I have looked for awhile and just cannot find the information I am seeking. It seems that google has failed me, perhaps someone else will have better luck or already know a source for my needed information. When the Federal Reserve buys Treasury Securities, or makes a loan to a financial institution at the overnight rate, where does the money come from? I found one web-site which stated that all unused interest and fees collected from fed. activities were turned over to the treasury, returning the principle to wherever it came from, so the Fed. isn't building up a cash reserve overtime for it to loan out in the future. Does anyone have any reputable internet references which answer this question? I was under the impression that the Fed. had the authority to make such loans and purchases without securing a revenue source, in a sense conjuring the money out of thin air. Was I mistaken? I would like to thank anyone that knows a reference for the information I seek. This is not for school but the result of a monetary disagreement among friends.
12/20/2005 3:24:09 AM
Uhm...as I understand it "by pure fucking magic" is about as realistic an answer as any other.
12/20/2005 3:35:21 AM
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0912986212/103-2291087-1532606?v=glance&n=283155
12/20/2005 6:38:50 AM
12/20/2005 10:53:09 AM
According to my economics textbook:What happens to money the Fed earns?"The Federal Reserve banks are very unusual corporations. Member banks can neither sell their shares on the stock market nor expect to receive a large share of the Fed’s profits, most of which are given to the U.S. Treasury. Member banks earn a 6 percent annual dividend on their stock no matter how much the Fed actually earns in a given year.""[The Federal Reserve] earns interest income from its holdings of securities and from loans it makes to depository institutions. It earns, on average, more than $10 billion per year, but it returns the bulk of these earnings to the Treasury."Where does the Federal Reserve get its money?"The Fed pays for the purchase by crediting the deposit accounts of these banks at regional Federal Reserve banks. [...] The Fed can also pay for its purchase of government securities by issuing more Federal Reserve notes. This is another neat trick of the central bank—it can actually create currency. All the Fed needs to do is put in a call to the Bureau of Engraving and Printing and order a crisp, clean batch of new $10, $20, $50, and $100 bills to ship out to the banks in payment for the securities. The currency, of course, is just as much a liability of the Fed as the deposits it creates for banks."So, yeah, they just make that shit up.
12/20/2005 11:04:19 AM
w00t
12/20/2005 2:10:12 PM
Thanks A Tanzarian. What was the title of your economics book? Gracias
12/20/2005 3:23:54 PM
Economics by NCSU's very own Professor Hyman.
12/20/2005 5:17:53 PM
EarthDoggI'm not sure you understand the concept of fiat money. Today's dollar are not IOU's. The government doesn't promice to pay you anything.
12/20/2005 6:35:56 PM
Socko, Our fiat dollars are not IOUs. But they are based on debt. Our money has no intrinsic value and would be worthless if not for legal tender laws forcing us to accept it as payment. The Treasury Notes are the IOUs.The Federal Reserve, a semi-private cartel, has basically owned and controlled our currency since 1913. The gov't is stealing your purchasing power through inflation. We're not at the wheelbarrows of money for a loaf of bread yet, but something that cost $1.00 in 1913 -today will cost you $19.00.
12/20/2005 7:55:18 PM
12/20/2005 8:20:41 PM
Actually, majority opinion nowadays seems to be that the existance of the Federal Reserve caused the Great Depression. As an example, some economists compare the 1930 recession to the 1908 recession. By some accounts, the economy going into the 1908 recession was worse but through quick actions the banking system was able to save itself by suspending demand deposits (if you have money in the bank, you can write someone a check but you cannot withdraw cash). It was technically illegal, but it prevented widespread bank failures. It required the creation of a consensus among the vast majority of banks in order for it to work, but work it did because the bank owners knew the next run could be on their bank. Meanwhile, in 1930, the largest banks had the Federal Reserve to prevent their insolvency, so they refused to submit to a similar system, which resulted in widespread bank failures and ultimately a monetary collapse. [Edited on December 21, 2005 at 12:02 AM. Reason : .,.]
