http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/comment/9623863/IMFs-epic-plan-to-conjure-away-debt-and-dethrone-bankers.html
IMF's epic plan to conjure away debt and dethrone bankers
So there is a magic wand after all. A revolutionary paper by the International Monetary Fund claims that one could eliminate the net public debt of the US at a stroke, and by implication do the same for Britain, Germany, Italy, or Japan.
Ambrose Evans-Pritchard
21 Oct 2012
One could slash private debt by 100pc of GDP, boost growth, stabilize prices, 
  and dethrone bankers all at the same time. It could be done cleanly and 
  painlessly, by legislative command, far more quickly than anybody imagined. 
The conjuring trick is to replace our system of private bank-created money -- 
  roughly 97pc of the money supply -- with state-created money. We return to 
  the historical norm, before Charles II placed control of the money supply in 
  private hands with the English Free Coinage Act of 1666. 
Specifically, it means an assault on "fractional reserve banking". 
  If lenders are forced to put up 100pc reserve backing for deposits, they 
  lose the exorbitant privilege of creating money out of thin air. 
The nation regains sovereign control over the money supply. There are no more 
  banks runs, and fewer boom-bust credit cycles. Accounting legerdemain will 
  do the rest. That at least is the argument. 
Some readers may already have seen the IMF study, by Jaromir Benes and Michael 
  Kumhof, which came out in August and has begun to acquire a cult following 
  around the world. 
Entitled "The 
  Chicago Plan Revisited", it revives the scheme first put 
  forward by professors Henry Simons and Irving Fisher in 1936 during the 
  ferment of creative thinking in the late Depression. 
Irving Fisher thought credit cycles led to an unhealthy concentration of 
  wealth. He saw it with his own eyes in the early 1930s as creditors 
  foreclosed on destitute farmers, seizing their land or buying it for a 
  pittance at the bottom of the cycle. 
The farmers found a way of defending themselves in the end. They muscled 
  together at "one dollar auctions", buying each other's property 
  back for almost nothing. Any carpet-bagger who tried to bid higher was 
  beaten to a pulp. 
Benes and Kumhof argue that credit-cycle trauma - caused by private money 
  creation - dates deep into history and lies at the root of debt jubilees in 
  the ancient religions of Mesopotian and the Middle East. 
Harvest cycles led to systemic defaults thousands of years ago, with 
  forfeiture of collateral, and concentration of wealth in the hands of 
  lenders. These episodes were not just caused by weather, as long thought. 
  They were amplified by the effects of credit. 
The Athenian leader Solon implemented the first known Chicago Plan/New Deal in 
  599 BC to relieve farmers in hock to oligarchs enjoying private coinage. He 
  cancelled debts, restituted lands seized by creditors, set floor-prices for 
  commodities (much like Franklin Roosevelt), and consciously flooded the 
  money supply with state-issued "debt-free" coinage. 
The Romans sent a delegation to study Solon's reforms 150 years later and 
  copied the ideas, setting up their own fiat money system under Lex Aternia 
  in 454 BC. 
It is a myth - innocently propagated by the great Adam Smith - that money 
  developed as a commodity-based or gold-linked means of exchange. Gold was 
  always highly valued, but that is another story. Metal-lovers often conflate 
  the two issues. 
Anthropological studies show that social fiat currencies began with the dawn 
  of time. The Spartans banned gold coins, replacing them with iron disks of 
  little intrinsic value. The early Romans used bronze tablets. Their worth 
  was entirely determined by law - a doctrine made explicit by Aristotle in 
  his Ethics - like the dollar, the euro, or sterling today. 
Some argue that Rome began to lose its solidarity spirit when it allowed an 
  oligarchy to develop a private silver-based coinage during the Punic Wars. 
  Money slipped control of the Senate. You could call it Rome's shadow banking 
  system. Evidence suggests that it became a machine for elite wealth 
  accumulation. 
Unchallenged sovereign or Papal control over currencies persisted through the 
  Middle Ages until England broke the mould in 1666. Benes and Kumhof say this 
  was the start of the boom-bust era. 
One might equally say that this opened the way to England's agricultural 
  revolution in the early 18th Century, the industrial revolution soon after, 
  and the greatest economic and technological leap ever seen. But let us not 
  quibble. 
The original authors of the Chicago Plan were responding to the Great 
  Depression. They believed it was possible to prevent the social havoc caused 
  by wild swings from boom to bust, and to do so without crimping economic 
  dynamism. 
The benign side-effect of their proposals would be a switch from national debt 
  to national surplus, as if by magic. "Because under the Chicago Plan 
  banks have to borrow reserves from the treasury to fully back liabilities, 
  the government acquires a very large asset vis-à-vis banks. Our analysis 
  finds that the government is left with a much lower, in fact negative, net 
  debt burden."
The IMF paper says total liabilities of the US financial system - including 
  shadow banking - are about 200pc of GDP. The new reserve rule would create a 
  windfall [a large amount of money that is won or received unexpectedly]. This would be used for a "potentially a very large, buy-back 
  of private debt", perhaps 100pc of GDP. 
While Washington would issue much more fiat money, this would not be 
  redeemable. It would be an equity of the commonwealth, not debt. 
The key of the Chicago Plan was to separate the "monetary and credit 
  functions" of the banking system. "The quantity of money and the 
  quantity of credit would become completely independent of each other."
Private lenders would no longer be able to create new deposits "ex nihilo". 
  New bank credit would have to be financed by retained earnings. 
"The control of credit growth would become much more straightforward 
  because banks would no longer be able, as they are today, to generate their 
  own funding, deposits, in the act of lending, an extraordinary privilege 
  that is not enjoyed by any other type of business," says the IMF paper. 
"Rather, banks would become what many erroneously believe them to be 
  today, pure intermediaries that depend on obtaining outside funding before 
  being able to lend."
The US 
  Federal Reserve would take real control over the money supply for the 
  first time, making it easier to manage inflation. It was precisely for this 
  reason that Milton Friedman called for 100pc reserve backing in 1967. Even 
  the great free marketeer implicitly favoured a clamp-down on private money. 
The switch would engender a 10pc boost to long-arm economic output. "None 
  of these benefits come at the expense of diminishing the core useful 
  functions of a private financial system."
Simons and Fisher were flying blind in the 1930s. They lacked the modern 
  instruments needed to crunch the numbers, so the IMF team has now done it 
  for them -- using the `DSGE' stochastic model now de rigueur in high 
  economics, loved and hated in equal measure. 
The finding is startling. Simons and Fisher understated their claims. It is 
  perhaps possible to confront the banking plutocracy head without endangering 
  the economy. 
Benes and Kumhof make large claims. They leave me baffled, to be honest. 
  Readers who want the technical details can make their own judgement by 
  studying the text here. 
  
