| ▲ | CraigJPerry 2 days ago | |||||||
Canada is not an exception and operates via the same mechanism https://lop.parl.ca/sites/PublicWebsite/default/en_CA/Resear... Fractional reserve is a model only for textbooks, it is not an accurate model of how the banking system works in most western economies with a central bank and sovereign currency today. >> The more useful limitation in economic terms and in legal terms is on the amount of capital banks need to hold Well this is usually the biggest of several limitations which impact whether a loan would be profitable to make for a bank or not so i don't entirely disagree but this is a legislative control, there's no "economic terms" here because in general no school of economics understands this or has anything to say about this control which you correctly point out exists and is central to loan decision making. People can argue about the degree of centrality because it's not the only factor so let me put it this way: it's central in a way which any notion of "fractional reserve" is simply not. | ||||||||
| ▲ | eru 2 days ago | parent [-] | |||||||
Your link barely says anything about private sector money creation and doesn't contradict what I said. I'm confused. Your view of fractional reserve banking is rather.. unorthodox. Pray, tell me, why do banks bother with deposits, then? | ||||||||
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