Placeholder Image

字幕列表 影片播放

  • How is money created? Where does it come from? Who benefits?

  • And what purpose does it serve?

  • What is a money system? What is the money behind the money system?

  • For centuries the mechanics of the money system have remained hidden

  • from the prying eyes of the populace.

  • Yet its impact, both on a national and international level, is perhaps unsurpassed,

  • for it is the monetary system that provides the foundations

  • for international dominance and national control.

  • Today, as these very foundations are being shaken by crises,

  • the need for open and honest dialogue on the future of the monetary system

  • has never been greater.

  • This economic crisis is like a cancer.

  • If you just wait and wait, thinking this is going to go away,

  • just like a cancer it's going to grow,

  • and it's going to be too late. What I would say to everybody is, get prepared.

  • This is not a time right now for wishful thinking

  • that the government is going to sort things out.

  • The governments don't rule the world: Goldman Sachs rules the world.

  • "We're on the verge of a perfect storm".

  • In opposition lie corrupt and entrenched interests that lurk in the corridors of power,

  • for whom there are no reasons to relinquish privileges that they feel are justly deserved.

  • Has he got a reform plan for the NHS? [SHOUT: No!] Has he got a police reform plan? [No!]

  • Has he got a plan to cut the deficit? [No!]

  • Order! Misorder! Order!

  • Do you trust the government?

  • Try to calm down and behave like an adult, and if you can't, if it's beyond you,

  • leave the chamber. Get out. We'll manage without you!

  • "This is the banking fraternities feeding station.

  • There's no coincidence that boom and bust became

  • a real cyclical issue around about the 1700's,

  • when William Paterson founded the Bank of England.

  • This is intolerable behaviour as far as the public is concerned. No, it's not funny!

  • Only in your mind is it funny. It's not funny at all, it's disgraceful.

  • One Solution, Revolution!

  • The system is inherently unstable as a result of

  • the international power it provides to the dominant parties,

  • for at the heart of it lies the idea of; how can I get something for nothing?

  • Statistical analysis has found that every time an empire begins to near its own demise,

  • you'll find that its currency will be debased.

  • There is no guide to how this whole system operates.

  • To give you an example, a researcher at the BBC working on a Robert Peston documentary

  • went to the Bank of England and said, "Can you give me a guide to how money is created?"

  • And they just said, "No".

  • This documentary will investigate and explain this ever changing system,

  • and the impact it has both on a national and international level.

  • 97% Owned

  • How is money created?

  • Notes and coins

  • In 2010 the total UK money supply stood at 2.15 trillion pounds.

  • 2.6 % of this total was physical cash, 53.5 billion.

  • The rest, 2.1 trillion, or 97.4% of the total money supply was commercial bank money.

  • The 3% of money is created through the central bank

  • and that money essentially, if you created a £10 note you could sell that to a bank

  • to put into their ATM and the bank would have to repay that £10 or buy it for £10.

  • There would be no interest charged on that money,

  • but that money is then essentially transferred to the Treasury

  • and it's a form of fundraising for the government. It's called seigniorage.

  • Seigniorage: Profit made by a government by issuing currency.

  • The difference between the face value of notes and coins, and their production costs.

  • When the Bank Of England creates a £10 note,

  • it costs it about 3 or 4 pence to actually print that note

  • and it sells it to a high street banks at face value, so for £10 and the profit,

  • the difference between printing the note and actually selling it for £10 goes directly to the treasury.

  • So, in effect all the profit that we get on creating physical money, bank notes, goes to the Treasury

  • and it reduces how much taxes we have to pay. Over the last 10 years, that's raised about £18 billion.

  • In 1948 notes and coins constituted 17% of the total money supply.

  • This was one contributing factor in the government's ability to finance post-war reconstruction.

  • This included the establishment of the NHS.

  • In only 60 years notes and coins have shrunk to less than 3%.

  • Prior to 1844 bank notes were created by private banks

  • and the government did not profit from their creation.

  • Pre-industrialisation there was multiple forms of money co-existing,

  • and so the rise of government-sponsored fiat money is a relatively recent phenomenon.

  • In the 1840s there was no law to stop banks from creating their own bank notes.

  • So they used to issue paper notes as kind of a representative of what you had in the bank account.

  • Instead of you taking your heavy metal coins out of the bank

  • and then going and paying somebody with them

  • you could get your paper which said how much money you had in the bank

  • and you could give that to somebody

  • and they could use that to go and get the heavy metal coins from the banks.

  • Now over time these paper notes became as good as money.

  • People would use paper notes instead of going and getting real money from the bank

  • and obviously as soon as the banks realised that what theywere creating

  • had become the dominant type of money in the economy,

  • they realised that by creating more of it they could generate profits.

  • They can just print up some new notes lend it and get the interest on top of them.

  • And they did that up until the 1840s.

  • In the1840s they pushed it just a little bit too far

  • and that caused inflation, destabilising the economy. So in 1844,

  • the Conservative Government of Robert Peel actually passed a law

  • that took the power to create money away from the commercial banks

  • and brought it back to the state.