12/21/2005 12:00:58 AM
^I was making a joke related to the fed causing the depressionbecause if inflation is stealing consumers' purchasing power then deflation is giving them more purchasing power
12/21/2005 12:20:45 AM
So true L-Snark, the Federal Reserve has been a most destabilizing influence on our economy. The Fed has manipulated the money supply over the years creating numerous periods of chaotic economic contraction and expansion. You think we would've learned our lesson from the first three failed attempts at a central bank
12/21/2005 12:21:33 AM
1)Our money is "based" on debt.: False Normarlly the Fed uses Open Market operations (where it buys and sells t-bills on the secondary market) to expand and contract the money supply. Even though this is normally done using government bonds (t-bills ussually i think), which is a form of government debt, it could just as well be done using other assets. This was a legitmate policy question 5 years ago when we thought we might pay the debt down to zero. 2) Inflation is bad because it "errodes purchasing power" of our dollars:FalseA monetary expansion eventually increases the prices of all goods and services including labor. As prices go up our incomes will follow. Even though it costs more to buy that sweater at the GAP than it did last year, it will still have the same opportunity cost--it will still cost the same portion of your income. In the long run, changes in the money supply only afect "nominal" variables, not real ones. The same is true in the short run if a monetary expansion is fully anticpated. The expected inflation for next year will be reflected in forward contracts this year. So long as expectations match what really happens, there shouldn't be any problem. So we can conclude that inflation is only "bad" (has negative consequences for real variables) if it is unexpected, which ammounts to saying that inflation is bad when it is highly variable. IOW: Inflation is only bad when it effects real variables. WHo gives a shit how much a dollar is worth?3) The government uses inflation as a secret tax:FalseIn some countries this is true. In fact, in this country it has been true from time to time. But in the modern era this is not the case. In America today the only way inflation would benifit the government would be if it eroded the value its debt liabilities. This can only happen if inflation was not correctly factored into the nominal interest rate of government securities. Since the inflation rate has been fairly constant for about the past 15 years, chances are this hasn't been a factor of concern. In fact, if the goal of the modern US government is to use inflation to wear away the value of its debt, then we can clearly see that they suck at the job at best. In the late 1970's the government was having to offer double digit nominal interest rates on its securities to get people to buy them thanks to the double digit inflation rate the nation was witnessing. By the late 1980's the inflation rate had slowed to the single digits and investors holding bonds from the late '70's saw their real rate of return increase, which means the US government actually saw its total debt liability increase. IOW: Thanks to the Fed, the US government owes more money than it even intended. If the Fed was a cartel out to spare the US from paying its bills, why the hell did it SLOW the rate of inflation???[Edited on December 21, 2005 at 1:07 AM. Reason : ``]
12/21/2005 1:06:55 AM
the man behind the curtainyeahdon't look there
12/21/2005 1:07:58 AM
12/21/2005 1:53:29 AM
12/21/2005 1:58:15 AM
12/21/2005 2:00:03 AM
gold has about as many practical uses as green paper with dead presidents on the front anyways
12/21/2005 2:13:02 AM
12/21/2005 2:43:40 AM
Floods of gold also helped speed up the decline of the Spanish empire.As it is, I have a fair amount of faith in fiat. There's no physical limits, but the wealthy (ie, those in charge) tend to suffer more from printing too much of the stuff than the poor do.
12/21/2005 2:45:42 AM
What if Bill Gates opened up a mall where the unit of currency was heart shaped granite rocks? LIke you could buy a digital camera for 40 heart-shaped granite rocks?[Edited on December 21, 2005 at 2:49 AM. Reason : ]
12/21/2005 2:48:52 AM
n/m[Edited on December 21, 2005 at 3:11 AM. Reason : ]
12/21/2005 2:59:26 AM
EarthDogg
12/21/2005 9:18:33 AM
^An excellent question Socks. I will try to provide a response when I have a bit more time.
12/21/2005 10:48:39 AM