[VIDEO] Where does money come from?
Apparently banks pull money out of thin air then lend it to borrowers for home loans. Here is what TVNZ reported.
Wednesday, April 9th 2014, 11:31AM 6 Comments
Whenever you apply for a loan or a mortgage the bank you applied ot creates the money out of nothing. It is not lent to you from the banks' holdings, it is not borrowed from other accounts. It simply is entered into a bank account digitally and from that day forth you are contractually responsible for paying back the created money plus all the interest that accrues.
Here's what Seven Sharp reported. What do you think?
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Comments from our readers
So it was pleasing to see this today http://www.goodreturns.co.nz/article/976501902/financial-literacy-tools-reach-teachers.html
The consequence of this might not be as obvious. For debt to be repaid plus interest it requires constant economic growth. So money created by debt is a claim on future resources. If we have more claims on future wealth than the earth can cash what happens then?
Money is not created out of thin air. Banks have to fight for both customer and corporate deposits which they can lend out. The assets have to be greater than liability for prudential purposes. Commercial banks do not have the right or the resources to lend more than what they have.
What happens is that the banks only have to maintain a small % of the deposits they collect as liquid assets whilst the rest can be used for lending purposes. At a company level this does not create money.
The banks do this because the interest earned on lending exceeds the interest paid to depositor. The profit of a bank comes from the interest spread between deposits and loans. However at all times the banks have to maintain liquid assets to meet cash demands.
At a macro level the money which is borrowed is consumed or saved and new loans are created on those savings. This creates a multiplier effect which gives the impression of money creation.
The actual money creators are Central Banks that have the right to print money. This is done through the outright purchase of government securities.
If you look at the balance sheet of the Central Banks, you will notice there is an item with regards to T-bill and T-bond holdings. These are securities that have been purchased from the market by printing money.
During the Asian Financial crisis, when foreign funds disposed of their securities, the central banks stepped in to purchase them. This resulted in a mass printing of money that destroyed the FX rate of a number of countries.
Hope this helps
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