  • So since then the Bank of England

  • has been the only organisation authorised to create paper notes.

  • Since then everything has gone digital and what we now use as money

  • is the digital numbers that commercial banks can create out of nothing.

  • The problem was that they did not include in that legislation the deposits,

  • the demand deposits, held in banks by individuals or electronic forms of money

  • which essentially is what those demand deposits are.

  • Today most of the money in circulation is electronic money,

  • it's bank demand deposits that sit in our accounts.

  • So in a way the legislation's got to catch up with the developments in

  • electronic money and the way that banks actually operate.

  • Money held in bank accounts are called demand deposits.

  • This is an accounting term the banks use when they create credit.

  • Banks follow the same process when they create loans.

  • All money held in bank accounts is an accounting entry.

  • Commercial bank money

  • The reality is now that most money is not paper and it's not metal coins it's digital.

  • It's just numbers in a computer system.

  • It's your Visa debit card. It's your electronic ATM card.

  • It's this - plastic. It's numbers in a computer system,

  • you move money from one computer system to another.

  • It's all a big database and this digital money

  • is what we are now using to make payments with.

  • It's what we actually use to run the economy.

  • I think a lot of people in the UK probably think that the government or the central bank

  • is in control of most money in circulation and issues new money into circulation,

  • but that's not the case.

  • It's private banks that create the vast majority of new money in circulation

  • and also decide how it's allocated.

  • The official terminology for this accounting entry is commercial bank money.

  • When banks issue loans to the public, they create new commercial bank money.

  • When a customer repays a loan, commercial bank money is destroyed.

  • The banks keep the interest as profit.

  • There're a lot of misconceptions about the way banks work.

  • There was a poll done by the Cobden Centre

  • where they asked people how they thought banks actually operated.

  • Around 30% of the public think that when you put your money into the bank

  • it just stays there and it's safe,

  • and you can understand why because every child has a piggy bank

  • where you keep putting money in

  • and then when it's a rainy day you smash it and you take that money out and you spend it.

  • So a lot of people keep this idea of banking

  • it's somewhere safe to keep your money so that it's there for whenever you need it.

  • Another, the other 60% of people assume that when you put your money in,

  • that money is then being moved across to somebody who wants to borrow it.

  • So you have a pensioner who keeps saving money her entire life

  • and then her life savings have been lent

  • to some young people who want to buy a house.

  • But actually banks don't work like that.

  • "It's basically an accounting trick. Banks create money. They don't lend it.

  • When a bank gives out what is called a loan,

  • it basically pretends that you have deposited the money. It has to invent the liability.

  • this is how the money supply is created." (Professor Richard Werner)

  • At the moment in the UK money creation and control is largely in the hands of private banks.

  • About 97 to 98% of money that's created is created as bank "debt money" you could call it,

  • when banks issue money into circulation as loans essentially.

  • This is a very poorly understood fact.

  • It's not a conspiracy theory, it's not a crackpot theory,

  • it's the way the Bank of England describes the process.

  • When banks make loans they create new money.

  • "by far the largest role in creating money is played by the banking sector.

  • When banks make loans they create additional deposits for those that have borrowed the money."

  • (Paul Tucker - Deputy Governor of the Bank of England)

  • A few economists will realise the way the money system works

  • but if you don't realise the way that money works and you think that

  • everybody saving is going to work well for the economy,

  • what really happens once you understand the way the money system works,

  • is that if everybody starts saving the amount of money in the economy shrinks and we have a recession.

  • Most economists don't have this full picture. They don't understand all the elements of the system.

  • They rely on assumptions, on received knowledge without actually going into the details

  • and money is the centre of the economy. If you don't understand where it comes from,

  • who creates it and when it gets created then how can you understand the entire economy?

  • When the vast majority of money that we use now is not cash but electronic money

  • then whoever's creating the electronic money is getting the proceeds of creating that money

  • and obviously creating electronic money is much more profitable than creating cash

  • because you don't have any production cost at all.

  • So while we've got £18 billion over the course of the decade in profit from creating cash,

  • the banks have actually created £1.2 trillion.

  • Between 1998 and 2007 the UK money supply tripled.

  • £1.2 trillion was created by banks, whilst £18 billion was created by the Treasury.

  • A lot of people think when I say this or when you say this

  • or when Positive Money say this, that we are all a bunch of nutters.

  • But on the 9th of March in 2009, the governor of the Federal Reserve, Ben Bernanke,

  • gave the first ever broadcast interview the Governor of the Central Bank

  • of the United States of America had ever given.

  • The day before that he had bailed out AIG,

  • to the tune of about US$160 billion.

  • So the journalist says to him: "Now Mr. Bernanke where did you get $160 billion to bail out AIG?"

  • Is that tax money that the Fed is spending?

  • It's not tax money. The banks have accounts with the Fed,

  • much the same way that you have an account in a commercial bank.

  • So to lend to a bank we simply use the computer

  • to mark up the size of the account they have with the Fed.

  • So it's much more akin, although not exactly the same,

  • to printing money than it is to borrowing.

