| Subject: | Re: [socialcredit] 10 can't pay 11 fallacy, again | | Date: | Tuesday, July 10, 2007 07:16:59 (+1200) | | From: | Peter <cymric @.......nz>
|
| In reply to: | Message 4911 (written by Martin Hattersley) |
I expected that banks like every other business would be paying their way
from their incomes and naturally interest is part of that. But it has been
put that they create new credit ( 'income' in this case) to pay overheads
equal to interest they are charging. That isnt paying out of income at all.
If they are creation 'money' to pay their bills then why has bank charges in
the last ten years gone up by several hundred percent in somecases and take
it all back, how is the interest actually covered as claimed?
When ever one reads about the source of the money supply no one ever
mentions this special creation of money equal to all the interest of the
banking system. How come, because it must be a huge amount.
If it is true as Douglas describes it, that banks keep money short for their
own interests then this allegation they are making sure the public have the
money to pay the interest must have started after Douglas' time since he
would have mentioned it when he pointed out that interest wasnt the big
issue.
Peter.
----- Original Messsage -----
From: "Martin Hattersley" <hattersleyjm@interbaun.com>
To: <socialcredit@elistas.com>
Sent: Tuesday, July 10, 2007 4:24 AM
Subject: Re: [socialcredit] 10 can't pay 11 fallacy, again
> Peter -
>
> Banks do pass on their costs, just like other businesses. The costs of
> staff, premises equipment and profit have to be matched through the
> interest rates that they charge to their borrowers.
>
> It's an entirely different cycle from the creation and destruction of
> credit which is the other feature of banking.
>
> How else would you expect it to be?
>
> Martin Hattersley
> 5929 - 189 St., NW
> EDMONTON AB CANADA T6M 2J1
> (780)483-5442
> jmartinh@shaw.ca
> e-mail: hattersleyjm@interbaun.com
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "Peter" <cymric@xtra.co.nz>
> To: <socialcredit@elistas.com>
> Sent: Sunday, July 08, 2007 6:52 PM
> Subject: Re: [socialcredit] 10 can't pay 11 fallacy, again
>
>
>> Businesses may borrow on pay day, depending on their cash flows, but I
>> dont think banks need to borrow because of cashflow rates are slow or
>> intermittant.
>> Can anyone quote banking practice references that banks are so public
>> spirited as claimed?
>> I ask again, are banks the only businesses that dont pass on their costs
>> as all businesses do?
>> Peter
>> ----- Original Message -----
>> From: "Martin Hattersley" <hattersleyjm@interbaun.com>
>> To: <socialcredit@elistas.com>
>> Sent: Monday, July 09, 2007 6:52 AM
>> Subject: Re: [socialcredit] 10 can't pay 11 fallacy, again
>>
>>
>>> Per -
>>>
>>> "A bank manufactures credit, just as a steel plant manufactures steel."
>>>
>>> So when payday is due for bank employees, the bank writes cheques on
>>> itself which are accepted by the employees as money. These are charged
>>> against its profit and loss account. That account is fed by the interest
>>> that is charged to borrowers from the bank. Hopefully, even after paying
>>> its staff and other overhead expenses, there will be enough surplus to
>>> pay dividends to its shareholders, as well as retaining earnings which
>>> can be used to increase
>>> the bank's holdings of physical assets.
>>>
>>> Those payments that it makes to staff and shareholders, and in acquiring
>>> physical assets, provide the dollars to the public which, after passing
>>> through the normal processes of business, enable the borrowers to pay
>>> interest to the bank on their loans.
>>>
>>> No great problem there. If you like to think of it in another way, the
>>> bank lends to itself by creating money to meet its payroll and other
>>> expenses, and repays that loan from the interest payments it receives as
>>> a result of the services of its staff in making loans.
>>>
>>> Martin Hattersley
>>> 5929 - 189 St., NW
>>> EDMONTON AB CANADA T6M 2J1
>>> (780)483-5442
>>> e-mail: jmartinh@shaw.ca
>>>
>>> ----- Original Message -----
>>> From: ""Per Almgren, Nordiska sparlån"" <info@nordspar.se>
>>> To: <socialcredit@elistas.com>
>>> Sent: Sunday, July 08, 2007 5:32 AM
>>> Subject: Re: [socialcredit] 10 can't pay 11 fallacy, again
>>>
>>>
>>>> At 12:50 2007-07-06, you wrote:
>>>>>"The money for the interest is not created, that's my
>>>>>beef. Sure, the debt for the interest is added to the
>>>>>debt for the money principle but you can't say the
>>>>>interest is 'created out of thin air' like the chips
>>>>>are created out of thin air."
>>>>>-----------------------------------
>>>>>------------------------------------
>>>>>
>>>>>Again, the word is spelled p_r_i_n_c_i_PAL when
>>>>>referring to the principal of loans. But sure it is,
>>>>>the money for the interest is most definitely created.
>>>>>Banking is a function of double entry accounting in a
>>>>>creditary economy. At the beginning of T1, 10 are
>>>>>lent, and 11 must be repaid at the beginning of T2 in
>>>>>loan amortization and interest payments. During T1 the banks spend
>>>>>thereby
>>>>>creating 1 into circulation for their salaries, wages,
>>>>>dividends and ordinary business expenses, so at the
>>>>>beginning of T2, 11 is in circulation.
>>>>
>>>> Can you explain, in detail, how this extra 1 is spent into
>>>> circulation without creating a corresponding debt?
>>>>
>>>>>The money that the banks spend is charged, as a matter of accounting,
>>>>>against their accrued profit accounts.
>>>>
>>>> If the borrowers debt accounts is charged daily with the daily
>>>> interest part of what they are supposed to pay in cash or from other
>>>> accounts at the end of the period, but they themselves are not
>>>> entitled to use that money at the corresponding credit accounts,
>>>> doesn't that mean that the bank is borrowing interest-free from the
>>>> credit accounts until the borrowers actually pay their accrued
>>>> interest amounts? ;-)
>>>> And what happens if the bank doesn't completely use the interest for
>>>> payments of expenses? It may prefer to increase its liquidity (cash
>>>> money) so it stays compatible with the increasing amounts on
>>>> different accounts. In that case the borrowers are forced to borrow
>>>> more to fill the difference, or they will experience a society with a
>>>> shrinking economy!
>>>>
>>>>>This is allowable because by the rules of accounting profit
>>>>>accrues contractually even if not yet received in cash receipts.
>>>>
>>>> But even the bank can't use money to pay with until they actually
>>>> have got them, either from inpayments from outside or by borrowing
>>>> internally from their customers accounts. So debt is created before
>>>> money can be spent. That means that interest is hard to pay if you
>>>> don't have anybody that borrows that money in advance.
>>>> Per Almgren
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>____________________________________________________________________________________
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>>>>>---------------------------------------------------------------------
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>>>>
>>>>
>>>> ---------------------------------------------------------------------
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>>>
>>>
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