CHAPTER 8
How They Do It
Ok, now it is time to show exactly
how the Federal Reserve System creates money
out of nothing. But before we do that, let’s quickly recap the different forms
of money discussed up to this point.
1.
Commodity money:
Commodity money is any form of
money that has intrinsic value. Sheep, cows, corn, wheat; all of these served as
early forms of commodity money. When mankind discovered metal and learned to
craft it into tools and weapons, the metals themselves became a new (more
convenient) form of commodity money. Unlike livestock, metal didn’t need to be
fed, watered and cleaned up after. And, unlike wheat and corn, you didn’t have
to worry about metal going bad, becoming
contaminated with bugs or mold, etc.
Also, metal was easily divisible.
Assuming a cow was equal in value to 100 pounds of iron, and an item was for
sale valued at 10 pounds of iron (or “1/10th” of a cow), the individual buying
with iron had a distinct advantage; he could easily produce the exact amount of
money needed. For these reasons, metal became the most common form of commodity
money. Though different metals were used (iron, tin, copper, etc.), gold and
silver coins became the standard.
2.
receipt money:
Gold and silver coins were a much improved form of commodity money, but they
still had some drawbacks. For instance, if you were even moderately wealthy,
carrying all of your gold or silver coins around with you was cumbersome and
potentially dangerous. Finding a place to safely hide your coins wasn’t easy
either.
Seeing an opportunity to earn a
little extra money, goldsmiths solved this problem by renting storage space in
their vaults. When a citizen came in to deposit their coins, the goldsmith would
give them a paper receipt as proof of their deposit. So, if a customer deposited
$1,000 in gold coins, they were given a receipt (or receipts) valued at $1,000
worth of gold.
These receipts were “payable on
demand” meaning the depositor, at any time, could come in and exchange the
receipts for their gold. Because they were literally “good as gold,” citizens
began accepting the receipts as payment for products and services. From that
point forward the receipts became a legitimate form of paper money, 100%
backed by gold (or sometimes backed by silver).
As time passed, it became
increasingly rare for individuals to visit the goldsmith and demand coins in
exchange for their receipts. (Although receipt holders had the right to exchange
their receipts for gold at any time, they were happy to leave it locked up in
the goldsmith’s vault.) It was much more convenient to use the paper money,
instead of the physical coins they represented, in commerce.
3.
fractional Money:
At some point, the goldsmiths realized that almost nobody ever came in to
withdraw their coins, and this sparked an idea. Why leave all that gold
gathering dust in the vault (earning only a small storage fee) when instead it
could be loaned out (at interest) for a much greater profit? Since receipt money
was already in use, the goldsmith wouldn’t even have to remove the coins from
storage. When a borrower came in seeking $1,000, the goldsmith could simply
print up $1,000 worth of new receipts!
This, of course, was an act of pure
fraud. The goldsmith had no right to give a borrower (or anyone the borrower
gave his borrowed receipts to) the right to
claim somebody else’s gold. Additionally, the only
reason citizens accepted receipts as payment was because they believed
the value stamped on every receipt was backed by an equal amount of coins in
storage. Unbeknownst to them, this was no longer the case.
What began as legitimate
receipt money (backed 100% by coins held in
reserve) was now fractional money. By creating
new receipts, the goldsmith had secretly driven down the percentage of
“reserves” backing each receipt. (And with each new printing, the fraction
became less and less.) Before long, citizens were, unknowingly, accepting
receipts backed by only half its printed value, a quarter its printed value, a
tenth its printed value. When people finally figured out what was going on, they
rushed to exchange their receipts for coin.
Of course, only the first few in
line were able to do so. The rest were left holding worthless paper.
4. fiat
Money:
Encarta defines fiat money as: “paper money
that a government declares to be legal tender although it is not based on or
convertible into coins…” Another way to put that would be: Fiat money is
paper (backed by nothing) and because so, government must
force people to accept it via legal tender
laws.
But believe it or not, there is
actually something worse than fiat paper money. And this brings us to the final
form of money we’ll be discussing in this book. The form of money we’re using
today is:
5. Debt
Money:
Take the inherently fraudulent characteristics of a fractional money system; add
in the greater fraud of pure fiat, top it off with a mechanism designed to
generate inescapable perpetual debt and presto:
You’ve got the greatest monetary fraud ever perpetrated against mankind. And,
wouldn’t you know, you also have all the components that make up our current
monetary system. (It is dishonest money at its
worst.)