  • Banks create new money whenever they extend credit, buy existing assets,

  • or make payments on their own account, which mostly involves expanding their assets.

  • When a bank buys securities, such as a Corporate or Government Bond

  • it adds the bond to its assets and increases the company's bank deposits

  • by the corresponding amount.

  • New commercial bank money enters circulation

  • when people spend the credit that has been granted to them by banks.

  • I found that talking on the door step from August 2009 around to the general election,

  • knocking on the doors, is that when we tried to explain how the money system works,

  • there's an almost in-built refusal of people to accept that such a bizarre situation could actually exist.

  • "Ah no, it can't possibly. What do you mean? ...banks don't create money out of thin air.

  • That's ridiculous. They can't do that. They lend out their depositors' money."

  • Most people have an idea of how money is. They are used to their own way of handling money

  • and they try and implement their own idea of how their small household economy works

  • into the national economy.

  • And of course it just doesn't work out at all.

  • By 2008 the outstanding loan portfolio of bank created credit,

  • also known as commercial bank money, stood at over 2 trillion.

  • As recently as 1982 the ratio of notes and coins to bank deposits was 1:12.

  • By 2010 the ratio had risen to 1:37.

  • That is for every pound of Treasury created money there were 37 pounds of bank created money.

  • In the 10 years prior to the 2007 crisis,

  • the UK commercial bank money supply expanded by between 7% to 10% every year.

  • A growth rate of 7% is the equivalent of doubling the money supply every 10 years.

  • The amount of money they're creating out of nothing is just incredible,

  • 1.2 trillion in the last 10 years.

  • That money is being distributed according to the priorities of the banking sector,

  • not the priorities of society.

  • The banking sector itself grew from 1980 $2.5 trillion to $40 trillion by assets.

  • In 1980, global bank assets were worth 20 times the then global economy.

  • By 2006 they were worth 75 times, according to the UN.

  • As the following chart shows, total bank assets of UK banks as a percentage of GDP

  • remained relatively stable at 50-60% up to the end of the 1960s.

  • After that they shot up dramatically.

  • And the real money in the world to be made today is not by producing anything at all.

  • It's simply by forms of speculating - basically making money from money.

  • That's the most profitable and by far and away

  • the biggest form of economic activity that exists in the world today.

  • Today, banks are no longer restricted by how much they can lend,

  • and as such, how much new credit they can create out of nothing.

  • They are restricted solely by their own willingness to lend.

  • The issue with allowing banks to create money - there's two main issues.

  • Firstly - the fact that they create this money when they make loans,

  • so it guarantees that we have to borrow all our money for the economy from the banks.

  • As such, to have a healthy growing economy, the Government needs to put in place strategies

  • to allow for ever-increasing debt.

  • The only way the Government can create additional purchasing power

  • is by getting itself and us into more debt.

  • The second big issue with allowing the banks to create money

  • is that they have the incentive to always create more.

  • They create more money if they issue a loan.

  • They get the bonuses, the commissions and the incentives to lend as much as possible.

  • You have to develop a sales culture. What did they do?

  • They recruited an amazing guy, a lovely guy, Andy Hornby, who came from Asda

  • to turn the bank into a supermarket retailing operation.

  • If you trust bankers to control the money supply,

  • the money supply will just grow and grow and grow, as will the level of debt,

  • until the point where it crashes, when some people can't repay the debt and then they'll stop lending.

  • You hear politicians and journalists saying We've been living beyond our means.

  • We've become dependent on debt. We need to reign in our spending and live within our means.

  • It's not possible in the current system.

  • The reason why everyone is in debt now is not because they have been recklessly borrowing.

  • We haven't borrowed all this money from an army of pensioners

  • who've been saving up their whole lives.

  • Money in the current system is debt. It's created when the banks make loans.

  • So the only way, in the current system, that we can have any money in the economy,

  • the only way we can have money for business to trade,

  • is if we've borrowed it all from the banks.

  • And it's the very opposite of what the Tory Party is arguing today,

  • which is that you have to create savings before you can help the National Health Service.

  • And it's because economists have completely confused those things,

  • both in monetary policy terms, but also in economic thinking,

  • and because most people still harbour the old fashioned view

  • that you need savings before you can invest,

  • that we have the mess that we're in today.

  • One of the reasons we find it difficult to understand the banking system and credit creation,

  • is that we leave school without any money

  • and we go and get a job working as an apprentice to a plumber.

  • We work really hard all month and at the end of the month somebody puts money in our bank,

  • and so for us the logic is: you work and then you get money, you get savings.

  • In reality you would never have got that job if credit hadn't been created in the first instance.

  • It's a really important conceptual misunderstanding

  • and it isn't something that the public just is guilty of. Economists don't understand this stuff.

  • Money doesn't come out of economic activity.

  • A lot of people I've come across kind of assume that if you have got businesses

  • and you've got people doing things, that somehow money emerges

  • out of the process of people doing things,

  • making things and growing things, selling things and producing things,

  • that somehow money just emerges. It's not. It's like oiling a car. You have to put it in.

