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Financing the navy

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Re: Financing the navy
Post by PeterZ   » Sat Dec 13, 2014 3:26 am

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Sorry Graydon, but you are wrong.

Currency must be backed by honest measures of bullion. Charis does this. Circulating those honestly measured coins rapidly enough that they effectively act as more money when compared to an economy with much slower velocity of money doesn't debase the currency in any way. The same gold piece simply works harder by circulating much more quickly through the economy.

Fractional reserve banking only increases the effective money supply, if the money circulates quickly enough. If money doesn't circulate quickloy, the supply of money effectively supports a smaller economy. Your 20% reserve only matters when there is demand for loans. If the bank can only loan 40% of gold on hand, the 20% reserve doesn't matter. The banks don't have to issue bank notes. They can attract real gold coins in deposits(assuming deposit institutions). Once deposited they can lend those honest measured coins out. If those coins find their way back to the bank as additional deposits, they can be lent out again. This process creates no additional money, but makes the existing money supply support a greater amount of economic activity.

The velocity of money doesn't increase the actual money supply so much as increase the size of an economy that can be supported by any given monetary base. Fractional reserve banking in depository institutions simply accelerates the velocity of money more effectively than other forms of financing.
Last edited by PeterZ on Sat Dec 13, 2014 11:44 am, edited 2 times in total.
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Re: Financing the navy
Post by Tanstaafl   » Sat Dec 13, 2014 5:58 am

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Graydon,

Thank you for your very coherent explanations of monetary economics. I have been searching for the thoughts to put my understanding of Safeholdion economy into words. And I am very glad to have waited long enough to let you fill that void.

I have always seen Safehold as a single currency area like the USA. The nominal value of the dollar is everywhere the same, but the buying power on Manhattan is a lot less than the same dollar gets you in Louisiana. The church acts in this setting as the Federal government with its 20% taxes redistributing the money and balancing the economy.

Charis and Siddarmark becoming independent economies turns Safehold in a single currency area like the EU with its Euro. It will experience asymmetric shocks without automatic stabilizers.

The metal in the ground at Silverlode Island makes it possible to grow the economy and the monetary supply and stay on the gold standard. But it poses a huge challenge in putting the new coins in circulation without distorting the economy.
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Re: Financing the navy
Post by TN4994   » Sat Dec 13, 2014 1:05 pm

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Graydon wrote:
PeterZ wrote:The House of Qwentyn can lend all its wealth just as it did after the SoS. It can accept borrowed gold as payment and lend it out again. Those borrowed funds can be lent out again and again.


That quote from RFC

the provisions of the Writ which forbid debasing the currency have always been interpreted to mean that while paper notes may be issued by a bank, a nation, an archbishopric, or Mother Church herself, the issuing institution cannot issue notes for more bullion than it has actually on hand.

So if I come home from a busy and eventful few years with Charisian privateers and take my nice stack of pay and profits, all 5,000 marks of it, handily in gold, and deposit it with a bank for safekeeping -- I'm going to do something boring ashore, privateering involves way too many cannon and far too much screaming in terror -- how much have I increased that bank's loan capital?

As I understand the above, 5,000 marks. The bank can issue notes for up to the 5,000 marks I've just deposited.

If the bank loans my deposit as gold, it obviously can't loan more than the 5,000 marks. The bank equally obviously can't issue notes against the gold it has loaned out; that gold isn't "on hand", safely in the vault. If people come back and re-deposit their loans in gold as gold, the bank still never gets above 5,000 marks in gold from my deposit.

The bank can't receive notes and issue loans backed by those notes. The only way to issue notes is to have gold on hand, and notes aren't gold. (Or, rather, they represent gold, but they're only allowed to do it once, and they already have.)

In a proper fractional reserve system, the restriction on notes being backed by gold on hand wouldn't be there. The bank could issue notes against the value of deposited notes, because the system doesn't care what the material representation of the money happens to be. (It has better not; most of our money is electrons.)

In such a system, a reserve requirement of 20% (Baron Ironhill is a cautious man, but not too cautious) that 5,000 mark deposit can create another 20,000 marks worth of "bank money" in the form of loans by cycling through depositing and being-re-issued up to 80% of the deposit value. (I'll be forgiven if I don't try to exhume some very dusty math skills and sum the series?)

All 20,000 created marks go away as the loans are paid off, but the interest paid to the bank doesn't, that's the money that expands the economy.

