The bank pockets only the difference in the interest rates....omgooooooood.........
They pocket whatever they make while gambling your deposit while it is on deposit.
Evidently you don't understand that the multiplier is achieved by deposits, on which interest is paid.
They pocket any and all loans weather they are paid off or not. If you pay it off they pocket the full principal plus the interest....if you don't pay it off they pocket the real property(repo) AND the taxpayer absorbs the loss on paper, which affects them when they spend their paper...double wham... Let's not forget that banks don't go get money from the vault when you get a loan....they fractionally lend, meaning they lend more than they have.....they create a "new deposit" that they "lend" you after you sign for it...fractional reserve lending also keeps people from being told "no" when they go to withdraw from deposits....
Again, you don't actually understand what the multiplier is. Before you offer your criticism, you really do need to understand that.
They pocket money cashing their own instruments.....cash a BOA check at BOA without an account and see if they don't charge you a couple bucks. That is the very definition of a "bad check", not being cashable for face value and all.
Don't take payments in checks if you expect to pay a transaction fee, then. Simple enough.
They pocket by being able to use newly created funds drawn on the good name of the good people of the US by their politician buddy's before the market knows they exist. If you get $100m at the source....hot off the press....they you spend it before it inflates....that is huge.
"They" is the US taxpayer. So you're complaining that the US taxpayer profits before any of the banks?
You are describing "banks" as they were when they were purely private entities without protection from the government.
The reason there wasn't a huge wave of bank failures in 2008 is because they were bailed out hello??
Most banks didn't need to be bailed out. TARP was engineered in an effort to cast public confidence on the entire banking sector, not out of necessity. Indeed, this should be apparent from the fact that most banks paid their TARP loans back very quickly--they never needed or wanted the money but were forced to take it by Hank Paulson.
C'mon we have all read Modern Money Mechanics......You can't have it both ways, admitting you know what fractional reserve lending is, justifying it as "better for all" and raising the standard of living for all and then pretending you think banks operate like mom and pop operations by only making the difference of interest, as they did before fractional reserve lending existed.....
According to your understanding of banking, the banks should have trillions of dollars in additional revenue. I present the same challenges to you that I presented to Kynes in the past (which he could not meet): point out the extra trillions your understanding requires to exist
Gold and silver do not go up or down, only what they are measured against goes up and down. We know this is true because we know we can print as much money as we want, but we can't mine all the gold we want, this stability is what provides the stability that PEOPLE use to create wealth.
If population isn't fixed and the supply of gold and silver is fixed, how can you claim that the prices of those commodities are stable? You cannot.
Gold is worth more with 7 billion people than it is with 1 billion people. Everyone else in this forum, arguing for and against me right now, will agree with that, and yet your statement does not.
The POTUS could personally come over to your house, right now, quite literally, and fill your house with brand new Federal Reserve Notes. The whole world, (maybe not collectivist they mostly philosophize about how to get stuff done)can not possibly even fill your living room with new gold. That is soooooooo much easier to understand than your complicated socialist stuff.
Edit: than socialist stuff.....no "your"
You never did answer my question about the practicability of the gold standard, did you? Tell me, with 7 billion people and $80 trillion of economic activity, how can the same amount of gold be used versus having 2 billion people and $5 trillion of economic activity?