  • When I see David Cameron talking about how we need an economy not based on debt,

  • but we need an economy based on savings,

  • he just doesn't know what he's saying. It's ridiculous.

  • It's absolutely absurd and it shows his complete lack of understanding

  • of how our money system actually works.

  • What he is essentially saying is that We need an economy with no money.

  • If everyone was saving we'd have mass disappearing of money,

  • which is essentially what a bank write-off is - people defaulting on their debt -

  • which essentially is just money disappearing.

  • But if people weren't taking on the debt then it's just such a joke.

  • It's such an amateur understanding of how our economy works

  • and how the monetary system works and how money is actually created.

  • So I really do get a laugh out of watching what people are actually saying.

  • They are all just regurgitating what they have learnt off each other

  • and it just really gets on my nerves when I hear people talking about

  • 'Yeah, we need more regulations, we need to regulate the way banks are and the bonuses'

  • It's all just one big smoke screen

  • and working on all the symptoms of a greater disease which is really

  • you need to look at the money system - the way money is created.

  • If we don't want any debt then we don't want any money and we want a moneyless economy

  • with the exception of the 3% that's created debt free.

  • You know, it's a paradox under the current system.

  • If we as the public go into further debt

  • then that's going to put more money into the economy

  • and we're going to have a boom. When you have a boom,

  • it's easier to borrow, so people get into even more debt.

  • And eventually this cycle continues. It gets easier and easier to get into debt

  • until some people get over-indebted

  • and then they default. They can't re-pay their mortgage.

  • That's what happened first in sub-prime America.

  • And then it brings through a wave of defaults,

  • which will ripple across the entire economy. The banks go insolvent.

  • Then we're into a financial crisis and then the banks stop lending.

  • They were excessively lending in the boom and then they stop lending

  • and that makes the recession even worse.

  • People lose their jobs and then they become even more dependent on debt just to survive.

  • You know we have a system where we have to borrow in order to have an economy.

  • We have to be in debt to the banks. That guarantees a massive profit for the banks.

  • This is the boom-bust cycle.

  • And I've said before, Mr Deputy Speaker, no return to boom and bust.

  • Net bank lending must forever increase.

  • We are paying interest on every single pound. Even if you think the money belongs to you,

  • somebody somewhere is paying interest on that money.

  • The banking system has such a huge impact on the world,

  • but only because it supplies our nation's money supply.

  • We have to protect them. We have to subsidise them. We have to allow them to continue

  • because the disaster of a bank collapse affects us all in a huge way.

  • Anyone who says that we shouldn't have bailed out the banks

  • doesn't quite understand the nature of our monetary system.

  • That's like eliminating a huge chunk of our money.

  • But also bailing out the banks is perpetuating a system which is never going to work anyway.

  • So whatever we do we are always going to have this cycle

  • until we separate how money is created

  • and the activities of banking. Then the banks could do as they wish.

  • They'd be a normal business like everyone else.

  • There's a major democratic issue here as well.

  • You have these private profit-seeking banks

  • creating up to £200 billion a year and pumping that into the economy wherever they want,

  • basically, wherever it suits them, whether they're pumping it into these toxic derivatives,

  • or putting money into housing bubbles, just making housing more expensive.

  • £200 billion in 2007 of new money coming into the economy, created out of nothing

  • and where that gets spent determines the shape of our economy effectively.

  • So if we are going to allow anybody to create new money out of nothing,

  • then we should at least have some democratic control over how that money's used.

  • I mean, would we rather have had that money used for health care,

  • or to deal with some of the environmental issues or to reduce poverty,

  • or would we rather have it to make houses more expensive

  • so none of us can afford to live in a house.

  • You can see it as a subsidy, a special super subsidy to the banks, for the right to create money,

  • which should be for the benefit of the public and spent through a democratic process.

  • Central bank reserve currency

  • There's also another form of money, which is effectively an electronic version of cash

  • and it's a type of money that the commercial banks use themselves

  • to make payments between each other.

  • The high street banks don't want to be carrying around huge quantities of money

  • because it's dangerous, inconvenient and expensive.

  • You have to hire security guards for that type of money.

  • So what they do is they pay each other in what is an electronic version of cash

  • which in the industry is known as Central Bank Reserves.

  • They keep this electronic cash in accounts at the Bank of England.

  • But as a member of the public you can't access this electronic cash,

  • you can't get an account with the Bank of England.

  • What they do is they effectively sell this central bank money to the banks

  • and they do this by creating it out of nothing

  • and using this money to pay for bonds, to buy bonds from the high street banks.

  • So, the high street bank will come along with a bond which is effectively government debt

  • and it will give it to the Bank of England and in return the Bank of England

  • will type some new numbers into the bank's account at the Bank of England.

  • So effectively they are creating central bank reserves out of nothing.

  • The Bank of England creates Central Bank Reserves

  • by increasing the available credit in the settlement bank's account with the Bank of England.

  • The settlement bank in return posts bonds, or sells assets as collateral for the reserves.