Rather than openly print the money
it needs to cover its reckless spending, our government uses a less obvious
tactic. Make no mistake, it still ends up “creating money out of nothing” for
its own purposes, it simply uses its friends at the Federal Reserve to do so.
And in exchange for helping our government
obtain the money it needs, the banking system reaps financial benefits that are
nothing short of obscene. (At a cost to our country that is incalculable.)
You see, unlike a normal fiat money
system (where the government simply creates its own worthless paper money,
spends it into the economy, and demands everyone accept it), our entire money
supply is built on debt. That means, not a single
dollar comes into existence but by the act of
borrowing it into existence. First let me explain this in the simplest
terms possible, and then we’ll get into a more detailed explanation.
Assume the government needs (wants)
1 billion dollars. Rather than print the money itself, the government goes to
its banking buddies at the Federal Reserve. The Federal Reserve is ALWAYS happy
to loan whatever amount of money the government
“needs.” The problem is the Fed doesn’t actually loan
anything. Yes, when the government shows up with its 1 billion dollar
bond, the Fed will give it a 1 billion dollar check in exchange; but that 1
billion dollar Federal Reserve check doesn’t have anything backing it. The
money (keystrokes in the Fed’s computer system)
is created on the spot out of thin air; poof,
there it is.
The government signs its new
Federal Reserve check, deposits it in its Federal Reserve bank account, and
immediately begins “paying its bills.” (Writing checks to government employees,
contractors, etc. and inflating our money supply by $1 billion in the process.)
But that’s just the beginning of the inflation. The government employees,
contractors, etc. take their government checks and deposit them in
their local bank accounts. Now the local banks,
using the original 1 billion dollars worth of government checks as “reserves,”
are permitted to inflate our money supply by another $9 billion! (And
they accomplish this by making yet more loans of “money created out of nothing”
to businesses, individuals, and government.)
The bottom line is
that the Congress and the banking cartel have entered into a partnership in
which the cartel has the privilege of collecting interest on money which it
creates out of nothing, a perpetual override on every American dollar that
exists in the world. Congress, on the other hand, has access to unlimited
funding without having to tell the voters their taxes are being raised through
the process of inflation.
Such is the nature of our entire
money supply. Our purchasing power is stolen via inflation, our collective
purchasing power is eroded by inescapable interest on every dollar in existence,
and if we (as a nation) attempted to pay off any significant portion of our
debt, within the rules of the current system, our country would be thrust into
economic chaos. Why? Because just as the “debt dollars” are created out of
nothing when a loan is issued, they are “erased” when the debt is repaid (and
this deflates our money supply). But the
remaining debt (the only thing keeping ANY money
in circulation) does not “adjust” downward. As the money supply gets
tighter, those who are trapped in high-dollar loans (say home loans based on
prices that reflected a larger money supply) will find it increasingly difficult
to make their payments. There are simply too few dollars to service the debt
and fuel the economy.
[1]
It’s sobering to consider, under
our current system, there can never be another debt-free generation…not even
close. To pay off a large portion of our debt would be disastrous; to pay it all
off, impossible. Does this sound like a system designed with our best
interests in mind?
The Nuts and Bolts
Alright, we’ve given the easy
explanation, now a slightly expanded overview of how the Federal Reserve System
creates and expands our nation’s debt money
supply. As in the previous example, we’ll focus on the primary method used; it’s
called the “open market operation.”
1. The government needs money, but
under our current system it can’t just create it.
So instead, it creates the next best thing. The
government “…adds ink to a piece of paper, creates
impressive designs around the edges, and calls it a (Treasury) bond or Treasury
note.” –Griffin. These pieces of paper are generically referred to as
Treasury securities and they are offered as
collateral to potential lenders.
As a simple example: The government
creates a bond in a denomination of $100,000 with a
maturity date of ten years. All that means is, a
lender can acquire the bond for $100,000, he
will earn interest on the loan for ten years, and when the bond matures (at the
end of ten years) his principal loan amount ($100,000) will be repaid. Treasury
securities are offered in many different denominations and
maturity can vary between 30 days (very short
term loan) to 30 years.
