Making Economic Sense
Making
Economic Sense
by Murray Rothbard
(Contents
by Publication Date)
Chapter 79
Anatomy Of The Bank Run
It was a scene familiar to any nostalgia buff:
all-night lines waiting for the banks (first in
Ohio, then in Maryland) to open; pompous but mendacious assurances by
the bankers that all is
well and that the people should go home; a stubborn insistence by
depositors to get their money
out; and the consequent closing of the banks by government, while at
the same time the
banks were permitted to stay in existence and collect the debts due
them by their borrowers.
In other words, instead of government protecting
private property and enforcing voluntary
contracts, it deliberately violated the property of the depositors by
barring them from retrieving
their own money from the banks.
All this was, of course, a replay of the early
1930s: the last era of massive runs on banks.
On the surface the weakness was the fact that the failed banks were
insured by private or state
deposit insurance agencies, whereas the banks that easily withstood the
storm were insured by the
federal government (FDIC for commercial banks; FSLIC for savings and
loan banks).
But why? What is the magic elixir possessed by the
federal government that neither
private firms nor states can muster? The defenders of the private
insurance agencies noted that
they were technically in better financial shape than FSLIC or FDIC,
since they had greater
reserves per deposit dollar insured. How is it that private firms, so
far superior to government in
all other operations, should be so defective in this one area? Is there
something unique about
money that requires federal control?
The answer to this puzzle lies in the anguished
statements of the savings and loan banks
in Ohio and in Maryland, after the first of their number went under
because of spectacularly
unsound loans. "What a pity," they in effect complained, "that the
failure of this one unsound
bank should drag the sound banks down with them!"
But in what sense is a bank "sound" when one
whisper of doom, one faltering of public
confidence, should quickly bring the bank down? In what other industry
does a mere rumor or
hint of doubt swiftly bring down a mighty and seemingly solid firm?
What is there about banking
that public confidence should play such a decisive and overwhelmingly
important role?
The answer lies in the nature of our banking
system, in the fact that both commercial
banks and thrift banks (mutual-savings and savings-and-loan) have been
systematically engaging
in fractional-reserve banking: that is, they have far less cash on hand
than there are demand
claims to cash outstanding. For commercial banks,
the reserve fraction is now about 10
percent; for the thrifts it is far less.
This means that the depositor who thinks he has
$10,000 in a bank is misled; in a
proportionate sense, there is only, say, $1,000 or less there. And yet,
both the checking depositor
and the savings depositor think that they can withdraw their money at
any time on demand.
Obviously, such a system, which is considered fraud when practiced by
other businesses, rests on
a confidence trick: that is, it can only work so long as the bulk of
depositors do not catch on to
the scare and try to get their money out. The confidence is essential,
and also misguided. That is
why once the public catches on, and bank runs begin, they are
irresistible and cannot be stopped.
We now see why private enterprise works so badly in
the deposit insurance business. For
private enterprise only works in a business that is legitimate and
useful, where needs are being
fulfilled. It is impossible to "insure" a firm, even less so an
industry, that is inherently insolvent.
Fractional reserve banks, being inherently insolvent, are uninsurable.
What, then, is the magic potion of the federal
government? Why does everyone trust the
FDIC and FSLIC even though their reserve ratios are lower than private
agencies, and though
they too have only a very small fraction of total insured deposits in
cash to stem any bank run?
The answer is really quite simple: because everyone realizes, and
realizes correctly, that only the
federal government--and not the states or private firms--can print
legal tender dollars. Everyone
knows that, in case of a bank run, the U.S. Treasury would simply order
the Fed to print enough
cash to bail out any depositors who want it. The Fed has the unlimited
power to print dollars, and
it is this unlimited power to inflate that stands behind the current
fractional reserve banking
system.
Yes, the FDIC and FSLIC "work," but only because
the unlimited monopoly power to
print money can "work" to bail out any firm or person on earth. For it
was precisely bank runs, as
severe as they were that, before 1933, kept the banking system under
check, and prevented any
substantial amount of inflation.
But now bank runs--at least for the overwhelming
majority of banks under federal
deposit insurance--are over, and we have
been paying and will continue to pay the
horrendous price of saving the banks: chronic and unlimited inflation.
Putting an end to inflation requires not only the
abolition of the Fed but also the abolition
of the FDIC and FSLIC. At long last, banks would be treated like any
firm in any other industry.
In short, if they can't meet their contractual obligations they will be
required to go under and
liquidate. It would be instructive to see how many banks would survive
if the massive
governmental props were finally taken away.
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