  • A total of 46 banks hold Central Reserve Accounts at the Bank of England.

  • Smaller or foreign banks hold accounts with one of these 46 banks

  • to allow them to accept or make payments in pounds sterling.

  • Prior to March 2009, the Bank of England would ask each of the

  • major settlement banks how much reserve currency they needed.

  • The settlement banks would then swap a bond for the reserve currency

  • and agree to repurchase the bond for a specific amount

  • at a specified future date. The settlement banks would then receive interest

  • at base or policy rate for the central bank reserves they held.

  • Since the crisis, settlement banks central reserves have shot up dramatically.

  • Significance of central bank reserves

  • When bank customers transfer funds from their account to another person's account,

  • a process called Intra-Day Clearing occurs.

  • The amount of central reserve currency Bank A has at the Bank of England

  • is reduced by the corresponding amount that Bank B receives.

  • This is the importance of central reserve currency to banks.

  • Before the credit crisis,

  • if a bank was short of central reserves at the Bank of England to meet its obligations,

  • then the bank would have to loan reserves from other banks with interest.

  • Only central bank reserve currency is moved, commercial bank money is simply deducted and added.

  • If you sell something on eBay, you know that that deal is not complete

  • until you get some money put into your account.

  • Most people actually want to see the money in their account before they're happy to close on a deal.

  • Now the banks are pretty much the same, but they

  • want to see the money in their account at the Bank of England

  • before they consider a deal complete.

  • So for example, if you are buying a house from somebody who banks with a different bank

  • then what'll happen after you've spent a quarter of a million on a house

  • is you'll tell your bank to transfer some money to the house seller's bank

  • and what the bank will do is

  • instruct the Bank of England to move £250,000 from their account at the Bank of England

  • to the bank of the house seller. And that money will move across

  • between the accounts at the Bank of England.

  • When that money has moved across,

  • then the banks will consider that that payment has been settled.

  • They don't really deal in the kind of money that we have in our accounts,

  • they deal in this special money that can only be used at the central bank.

  • There are millions of people across the country,

  • all transferring money to each other using only a few major banks.

  • These banks can keep a tally on their computer systems and usually

  • many of the movements cancel each other out at the end of the day.

  • The five major banks - RBS, Lloyds, HSBC, Barclays and Santander - hold over 85% of all deposits.

  • As there are a limited number of banks in the system,

  • the central reserve money can only be moved around them in a closed loop.

  • The money is just circulating through this system over and over again and if you think about it,

  • a one pound coin could be used to make a billion pounds of payments

  • if it was circulated a billion times.

  • And that's effectively the system that you have now, is you have a small pool of real money

  • that's just going round and round the system

  • and it's being used to make a huge quantity of payments on our behalf.

  • Just before the crisis there was only 20 billion in the accounts at the central bank.

  • September 2007. Thousands of Northern Rock customers queue up to withdraw their cash.

  • The company had been forced to seek emergency funding. It's the first run on a British bank in 140 years.

  • Northern Rock had committed to asset (mortgage) purchases,

  • but was unable to sell securitised assets to meet these obligations.

  • The Bank of England was required to step in as the lender of last resort,

  • to supply Northern Rock with central bank reserve currency.

  • If they don't have enough of this central bank money, then effectively they can't make payments

  • and if that happens then pretty quickly the entire system seizes up.

  • So the Bank of England has the responsibility of making sure there's enough of this money in the system.

  • The requirements for banks to hold a specific amount of reserves has changed many times since 1947.

  • At that time, banks needed to hold a minimum ratio of 32% of reserves, cash or Treasury Bonds to deposits.

  • In 2006, the Corridor System was introduced, in which banks could set their own reserve targets.

  • The rules changed again in March 2009 when the Bank of England introduced quantitative easing.

  • Quantitative Easing in effect, gives settlement banks the central reserve currency for free.

  • The Central Reserve Currency is what is referred to as the real money in the fractional reserve model

  • but the fact is banks can have as much of this as they want.

  • And Central Reserve Currency itself is a form of fiat money which is backed by nothing.

  • As a consequence there is no longer a meaningful fractional reserve.

  • A short history of money

  • If you look over the history of the last 150 years or so,

  • you start off with a development of a gold standard that really comes to the fore in the 1880s/1890s

  • where essentially countries peg themselves to a particular defined value of gold

  • and then they have an agreement to fix that value, to hold that value,

  • and to trade gold amongst themselves to make sure the balances are all there

  • and also to try and restrict or expand or contract activity in their own economies to make sure that the balance,

  • that particular fixed price, is maintained. That disintegrates after the First World War.

  • This is where the whole thing breaks apart,

  • a very major dislocation in the international monetary system at that point,

  • not really resolved until you get Bretton Woods agreements at the end of the Second World War

  • in which everything is pegged to the dollar and the dollar is pegged to the gold.

  • So you are kind of one removed from the gold backing

  • or saying that there is a definite solid commodity money

  • behind the paper money and the credit money

  • that we are all using over here. You are kind of one removed from it.