SIDE NOTE: If you or I purchase these Treasury
securities, it does not inflate the nation’s
money supply. That is because when you or I loan the government money, we are
not allowed to create a new pile of money to do it. We must use money we’ve
already earned. The same is true when a business or other institution acquires
these securities; money already in circulation must be used. Only Federal
Reserve banks, and commercial banks, are allowed to create money out of nothing
for the purpose of lending money to the government.
…continuing…
2. The government, looking to
convert its “Treasury securities” into something it can spend (Federal Reserve
Notes and checkbook money), turns to the Fed. The Fed is happy to oblige. It
pulls a check out of its magic checkbook,
writes in whatever dollar amount is needed, and gives it to the government in
exchange for the securities.
There is no money
in any account to cover this check. Anyone else doing this would be sent to
prison. It is legal for the Fed, however, because Congress wants the money, and
it is the easiest way to get it. (To raise taxes would be political suicide; to
depend on the public to buy all the bonds would not be realistic…and to print
very large quantities of currency would be obvious and controversial.) This way,
the process is mysteriously wrapped up in the banking system. The end result,
however, is the same as turning on government printing presses and simply
manufacturing fiat money…to pay government expenses.
3. The government endorses its
Federal Reserve check, and then deposits it with one of the Federal Reserve
banks. The check amount is added to the government’s account balance and, just
like that, the government can begin spending the money, which it does by writing
checks of its own. “These
checks become the means by which the first wave of fiat money floods into
the economy. Recipients now deposit them into their own (commercial)
bank accounts…” –Griffin. And this is where the
real action
begins.
SIDE NOTE: Some like to point out Federal Reserve
banks are “not operated for profit” and that they “return to the U.S. Treasury
all earnings in excess of Federal Reserve operating expenses.” Assuming we
accept all excess earnings really are handed
over (the Fed has never been properly audited; how could we know?), this
fact is still largely irrelevant. Huge profits
are made when commercial banks get their hands
on the newly created Fed money. (This should come as no surprise; it was the
commercial banking interests of Rockefeller, Morgan, Rothschild, Kuhn Loeb, and
Warburg that crafted the system.) And if those profits weren’t enough, as we’ve
already covered, the biggest profit gained in
this game is control.
…continuing…
4. So assume the government pays
Joe Contractor $1 million by check and Joe promptly deposits that check at his
commercial bank. Joe is happy because his bank account balance is now 1 million
dollars bigger. But the bank is even happier. In accordance with the rules of
our Federal Reserve System, commercial banks only need to keep 10%
reserves on hand. In short, that means the bank
Joe deposited his million dollars with immediately has $900,000 in “excess
reserves.” ($1 million minus 10% in required
reserves leaves $900,000 excess reserves.)
Guess what that means? It means the bank is allowed to create $900,000 in
new money (for loans) out of thin air.
5. But that’s not all!!! When that
$900,000 in newly created debt money is spent into the economy, it finds its way
right back into the banking system as new deposits and those deposits create
“excess reserves” too. As a simple example, if the $900,000 all winds up in one
bank, that bank is only required to keep 10% of $900,000
in reserves. So that means it can now create
$810,000 in new loans out of nothing; again the debt money supply increases! And
when that newly created $810,000 is deposited, it can be used to create another
$729,000 in loans “created out of nothing.”
This continues over and over again.
By the time the process reaches its legal
limit, the commercial banks will have created 9 million new debt dollars on top
of the original $1 million Federal Reserve loan
(also created out of thin air) for the government. (A total increase in our
money supply of $10 million!) Even if the Fed bank hands over every penny of
interest it earns on the $1 million loan to the
government, the commercial banks can earn ten times as much (or more depending
on the interest rates) on the $9 million they created.
Try to imagine the wealth and power
you could amass under a system that allowed YOU to do this. Imagine being
legally allowed to loan out money that you never had to earn…money that you
could simply “create” and then collect interest on. With only 1 billion dollars
you could easily generate 50 -100 million dollars per
year in interest payments. Even the best among us, given the chance to
acquire such a lucrative government-backed monopoly, might find it hard to
resist. …To say nothing of a group of unscrupulous, yet highly intelligent,
bankers.