Only on Safehold that's a heresy; Holy Writ says you can only issue notes for gold that's in your vault. Even Father Paitr would be upset with you. (And Baron Ironhill. And the bank. Though probably not in a way that involves dying horribly. Just lots and lots of penance.)

While a bank can't use deposited notes as the basis to issue more notes, while, more specifically, you're required to have bullion on hand as the basis of your bank notes, you can't have fractional reserve banking. Your money supply is fundamentally limited by your stock of whatever the backing substance is. (In this case gold. Lots of things have been used.) This keeps money from turning into the abstraction of economic activity you really want when industrializing.

What happens if the ex-privateer wants some of his gold back?
Does the bank say: "Sorry, but we've wrote these lines of credit?
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Re: Financing the navy
Post by Tanstaafl   » Sat Dec 13, 2014 2:05 pm

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TN4994 wrote:
Graydon wrote:That quote from RFC

the provisions of the Writ which forbid debasing the currency have always been interpreted to mean that while paper notes may be issued by a bank, a nation, an archbishopric, or Mother Church herself, the issuing institution cannot issue notes for more bullion than it has actually on hand.

So if I come home from a busy and eventful few years with Charisian privateers and take my nice stack of pay and profits, all 5,000 marks of it, handily in gold, and deposit it with a bank for safekeeping -- I'm going to do something boring ashore, privateering involves way too many cannon and far too much screaming in terror -- how much have I increased that bank's loan capital?

As I understand the above, 5,000 marks. The bank can issue notes for up to the 5,000 marks I've just deposited.

If the bank loans my deposit as gold, it obviously can't loan more than the 5,000 marks. The bank equally obviously can't issue notes against the gold it has loaned out; that gold isn't "on hand", safely in the vault. If people come back and re-deposit their loans in gold as gold, the bank still never gets above 5,000 marks in gold from my deposit.

The bank can't receive notes and issue loans backed by those notes. The only way to issue notes is to have gold on hand, and notes aren't gold. (Or, rather, they represent gold, but they're only allowed to do it once, and they already have.)

In a proper fractional reserve system, the restriction on notes being backed by gold on hand wouldn't be there. The bank could issue notes against the value of deposited notes, because the system doesn't care what the material representation of the money happens to be. (It has better not; most of our money is electrons.)

In such a system, a reserve requirement of 20% (Baron Ironhill is a cautious man, but not too cautious) that 5,000 mark deposit can create another 20,000 marks worth of "bank money" in the form of loans by cycling through depositing and being-re-issued up to 80% of the deposit value. (I'll be forgiven if I don't try to exhume some very dusty math skills and sum the series?)

All 20,000 created marks go away as the loans are paid off, but the interest paid to the bank doesn't, that's the money that expands the economy.

Only on Safehold that's a heresy; Holy Writ says you can only issue notes for gold that's in your vault. Even Father Paitr would be upset with you. (And Baron Ironhill. And the bank. Though probably not in a way that involves dying horribly. Just lots and lots of penance.)

While a bank can't use deposited notes as the basis to issue more notes, while, more specifically, you're required to have bullion on hand as the basis of your bank notes, you can't have fractional reserve banking. Your money supply is fundamentally limited by your stock of whatever the backing substance is. (In this case gold. Lots of things have been used.) This keeps money from turning into the abstraction of economic activity you really want when industrializing.

What happens if the ex-privateer wants some of his gold back?
Does the bank say: "Sorry, but we've wrote these lines of credit?



And here we have the beginning of a bank run.
If the bank has lend all the gold she has in deposit and can't borrow from another bank, it is finished.

This is why you need deposit insurance and a lender of last resort and all the other things that make modern banking so complex.

Banking should be safe and boring.

But as long as the currency is gold, modern banking is out of the question. With independent economies and a single currency wave after wave of depressions are highly likely. Perhaps not in Charis, where Owl can suggest a policy that keeps the economy balanced, but surely in the rest of Safehold.
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Re: Financing the navy
Post by PeterZ   » Sat Dec 13, 2014 2:46 pm

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Tanstaafl wrote:

And here we have the beginning of a bank run.
If the bank has lend all the gold she has in deposit and can't borrow from another bank, it is finished.

This is why you need deposit insurance and a lender of last resort and all the other things that make modern banking so complex.

Banking should be safe and boring.