  • After Hiroshima, Tokyo wondered when the next atom bomb would fall. They did not wonder long.

  • In 1944, at Bretton Woods, the US and the UK began to negotiate how to govern the world economy,

  • the world monetary system and came up with the World Bank and the IMF

  • and a series of other institutions designed to manage the global currency

  • and there was still a gold standard, but this gold standard was going to be tied to the dollar.

  • All of the world's gold had moved from London to Fort Knox,

  • and all of the world's currencies were tied to the dollar.

  • This system was designed to manage the sorts of imbalances, to avoid credit crunches,

  • or for countries, credit crunches are known as balance of trade deficits

  • i.e. when they can't pay their bills and their currency collapses.

  • The currencies were managed and the system was stable, as long as the Americans played the role of oversight.

  • Now, who knows the great story about how that all came to an end?

  • The quantity of money that was needed to pay for the Vietnam War, that's exactly what I was trying to get at.

  • Oil shocks were another one.

  • That meant that the Americans were no longer respecting their role

  • or playing their role governing the monetary system.

  • They were inflating the value of their own currency that ostensibly was meant to be tied,

  • tied to gold and to every other currency. So what did the French do?

  • The French were a little bit worried that President Nixon wasn't entirely honest.

  • And they were worried that precisely what we described,

  • that Nixon was printing money when he shouldn't have been, was going on.

  • And they were worried there wasn't enough gold to honour the exchange rate of the French Franc,

  • so they sent a gunboat to New York harbour to ever so politely ask for our gold back please.

  • Did they get their gold back? Go on, guess! They didn't. And the Bretton Woods system came to an end.

  • And this is the point at which we enter the modern era of the financial system.

  • Fiat money: A medium of exchange, which the issuer

  • does not promise to redeem in a commodity, and is based on confidence.

  • Historically, money creation was pegged to a commodity, often gold, but today it is pegged to nothing.

  • Which means there is nothing backing our money. This piece of paper is just a piece of paper.

  • Where does this leave us? If money is based on nothing, why do we think it has any value?

  • Sorry? Because we can still go and exchange it. What? Somebody else was going to shout.

  • Great little Latin fact, the word for credit comes from? belief. Correct.

  • Credere = to believe

  • Since the collapse of the dollar gold standard in 1971 and the deregulation of the financial system,

  • money creation has grown exponentially.

  • The World Economic Forum meeting in Davos at the present time

  • have called on a need for the credit within the economy,

  • the global economy, to be expanded by US$100 trillion.

  • A trillion is 12 noughts so 100 trillion, if you want to imagine is a 1 followed by 14 noughts.

  • They believe this credit expansion will create a boom

  • because there is now more money in the economy with which to make investments.

  • It's fascinating this emergence of digital currencies, how it's transformed everything really.

  • Because it just completely unleashed private banks to dominate

  • and create the money system that works for them

  • and works for the people who run private banks.

  • Growth and inflation

  • If you want a growing economy under the current set-up we have to have growing debt.

  • This is something very, very few people really understand

  • - especially not the politicians who are managing the economy - which is a scary thought.

  • GDP Gross Domestic Product: The market value of all final goods and services

  • produced in a country in a given period.

  • As the money supply grows more money is available which can be invested in productive avenues.

  • However it can also be used to gamble and drive up asset prices.

  • An increase in the money supply = A likely relative increase in economic activity.

  • The effects of rapid credit expansion

  • Inflation is a rise in the general level of the prices of goods and services in an economy over a period of time.

  • When the general price level rises each unit of currency buys fewer goods and services.

  • As the money supply grows and there is more currency available,

  • more money is available for investment which can lead to growth,

  • but more money is also available for purchases of goods and speculation which leads to inflation.

  • Essentially, inflation is what happens when too much money is chasing too few goods and services,

  • so there is too much money for the actual output of the economy.

  • However in practice inflation is much more skewed and complicated.

  • Measuring inflation is not a science and the way it is recorded poses a dilemma.

  • The Consumer Price Index or CPI is measured from a sample of goods and services.

  • Each category of goods and services is given a weighing data

  • which determines the overall impact of the price data for a specific category.

  • However this measure is deemed to provide a consistently low figure for inflation.

  • Interestingly house prices, mortgage repayments and council tax are excluded

  • yet apps and dating agency fees are included.

  • The Retail Price Index or RPI inflation index is another way of measuring inflation

  • and scores consistently higher values than the Consumer Price Index.

  • Recently many pension schemes have adjusted their annual payout increases from RPI to CPI.

  • This is another cost saving measure which will leave pensioners worse off in future.

  • The CPI index of inflation is not geared towards providing an accurate picture of inflation

  • and the deterioration in the purchasing power of money.

  • In the seven years between the years 2000 and 2007 the money supply doubled and the central bank,

  • the Bank of England was under the impression at this time that they had it under control

  • because they were saying that prices weren't going up that much.

  • Of course they were only looking at prices in your local corner shop.

  • They weren't looking at the price of housing

  • and housing is the biggest expenditure that most people will make.