The IMF duo have supporters. Professor Richard Werner from Southampton 
  University - who coined the term quantitative easing (QE) in the 1990s -- 
  testified to Britain's Vickers Commission that a switch to state-money would 
  have major welfare gains. He was backed by the campaign group Positive Money 
  and the New Economics Foundation. 
The theory also has strong critics. Tim Congdon from International Monetary Research 
  says banks are in a sense already being forced to increase reserves by EU 
  rules, Basel III rules, and gold-plated variants in the UK. The effect has 
  been to choke lending to the private sector. 
He argues that is the chief reason why the world economy remains stuck in 
  near-slump, and why central banks are having to cushion the shock with QE. 
"If you enacted this plan, it would devastate bank profits and cause a 
  massive deflationary disaster. There would have to do `QE squared' to offset 
  it," he said. 
The result would be a huge shift in bank balance sheets from private lending 
  to government securities. This happened during World War Two, but that was 
  the anomalous cost of defeating Fascism. 
To do this on a permanent basis in peace-time would be to change in the nature 
  of western capitalism. "People wouldn't be able to get money from 
  banks. There would be huge damage to the efficiency of the economy," he 
  said. 
Arguably, it would smother freedom and enthrone a Leviathan state. It might be 
  even more irksome in the long run than rule by bankers. 
Personally, I am a long way from reaching an conclusion in this extraordinary 
  debate. Let it run, and let us all fight until we flush out the arguments. 
One thing is sure. The City of London will have great trouble earning its keep 
  if any variant of the Chicago Plan ever gains wide support. 
 
 
 
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