PeterZ wrote:That's an excellent analogy. I also agree with your description of the effective money supply. I still disagree that fractional reserve banking is implicitly disallowed by Langhorne's honest measure commandment.
One can view borrowed funds (gold coins) as the present value of the cost of executing a business plan. Once a bank lends an entity those funds, those funds get spent and turned into revenue generating assets. The spent funds find their way back to banks to be lent again. The number of gold coins haven't changed. The borrower doesn't have all the coins he/she borrowed. Instead those coins were traded for revenue generating assets in exchange for a contract that stipulates periodical interest payments and repayment of principal at a later date.
[snip elaboration of the point]
Hi Peter --
Thank you! re analogy.
Consider a coachworks in Chisholm. They used to make vehicles for the well-to-do to sit in and be pulled behind horses. The Queen-Empress has invested tax money in railroads, and the railroads want passenger-equipped rolling stock.
Our hypothetical coachworks, because its owners are ambitious, because they're very pro House of Tait, or because they're low on the swank list and delighted to find another business to move into, sinks its working capital and then some into air tools from Old Charis. That lets them bid on railroad contracts with much shorter completion times than their competition, and away they go; they're doing well, the railroad is happy, people are delighted to travel in a nice warm, wind-tight rail car at much greater speeds, and everyone wins.
Pressures of competition make the coachwork firm worry; more and more former coachmakers are trying to get into the railway business, and it's not like they can't buy air tools, too. So, in an attempt to differentiate themselves in the market, our example coachwork firm (its capital sunk) takes out a 10,000 mark loan to buy a big load of display-grade tropical hardwood from Emerald. Old Charis has lots of the stuff, too, but Emerald's got some unique and splendid trees that haven't been seen in Chisholm before. It's a big success; the railroad, busy differentiating proliferating passenger trains into first and second class (third class, with the implied lack of effective windows, is something Her Majesty isn't willing to stand for considering the Chisholmian winter) wants more first class coaches. So there's another 10,000 mark loan, and another batch of first-class coaches, and iterate for five years.
In a sense, it's the same money in each loan; that ten thousand marks has travelled to Emerald, and, in the Empire's internal trade, travelled back somehow, five times. (If it hadn't, the railroad would be able to pay for its new first class cars and it wouldn't be expanding, either. It's quite possible the gold never left its vault in Chisholm, it just had its ownership labels changed in a ledger as various bits of financial paperwork travelled around. You can make duplicates of the paperwork, while if the gold sinks, it's gone.)
The coachwork firm has prospered; it's trained its workers so they know more, work faster, and produce greater value per unit time than formerly. Those workers can quite reasonably expect their wages to increase.
Only the total amount of money in the Empire hasn't increased; that's set by the rate of gold mining. In the general case, gold mining hasn't got any faster and no one's found any new gold because worker productivity is increasing. (Only RFC knows this and arranged an out with Silverlode Island.) So this one 10,000 mark pile of gold has added, just in the value of the wood, 50,000 marks to the worth of the railroad's rolling stock. (If we count the value of the labour, the fact that all that wood is a passenger coach now, it could as easily be 200,000 or 250,000 marks. That gets into questions of defining value and labour compensation and muddies up the example with sticky prices, including prices for labour.)
The result of that is the money supply being spread over much more value; prices and wages in denominated terms should come down, because there's a fixed stock of money -- vigorous and rapidly circulating money, you'd have trouble getting the velocity of money much higher than a railroad expansion will produce -- having to denominate more and more economy as an industrial revolution takes hold and people can do more stuff, more kinds of stuff, and both happen faster.
The desire for some prices, notably the price of labour, to increase (labour is, after all, being much more productive) and the desire for prices to decrease (there is, after all, only this one fixed amount of money to denominate all the value in the economy, so the real value of gold is trying to go up) gets into conflict and the economy locks up in deflation.
The escape is to let the loans create money; if money is a purely notional unit of account, that's not problem. You create money to cover the increased value in the economy through interest on loans. If you can't do that, and the Writ says you can't because money is gold, not a notional unit of account, you've got a real problem with a fixed money supply. You're going to deflate because your money supply can't keep up with your rate of increase in value once you start to industrialize.
Pre-War and pre-Silverlode, if Charis is dealing with this money-supply problem by being a gold sink with respect to the entire rest of the planet, there's a reason people aren't too fond of them! Charisian manufactures really were hurting everyone else's economies, even if the prices are lower than they can achieve locally.
So, yeah, the Writ really does prevent fractional reserve banking; the essential thing about fractional reserve banking is the creation of money by the extension of credit and the Writ insists money is gold, not a notional unit of account.