  • Many western countries heavily subsidise agricultural production,

  • which has the effect of keeping prices and inflation low.

  • Increasing house prices, it may make you feel like you're becoming wealthier,

  • but as your wealth increases the effect is that your children's wealth is actually decreasing.

  • So in fact there is no net gain in wealth because your children

  • are going to have to pay even more when they want to buy a house.

  • So in effect there is no net increase. They are going to have to earn even more.

  • They are going to have to go into even more debt.

  • So rising house prices do not create additional net GDP value to the economy.

  • Actually what they do is they re-distribute wealth towards those people who already have houses

  • i.e. wealthier people and remove it from poorer people who can't afford to get on the housing ladder.

  • So it's another example of a very regressive policy to allow house prices to simply inflate.

  • It makes everybody feel like things are going well and people spend money on other stuff,

  • they take equity out of their houses but it's not creating new jobs.

  • It's not enhancing the quality of the economy. It's not helping our balance of trade.

  • It's not helping the public deficit. It's a zero sum game.

  • As of August 2011, 85.5% of consumer bank lending was secured as mortgages on dwellings.

  • If you have somebody creating money that can only be spent on one thing,

  • which is housing then the price of that thing is going to go up.

  • Between 2000 and 2010 they created over a trillion pounds of new money

  • - £500 billion just in the three years before the crisis. That's why house prices went up they way they were.

  • There's nothing special about houses.

  • It was just all this funny money being pumped into that market.

  • If money is spent into the economy a lot of money goes into houses for example into mortgages

  • - that's an increase in the amount of money in the economy -

  • without a corresponding increase in activity in output, in GDP.

  • It's non-GDP based spending. That's what causes inflation.

  • In the UK we've had it in spades. We've had this massive housing boom.

  • The main cause for the housing boom, in my opinion,

  • is the huge amount of speculative credit created by the banks to go into houses.

  • If houses were cheaper, they would be easier to build. More of them would be built.

  • There would be less huge houses, with hardly any people in them.

  • London would not be the centre of a kind of very rich speculative orgy,

  • where all the richest people in the world want to get a property in London,

  • because it's seen as a great asset.

  • Houses would be seen as places to live primarily, rather than seen as places to invest.

  • The important thing to think about is, if you are a bank and you've got to make a loan, you have choices.

  • You can give that loan to a small business and you'll know that the risk to you of that loan failing, defaulting,

  • is actually quite high, because that small business, the owners of that business,

  • have limited liability, which means if that business goes bust you as a bank get nothing back essentially.

  • So that's kind of high risk, compared to loaning your money to somebody with some collateral,

  • with a house behind them, like a mortgage.

  • So there's a simple incentive for banks to prefer putting money into housing than into a small business.

  • Now that's a real problem if you widen that out across a whole economy,

  • because it means there's an incentive to put money into speculative rather than productive investment.

  • So again, we have to think about how we create our monetary system that is more balanced

  • between those two kinds of speculative and productive investment.

  • The government is showing enormous reluctance to regulate the housing market

  • and to again regulate the amount of money that banks put into houses.

  • We don't decide who creates credit for what.

  • No. We leave that to a couple of chaps in a bank to decide basically.

  • A short history of bubbles

  • A bubble occurs when there is very high inflation in the price

  • of a specific good or service over a short period of time.

  • The first recorded bubble was the tulip bubble of 1637.

  • The idea of the tulips and their relevance is that you saw the first ever financial bubble and crash.

  • The craze for tulips - black tulips being a mythical ideal of what somebody could genetically engineer

  • through cultivation after many generations - became a mania in the Netherlands in the 1630s.

  • What they didn't realise was that many of the very, very rare patterns on tulips bulbs

  • were caused by a virus and weren't genetic at all.

  • But they traded them to the extent that tulip got to the point

  • where they were worth ten times the average annual salary of a person working in the Netherlands.

  • There was a futures market in tulip bulbs

  • because obviously you plant them now but you don't know what's going to come out of the ground.

  • So we see already, 400 years ago, that a money system or a financial system

  • is not something that exists in the abstract, somewhere out there in the ether,

  • but something that was to do with states, power, trade and how they interact with each other.

  • Unlike tulips, which are a disposable luxury, houses are both a necessity and a luxury.

  • And as such, they are ideal as a vehicle for money and bubble creation.

  • A dwelling is perhaps the most prized possession of value most people aspire to.

  • Inflating house prices in this way allows a nation to expand its money supply

  • without affecting inflation data.

  • The additional purchasing power created increases the perceived wealth in relation to other nations

  • and thus it creates relative power.

  • It is a way of increasing monetary power without investing in the productive growth of industry.

  • Certainly if you look at Britain and America as outstanding examples of this,

  • these are countries with very high rates of private home ownership

  • so you've got a good base to try and perform this sort of policy off the back of.