But as long as the currency is gold, modern banking is out of the question. With independent economies and a single currency wave after wave of depressions are highly likely. Perhaps not in Charis, where Owl can suggest a policy that keeps the economy balanced, but surely in the rest of Safehold.


If the bank keeps sufficient reserves to accommodate withdrawals, there isn't a problem. Deposit insurance isn't really necessary. One might argue that by shifting risk to third parties, one encourages banks to engage in riskier behavior since their depositors are protected. At least that would be true for mandatory deposit insurance. If such insurance is optional, banks with sufficient capital and reserves can offer safety at a much lower cost. If default insurance is mandatory, the additional risk adds up to higher defaults and higher overall costs of default.

The lender of last resort would be helpful. Banks that face short term liquidity issues can borrow enough to satisfy an unusually large withdrawal without adversely impacting the bank's operations.
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Re: Financing the navy
Post by Graydon   » Sat Dec 13, 2014 3:32 pm

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TN4994 wrote:What happens if the ex-privateer wants some of his gold back?
Does the bank say: "Sorry, but we've wrote these lines of credit?


That depends on the terms of the deposit.

(Keep in mind that under pretty much all modern banking rules, once you make the deposit it stops being your money, which is why the bank is allowed to risk it by lending it and deposit insurance has a capped amount.)

So just as today you can stick money into a term deposit and not be able to withdraw it, in return for a better rate of interest than you get on your plain savings account, it's quite possible that the bank has some sort of investment account that's got a "no withdrawals" clause.

In general, though, if you're depositing plain savings, you can of course make withdrawals, and while the bank would like you to take notes, you probably want gold (and, if you were in Desnair, probably a neutral third party's scales...). This is why banks have reserve limits; you don't loan out all 5,000 marks, you loan out (under a 20% reserve limit and the uncomfortable awareness that there are some things about which the Church, the Courts, Baron Ironhill, and Their Majesties have no sense of humour whatsoever) not more than 4,000 of those 5,000 marks. That way you're OK under pretty much any circumstances short of a complete run on your bank. (Bank run = people are convinced a bank is insolvent and want their money out NOW. Since the bank won't have all the money it owes its depositors (really; you become a creditor of the bank when you deposit cash) on hand, it's been making loans with it, this will destroy the bank. People's money goes suddenly away, bills don't get paid, and economic chaos ensues.)

So the Empire (as some other posters have noted) needs a lender of last resort, much as the Bank of England was in the very early 19th ("lend freely at a penalty rate" being the rule for rescuing suddenly-insolvent banks), and would probably benefit from deposit insurance if they haven't got it.
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Re: Financing the navy
Post by Graydon   » Sat Dec 13, 2014 3:37 pm

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PeterZ wrote:The velocity of money doesn't increase the actual money supply so much as increase the size of an economy that can be supported by any given monetary base. Fractional reserve banking in depository institutions simply accelerates the velocity of money more effectively than other forms of financing.


Permit me an analogy.

The effective money supply is a function of the size of the money supply, the velocity of money, the distribution of the money (80% of the money is in 20% of the hands is very different from 80% of the money in 75% of the hands...) and probably some other stuff depending on how you want to model it.

Similarly, the lethality of an army battalion is a function of the number of rifles, the standard of training and thus accuracy of the troops, how prepared/dug in/well dispositioned they are, and so on.

Velocity of money is like the training standard; if you're talking about the British Army's Old Sweats in 1914, they are more lethal than their numbers would suggest because they're all such excellent shots. A high training standard is still, in the end, no substitute for there being more of them, and fractional reserve banking increases the size of the money supply; it's reinforcements. (In the modern form, it's Lord Kitchener's Armies and mass mobilization.)

(Securitization is a bit like inventing the machine gun.)
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Re: Financing the navy
Post by PeterZ   » Sat Dec 13, 2014 8:05 pm

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Graydon wrote:
Permit me an analogy.

The effective money supply is a function of the size of the money supply, the velocity of money, the distribution of the money (80% of the money is in 20% of the hands is very different from 80% of the money in 75% of the hands...) and probably some other stuff depending on how you want to model it.

Similarly, the lethality of an army battalion is a function of the number of rifles, the standard of training and thus accuracy of the troops, how prepared/dug in/well dispositioned they are, and so on.

Velocity of money is like the training standard; if you're talking about the British Army's Old Sweats in 1914, they are more lethal than their numbers would suggest because they're all such excellent shots. A high training standard is still, in the end, no substitute for there being more of them, and fractional reserve banking increases the size of the money supply; it's reinforcements. (In the modern form, it's Lord Kitchener's Armies and mass mobilization.)

