Physical paper money is not anyone's liability. 
 
Bank deposit money,  on the other hand, does have credit risk associated to it. That risk consists  of the liability of the bank in which the deposit resides. Strangely enough,  most of the time the credit risk of bank deposit money is lower than the theft  and physical-loss risk of physical paper money. That is why we use bank deposit  money more than physical money. Through this (normally) transparent process of  inter-bank lending, the banking system acts like a huge clearinghouse (essentially  a giant ledger) which clears payments between its customers without the  physical transfer of cash, and keeps track of who has how much money. Most  money in the world economy is not physical (paper cash or gold) but logical  (ledger entries).
To summarize: physical paper money is equity. Bank deposit money is backed by debt (actually that's not 100% true--reserves at the federal reserve system are also equity, essentially an electronic version of physical paper cash).
That difference --  that physical paper money = equity in the nation's economy, and that a bank  deposit = debt (a bank obligation) causes great confusion.
  
We have become very comfortable with bank deposit  money, without thinking much about the credit risk we are taking. Bank  failures, when they happen, create confusion and chaos because the vast  majority of businesses and individuals use checking accounts for convenience  (they can write checks rather than handling physical paper cash) and they don't  really think much about the credit risk that is normally associated with  keeping their money (their most liquid capital) in a bank in a checking  account.  In fact, in most cases users of  checking accounts do not want to take a credit risk.  But in the current banking system there are  no alternatives.
Is There a Better  Way?
  
  Consider the banking  industry's contribution to society. The banking industry provides three major  services to the public:
  
  1. It provides a "safe" place to hold  the public's most liquid assets (cash).
  
  2. It acts like a giant clearinghouse (settling  checks without physical paper cash transfer).
  
  3. It is a source of loan money (banks evaluate  the credit worthiness of borrowers). Think of "credit worthiness  evaluation" as a service to society. If bankers do a poor job at evaluating  credit worthiness they end will up mis-allocating economic resources.
  
  What I am asserting is that it is possible to have  a banking system where a customer would get benefits 1 and 2 described above  without taking a credit risk, if banks gave people a choice between a regular  account and a special "100% reserve account." These special accounts,  which are not available to the public today, would have no credit risk. The  money in such accounts would not be lendable. There would still be fraud risk, of  course. A bank desperate for cash might be tempted to "dip" into the  reserves allocated to their 100% reserve accounts. Of course we would make such  "dipping" illegal. The 100% accounts would be the electronic  equivalent of storing physical paper bills in a safe deposit box at the bank.
  
Such accounts would have no credit risk (like  physical paper cash) but would have the benefit of being used in electronic  transactions and be accessible by personal checks. Of course, a 100% reserve  account would not earn interest but would most likely have monthly maintenance  fees associated to it (similar to a safe deposit box; it would also be very  much like the reserve accounts that banks have with the FED). Such accounts, if  widely used, would lessen the impact of bank failures on the economy in terms  of a contraction of the money supply, chaos and confusion--but would not  completely eliminate them. 
Lending involves  business risks (credit risks). If a customer were to choose a non-100% reserve  account then he would be subject to losing his money. This would force the  public to do some homework before handing money over to a bank (in essence,  customers would need to consider banks' credit ratings, quality of management,  etc.). Of course in this type of setup, a non-100% reserve account would  probably have to pay a higher interest rate than the fractional reserve  accounts do today. In fact if the public had a choice of 100% reserve accounts,  there would be no need to impose legal reserve requirements on non-100% reserve  accounts. There would be a clear separation between accounts that have a credit  risk and accounts that don't. The accounts with credit risk would need to set  their interest rates high enough to attract depositors.
  
If our banking system were setup this way, we  would avoid huge systemic risks in the future, since a major part of the money  supply would likely be sitting in non-lendable accounts. Many enterprises  probably should not take any credit risk with their liquid capital (utility  companies, municipalities, states, hospitals, etc.). In any insolvency or  bankruptcy the 100% reserve accounts would receive priority, and unless the  bank was fraudulently “using” these reserves the deposit owners of such  accounts would never lose their money. If an electronic deposit account with no  credit risk were available, then any individual or business choosing not to use  such an account would be subject to losing their at-risk deposit. If such an  alternative were available, then the depositor who chose the lendable money  account would be warned that he or she could lose money if the bank became  insolvent.  
Once this choice is given to the public  the banks can then be allowed to fail without severely impacting the payment  system which is needed to conduct day-to-day commerce.   The only job of the FDIC would then be to  insure smooth transfer of 100% reserve accounts to another bank.
  
  I will go a step further and state that the  availability of such accounts (non-lendable, 100% reserve accounts) should be  mandated by Congress through force of law. Each business and individual should  be able to choose whether they want to take a credit risk or not.
Mansoor H. Khan
http://aquinums-razor.blogspot.com/
About the author: I am an Electrical Engineer by training (Bachelor of Engineering from Stevens Institute of Technology). I also have a Masters of Business Admnistration degree (MBA) from the University of Virginia.
© 2009 Copyright Mansoor H. Khan   - All Rights Reserved 
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