What Has Government Done to Our Money? Directing the Inflation
What Has Government Done to Our Money?
Murray N. Rothbard
III.
Government Meddling With Money
9. Central Banking
Directing the Inflation
Precisely how does the Central Bank go about its task of
regulating the private banks? By controlling the banks' "reserves"--their deposit accounts at the Central
Bank. Banks tend to keep a certain ratio of reserves to their
total deposit liabilities, and in the United States government
control is made easier by imposing a legal minimum ratio on the
bank. The Central Bank can stimulate inflation, then, by pouring
reserves into the banking system, and also by lowering the
reserve ratio, thus permitting a nationwide bank credit-expansion. If the banks keep a reserve/deposit ratio of 1:10,
then "excess reserves" (above the required ratio) of ten
million dollars will permit and encourage a nationwide bank
inflation of 100 million. Since banks profit by credit expansion,
and since government has made it almost impossible for them to
fail, they will usually try to keep "loaned up" to their
allowable maximum.
The Central Bank adds to the quantity of bank reserves by buying
assets on the market. What happens, for example, if the Bank buys
an asset (any asset) from Mr. Jones, valued at $1,000? The
Central Bank writes out a check to Mr. Jones for $1,000 to pay
for the asset. The Central Bank does not keep individual
accounts, so Mr. Jones takes the check and deposits it in his
bank. Jones' bank credits him with a $1,000 deposit, and presents
the check to the Central Bank, which has to credit the bank with
an added $1,000 in reserves. This $1,000 in reserves permits a
multiple bank credit expansion, particularly if added reserves
are in this way poured into many banks across the country.
If the Central Bank buys an asset from a bank directly, then the
result is even clearer; the bank adds to its reserves, and a base
for multiple credit expansion is established.
Undoubtedly, the favorite asset for Central Bank purchase has
been government securities. In that way, the government assures a
market for its own securities. Government can easily inflate the
money supply by issuing new bonds, and then orders its Central
Bank to purchase them. Often the Central Bank undertakes to
support the market price of government securities at a certain
level, thereby causing a flow of securities into the Bank, and a
consequent perpetual inflation.
Besides buying assets, the Central Bank can create new bank
reserves in another way: by lending them. The rate which the
Central Bank charges the banks for this service is the
"rediscount rate." Clearly, borrowed reserves are not as
satisfactory to the banks as reserves that are wholly theirs,
since there is now pressure for repayment. Changes in the
rediscount rate receive a great deal of publicity, but they are
clearly of minor importance compared to the movements in the
quantity of bank reserves and the reserve ratio.
When the Central Bank sells assets to the banks or the public, it
lowers bank reserves, and causes pressure for credit contraction
and deflation--lowering--of the money supply. We have seen,
however, that governments are inherently inflationary;
historically, deflationary action by the government has been
negligible and fleeting. One thing is often forgotten: deflation
can only take place after a previous inflation; only pseudo-receipts, not gold coins, can be retired and liquidated.