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27 January 2016 Enterprising Investor Blog

Is This the End of Fractional Reserve Banking?

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Is This the End of Fractional Reserve Banking?

Switzerland’s Vollgeld “Full Money Initiative”

I can pretty much guarantee you that the biggest story not being covered in the traditional business press right now is that Switzerland will hold a referendum to consider ending fractional reserve banking (!).

Yes, you read that correctly. That paragon of the banking industry is voting on whether to deconstruct banking as it has been practiced for centuries. In case you cannot read German, let me share with you some of the details:

  • Swiss law requires a popular referendum on any petition that receives at least 100,000 verified signatures as affirmed by the Swiss Federal Chancellery.
  • On 24 December 2015, the Federal Chancellery confirmed to finanzen.ch that it had received 110,955 valid signatures on a petition to end fractional reserve banking.
  • The effort is officially known as the Vollgeld, or “Full Money Initiative.”
  • The date for the vote has yet to be set. But given the complexities of the issue, and that Swiss law allows for counter-arguments, it will likely be a drawn out process before the official referendum date is set.

In the Heart of the Great Depression

How did this state of affairs even come about? The answer, it turns out, is shrouded in history. Specifically, it is hidden in the fog of the economics profession of the Great Depression. On 16 March 1933, a group of economists hatched an idea known as the "Chicago Plan," Chief among these economists was one of the grandfathers of the profession, Irving Fisher. Their obsession was to identify the causes of the Great Depression and of the business cycle. Among the culprits they identified was fractional reserve banking.

In fractional reserve banking, banks keep only a small portion of the deposits they receive in their vaults and are otherwise free to lend out the rest. A typical ratio is 10:1 loans to reserves. What that means is that commercial banks share responsibility for money creation in an economy with central banks and that the credit and monetary functions of banking are intimately tied together.

Yet commercial banks have a varying and volatile appetite for money creation. The economists of the Chicago Plan thought that the business cycle was directly related to these appetites, with recessions (and the Great Depression) being among the consequences. Their solution? A 1:1 ratio of loans to reserves, with every $1 in loans backed by $1 in deposits. Despite generating a lot of interest at the time, the plan fell into obscurity. It resurfaced briefly several years later, following the US recession of 1937–1938, after which it again disappeared from history.

The Chicago Plan Revisited

In the wake of the Great Recession, many began reconsidering the Chicago Plan. But the greatest re-examination came after Jaromir Benes and Michael Kumhof — two economists at the International Monetary Fund (IMF) — published a paper entitled "The Chicago Plan Revisited" in August 2012. Benes and Kumhof not only revisited the Chicago Plan, they tested it with modern econometric models of the economy. Before discussing the results of their modeling, what were the asserted benefits of the original Chicago Plan as set forth by Fisher in 1936?

  1. Greater control of a major source of business cycle fluctuations, including the unpredictable expansion and contraction of banks’ credit and, consequently, the supply of banks’ created money.
  2. The complete elimination of bank runs.
  3. A dramatic reduction — if not complete elimination — of net government debt.
  4. A dramatic reduction in private debt since money creation is no longer tied to debt creation.

Certainly these are interesting contentions, and if you know anything about the financial system, then you also know that the Chicago Plan is nothing less than a radical rethink and redo of the global financial system. But will it work? According to Benes and Kumhof, the answer is an astounding and unequivocal "Yes":

“We find strong support for all four of Fisher’s claims, with the potential for much smoother business cycles, no possibility of bank runs, a large reduction of debt levels across the economy, and a replacement of that debt by debt-free government-issued money. Furthermore, none of these benefits come at the expense of diminishing the core useful functions of a private financial system. Under the Chicago Plan private financial institutions would continue to play a key role in providing a state-of-the-art payments system, facilitating the efficient allocation of capital to its most productive uses, facilitating intertemporal smoothing by households and firms. Credit, especially socially useful credit that supports real physical investment activity, would continue to exist. What would cease to exist however is the proliferation of credit created, at the almost exclusive initiative of private institutions, for the sole purpose of creating an adequate money supply that can easily be created debt-free.”

Iceland Takes Up the Mantle

On 20 March 2015, Iceland published the results of an intensive study that explored the viability of ending fractional reserve banking. The report, commissioned by the prime minister, is entitled, “Monetary Reform: A Better Monetary System for Iceland.” In the words of the author, Frosti Sigurjonsson:

“[The report] proposes a radical structural solution to the problems we face. The feasibility of and merits of that specific solution need to be debated. But whatever the precise policies pursued, they must be grounded in the philosophy which the report proposes — the money creation is too important to be left to bankers alone.”

What Does It All Mean?

By now you must have many questions about the ramifications of an end to fractional reserve banking. What does it all mean? There are several good sources for necessarily speculative answers (since no one has ever lived under a full reserve regime):

  • The papers from the IMF, Iceland, and Switzerland.
  • Read about the Chicago Plan and assess the potential impacts for yourself.
  • My colleague Ron Rimkus, CFA, is writing a follow-on piece to discuss the ramifications. So check back here on The Enterprising Investor.

Editor's note: An early version of this article stated that the Vollgeld referendum would be held this year. That is not correct. A date for the referendum has yet to be set.

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36 Comments

JV
Jason Voss, CFA (not verified)
27th January 2016 | 7:46pm

Hello Chris,

Thank you for these important contributions. First, thank you also for the clarification about the timing of a referendum, it has been devilishly difficult to get information about this issue in English, and here in the United States. Second, also thank you for indicating that there are differences between the Chicago Plan and Vollgeld. However, I did not say that the two were identical; the piece before you is one about the ending of fractional reserve banking.