(Securitization is a bit like inventing the machine gun.)


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.

Substitute a depository institution for a private bank. The primary difference is the size of the pool of funds able to be lent out. If that deposit bank has sufficient capital to cover losses and holds a reserve to cover withdrawals and operating needs, a great many transactions as described above can be funded. The honestly measured gold necessary to fund those transactions are used repeatedly and are in no way debased. The pool of money as a whole is not debased either. Those funds simply facilitate economic transactions that change raw materials and labor into revenue generating assets. The gold functions as a wealth transfer mechanism and the revenue generating assets function as the wealth creation and storage mechanisms for the borrower. The bank transfers its wealth from gold into a contract for future repayment. Interest is part of the wealth created in the process, but that wealth is stored in coins used to pay the interest for only so long as those coins aren't lent out again or used in some other way to support the bank's operations.


None of what I described runs afoul of Langhorne's honest measure mandate. That is unless RFC wants it to.
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Re: Financing the navy
Post by Keith_w   » Sun Dec 14, 2014 10:28 am

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PeterZ wrote:
Tanstaafl wrote:

And here we have the beginning of a bank run.
If the bank has lend all the gold she has in deposit and can't borrow from another bank, it is finished.

This is why you need deposit insurance and a lender of last resort and all the other things that make modern banking so complex.

Banking should be safe and boring.

But as long as the currency is gold, modern banking is out of the question. With independent economies and a single currency wave after wave of depressions are highly likely. Perhaps not in Charis, where Owl can suggest a policy that keeps the economy balanced, but surely in the rest of Safehold.


If the bank keeps sufficient reserves to accommodate withdrawals, there isn't a problem. Deposit insurance isn't really necessary. One might argue that by shifting risk to third parties, one encourages banks to engage in riskier behavior since their depositors are protected. At least that would be true for mandatory deposit insurance. If such insurance is optional, banks with sufficient capital and reserves can offer safety at a much lower cost. If default insurance is mandatory, the additional risk adds up to higher defaults and higher overall costs of default.

The lender of last resort would be helpful. Banks that face short term liquidity issues can borrow enough to satisfy an unusually large withdrawal without adversely impacting the bank's operations.


Not necessarily true. In Canada we have deposit insurance to $100,000 per account and strict capital limits. If you noticed, during the most recent international banking meltdown, none of the Canadian banks required bailing out. Playing at dice with depositors' money by providing sub-prime loans to people who should never have been approved, messing with derivatives, and other fun "let's make a really big bonus this year and who cares about the rest" type bank maneuvers can lead to bank failures or "too big to fail" attitudes which rewards risky behaviours.
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Re: Financing the navy
Post by fallsfromtrees   » Sun Dec 14, 2014 1:24 pm

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Tanstaafl wrote:

And here we have the beginning of a bank run.
If the bank has lend all the gold she has in deposit and can't borrow from another bank, it is finished.

This is why you need deposit insurance and a lender of last resort and all the other things that make modern banking so complex.

Banking should be safe and boring.

But as long as the currency is gold, modern banking is out of the question. With independent economies and a single currency wave after wave of depressions are highly likely. Perhaps not in Charis, where Owl can suggest a policy that keeps the economy balanced, but surely in the rest of Safehold.
PeterZ wrote:
If the bank keeps sufficient reserves to accommodate withdrawals, there isn't a problem. Deposit insurance isn't really necessary. One might argue that by shifting risk to third parties, one encourages banks to engage in riskier behavior since their depositors are protected. At least that would be true for mandatory deposit insurance. If such insurance is optional, banks with sufficient capital and reserves can offer safety at a much lower cost. If default insurance is mandatory, the additional risk adds up to higher defaults and higher overall costs of default.

The lender of last resort would be helpful. Banks that face short term liquidity issues can borrow enough to satisfy an unusually large withdrawal without adversely impacting the bank's operations.


And in fact is was the series of bank failures (due to runs on the bank's deposits) in 1907, that led to the creation of the US Federal Reserve system, which is in fact that lender of last resort. The Great Depression of 1929 was in part caused by the Fed failing in its duties, for whatever reason. A similar melt down in the Stock Market in 1989? didn't cause a major depression because the Fed did in fact do its job.
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