The total amount
of fiat money created by the Federal Reserve and the commercial banks together
is approximately ten times the amount of the underlying government debt. To the
degree that this newly created money floods into the economy in excess of goods
and services, it causes the purchasing power of all money, both old and new, to
decline. Prices go up because the relative value of the money has gone down. The
result is the same as if that purchasing power had been taken from us in taxes.
…Since our money
is an arbitrary entity with nothing behind it except debt, its quantity can go
down as well as up. When people are going deeper into debt, the nation’s money
supply expands and prices go up, when they pay off their debts and refuse to
renew, the money supply contracts and prices tumble. This alteration between
periods of expansion and contraction of the money supply is the underlying cause
of booms, busts, and depressions.
Who benefits from
all of this? Certainly not the average citizen. The only beneficiaries are the
political scientists in Congress who enjoy the effect of unlimited revenue to
perpetuate their power, and the monetary scientists within the banking cartel
called the Federal Reserve System who have been able to harness the American
people, without their knowing it, to the yoke of modern feudalism.
That covers the most common method
by which the Fed System inflates our money supply; by “monetizing” government
debt. (Converting government IOUs like Treasury bonds into “money” by simply
creating the money out of nothing and loaning
it to the government.) The government spends the money and then commercial banks
“inflate” on top of what was originally created. But if the government isn’t
borrowing enough from the Fed, there are plenty of other ways for “the system”
to work its magic.
Another inflation mechanism is
known as the “discount window.” The discount window is where commercial banks go
to borrow money from the Fed. The inflationary process is similar to the open
market operation, only a little more direct.
Rather than
loan the government money (which then becomes
government checks, then eventually becomes deposits in commercial banks, then is
counted as reserves, which then can be
multiplied by up to 10 times the original loan amount), the Fed simply
loans money to the commercial banks directly.
It’s a much easier process. If a bank borrows $1 million, it can immediately
start the process of creating more money. (Subtract 10% for reserves, create
$900,000. When the $900,000 makes its way back, subtract 10% for reserves,
create $810,000, etc.)
The enormous increase in our
nation’s money supply leading up to the stock market crash in 1929 (and the
Great Depression) was not due to government borrowing. The government, prior to
the crash, was doing well and had little need to borrow. No, the bulk of new
money originated out of the Fed’s discount window. At this point in our history,
there is little doubt about whether or not Fed policy
Is what crashed our economy and led to the Great Depression. It most
certainly did. Today, the arguments should be based on whether or not the
monetary scientists, working through the Fed,
did it on purpose.[2]
Another method the Fed
can use to increase our money supply is to
simply change the required “reserve ratios” that commercial banks must hold. The
current requirement of 10% is purely arbitrary. If there is a
need for more money, it could be easily cut in
half to 5% (doubling the amount of new money that can be created from deposits),
quartered to 2.5%, or even dropped all together. It’s the Fed’s call.
And as if all this weren’t enough,
the Monetary Control Act of 1980 handed the Fed even more power. Now, the Fed
has the authority to legally monetize foreign
debt too! (Which it has already done, to the tune of many billions of dollars.)
The apparent
purpose of this legislation is to…bail out those governments which are having
trouble paying the interest on their loans to American banks. When the Fed
creates fiat American dollars to give foreign governments in exchange for their
worthless bonds, the money path is slightly longer and more twisted, but the
effect is similar to the purchase of Treasury Bonds. …they flow back into the
Money pool (multiplied by nine) in the form of additional loans. The cost of the
operation is once again borne by the American citizen through the loss of
purchasing power. …As long as someone is
willing to borrow American dollars, the cartel will have the option of creating
those dollars specifically to purchase their bonds and, by so doing, continue to
expand the money supply.
By confiscating and
“redistributing” purchasing power, the elite are able to shape the world as they
see fit. (Rewarding those who comply with their wishes, and punishing those who
insist on independence.)
[1] For a
short and easy article that explains this further, read Ten humans
and a Banker in the addendum of this book.
[2] Prior to the Great Depression,
“gold” was money in the United States. That ended in 1933 when FDR
signed executive order 6102, requiring all U.S. citizens to immediately
surrender their gold and gold certificates to the Federal Reserve. In
exchange for their gold, citizens were given “money” that could NOT be
redeemed in gold (because private gold ownership was now illegal).
Failure to comply with the order carried a prison sentence of up to 10
years, a $10,000 fine (over $150,000 in today’s dollars), or both.