Also, I am confused by your inclusion of the Positive Money website, because it seems very different than the Vollgeld website, which is the Swiss site I linked to. For one thing, Positive Money seems last updated in 2013, whereas Vollgeld is up-to-date with the latest developments. Please clarify why you included this link. Last, Positive Money is proposing something almost exactly like the Chicago Plan, but using slightly different language. It sounds as if you thought there were significant differences, please feel free to enumerate those differences if you would like.

Yes, I was referring to Iceland and Switzerland using a left-right framework, and still think that two countries of normally different dispositions toward the role of business discussing similar policies is interesting. Yes, there are similarities, but that is true of any two things that can be compared.

Yours, in service,

Jason

FA
Frank Ashe (not verified)
27th January 2016 | 8:53pm

I'm surprised that the people who think fractional reserve banking is bad, are comfortable with the government issuing all the money and gaining the seignorage. We could have avoided the recessions after the financial crisis if US and European governments had created money for spending on infrastructure. But the people who dislike fractional reserve banking typically dislike this fiscal policy as well. You can't have both.

Well you can, but you might as well wish for a pony as well while you're at it.

JV
Jason Voss, CFA (not verified)
27th January 2016 | 9:10pm

Hello Frank,

Thank you for taking the time to share your comments.

Yours, in service,

Jason

R
Ross (not verified)
5th June 2018 | 8:13pm

I am one of those people who see the inherit problem in fractional reserve banking, especially as currently practiced in the U.S. Our governments borrow massive amounts of money, creating inflation with the added burden of interest. At least inflation under a fractional reserve system would be interest free.

What causes these boom and bust cycles in the first place is the disconnect between money and wealth. People forget that money is supposed to be a way of trading wealth, money is not wealth. Creating money without the backing of real wealth causes instability. To be specific, home loans were given to people who lacked the wealth to pay for the loans. There was no real wealth to back up all the money that was being created by these loans. There was no foundation.

You say "We could have avoided the recessions after the financial crisis if US and European governments had created money for spending on infrastructure." That is not only more of the same problem, it's putting the cart in front of the horse. Creating money that is supposed to represent wealth before creating the wealth is what caused the financial crises to begin with. Also, creating infrastructure is of limited use. If the current infrastructure is adequate, then creating more is a misuse of labor and resources. (Labor and resources are both forms of real wealth.) All it would have done is create a temporary and false drop in unemployment, a political feather in Obama's hat. It would have cost us all in the long run when those jobs and that fake inflation causing money ran out. Unemployment would have risen again and we would have had unneeded infrastructure that would give no return on investment.

Read "Economics in One Lesson" by Henry Hazlitt to understand the problem of make work policies more fully.

FA
Frank Ashe (not verified)
27th January 2016 | 8:56pm

BTW The IMF paper uses a DSGE model, which, by construction of their solutions, can't have a major crisis like 2007-2009 in it.

CC
Chris Cook (not verified)
29th January 2016 | 8:14am

While I applaud the aim to replace conventional banking with a better system, this proposal is based upon misconceptions.

In very few banking systems are reserves a constraint. The fact is that banks create credit instruments/modern money first and THEN spend (often missed) or lend this modern money at interest.

The constraint is the cushion of bank capital - set by the Bank of International Settlements in Basel - which underpins their implicit guarantee of their loans to borrowers.

Note that an enormous amount of credit - which underpins a great deal of retail goods and services - is created by credit card systems such as Mastercard and Visa.

There are no deposits in these systems.

Note also that Switzerland created in 1934 in the WIR a complementary currency/credit system which - if updated - would be an infinitely preferable approach to this regrettably flawed proposal...albeit a proposal with its heart in the rights place.

The fact of the matter is that in a networked economy there is a need for banking-as-a-(risk management) service, but not banks-as-(risk) middlemen.

JV
Jason Voss, CFA (not verified)
29th January 2016 | 9:08am

Hello Chris,

Thank you for your thoughtful comments, and suggestions. To me they contribute to the discussion meaningfully.

Yours, in service,

Jason

J
Jacob (not verified)
16th February 2016 | 1:19pm

We don't live in a Fractional Reserve System. We live in an Endogenous Money system.

Loans create deposits, and reserves are found later.

NE
Nick Egnatz (not verified)
29th January 2016 | 11:23am

http://www.monetary.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/01/HR-2990.pdf

The above link is for the legislation put before the U.S. Congress in 2011 by Dennis Kucinich: the NEED Act (National Emergency Employment Defense Act). It is understandable, comprehensive monetary reform. The bill itself is only 12 pages and Kucinich's two page explanation is great.

The Three Necessary Reforms of the NEED Act
1. The U.S. Federal Reserve System is nationalized into the Treasury Dept.
2. Bank creation of money (fractional reserve lending) is decisively stopped.
3. New US Money, is created and spent into existence, debt-free, in non inflation/deflationary amounts, by our government for the needs of the nation and its people. Beginning with the infrastructure repairs called for by the American Society of Civil Engineers that now amount to $3.6 trillion by 2020. This would immediately create at minimum 10 million new, good-paying jobs.

The NEED Act has been vetted by Dr. Karou Yamaguchi as non inflationary and that includes paying off the national debt as it comes due. Kumhof and Benes, while not specifically vetting the NEED Act, did vet the Chicago Plan that the NEED Act was based on and said basically the same thing. It works.

JV
Jason Voss, CFA (not verified)
29th January 2016 | 12:02pm

Hello Nick,

Thank you for the additional detail on the NEED Act. At the suggestion of an earlier commenter I read through an overview of the bill several days ago. It sounds as if you are an active part of the movement to support the NEED Act, yes?

Yours, in service,

Jason