  • I think it was quite deliberate in the case of the US, almost explicit, as Alan Greenspan

  • as head of the Federal Reserve when confronted by a stock market crash at the end of the 1990s

  • quite deliberately slashed interest rates to almost zero. Everyone can borrow very, very cheaply,

  • in particular its very easy to borrow against a house because this is an asset

  • and is potentially something that the bank can say Well, OK we're not just lending you money unsecured,

  • They won't tell you this when you take the mortgage but they can do this

  • and that bubble is then what fuels expansion such as it is,

  • inside the US and inside the UK where something similar takes place for the next decade or so.

  • I think it's also a reflection of an underlying weakness in these governments

  • that they simply lack the will and possibly the ability, but I think it more comes down to a will,

  • to challenge financial markets, to challenge big capital and say

  • We're going to do something different now.

  • And you're going to have to go along with it because we've been democratically elected

  • and you haven't and we have a mandate to do this and we're going to make this happen.

  • Just remember it's all part of the plan. What are you yapping about - you voted for it!

  • In Holland what we had over a period of trying to get independence initially from Spain

  • and trying to raise money to get an army to free themselves was financial innovation.

  • They innovated public lotteries to get money together. They had public subscription.

  • This was the idea that led to the idea of public shares - a piece of the action that anybody could invest in -

  • that meant that something like two thirds of the population was investing in tulip bulbs by the 1630s.

  • After independence these instruments were applied for financing expansion.

  • Why was such a small country able to hold its own against so much bigger countries

  • for example Spain and Portugal that had the benefits

  • of their empires for over a century in respect of the Netherlands?

  • Why could they compete? On what resource basis?

  • Well they had a more efficient, a more evolved and a broader based financial system

  • with these instruments that they'd innovated that allowed them

  • to bring more money to bear at one point then anybody else, more quickly.

  • Incredible But True.

  • How to avoid inflation

  • Now, inflation can be avoided if the amount of money that goes into the economy is regulated

  • in a way that it doesn't exceed the actual activity that's happening in the economy.

  • Now, the best way to do that, in my opinion, is to make sure that money is issued into the economy

  • only for productive investment, for productive goods and services,

  • so money goes in to help a small business to start up

  • which creates jobs, which creates additional purchasing power

  • which means there's no inflation.

  • During their history almost all central banks have employed forms of direct credit regulation.

  • The central bank will determine desired nominal GDP growth

  • then calculate the necessary amount of credit creation to achieve this.

  • And then allocate this credit creation both across the various banks

  • and type of banks and across the industrial sectors.

  • Unproductive credit was suppressed.

  • Thus it was difficult or impossible to obtain bank credit for large scale,

  • purely speculative transactions such as today's large scale bank funding to hedge funds.

  • The World Bank recognised in a 1993 study that this method of intervention in credit allocation

  • was at the core of the East Asian economic miracle.

  • There're all sorts of things that governments have done in the past, very successfully in a number of cases

  • and often not unsuccessfully in this country but the examples that spring to mind South Korea, Japan,

  • often in East Asia where governments have been quite targeted

  • about how they're going to rebalance the economy,

  • picking sectors and deciding where the investment should take place,

  • I think that has to start happening in the UK

  • because we're in a demand side recession rather than looking at crisis of supply.

  • You have to have a system where credit is put into productive avenues,

  • where credit is put into building high speed rail links,

  • where credit is put into building houses rather than giving people money to inflate the price of houses.

  • It's quite simple really and the current system is simply set up not to do that.

  • The creation of money by private banks for non-productive usage causes real inflation

  • and as such it is a tax on the purchasing power of the medium of exchange.

  • Decrease in the standard of living

  • The figures for the UK are quite stark actually.

  • The average median real incomes for most people declined over the last 8 years.

  • They are now in quite sharp decline as we go into recession

  • - the sharpest really since about the 1930s - so real income is declining.

  • Bank created fiat currency allows the private banks to suck wealth from the economy

  • and over time results in a gradual decrease in the standard of living.

  • As people become poorer they become even more dependent on debt

  • If you go back to the 1960s and we were expected to, we were looking forward to an age of leisure,

  • television programmes saying What are people going to do with their spare time?

  • And now we have got more people working harder than ever,

  • spending more than ever, which looks great,

  • everyone is spending more, but if you're not actually benefiting from what you're spending,

  • if you're having to spend the money on childcare costs on commuting costs and so forth,

  • costs that people didn't in the past used to have to pay because you could walk to work

  • and one member of the family was able to stay at home

  • and be a permanent homemaker, then you're not actually any better off.

  • Everyone is under such enormous pressures nowadays.

  • I am conscious that my four nephews and nieces are facing difficult times.

  • They're just going to find themselves having to work very hard

  • just to keep a roof over their heads, to get a roof over their heads.

  • People are getting poorer in real terms. It's because prices are always going up

  • because all this new funny money is being pumped into the system by the banks

  • and they're creating it all as debt

  • so at the same time as prices are going up and things are getting more expensive,

  • we're getting further and further into debt

  • and our wealth and the return that we get from actually working is getting less and less all the time.

  • You can't deal with poverty when you have a financial system and a money system

  • that distributes money from the poor to the very rich.

  • Any distribution that you try and do in the opposite direction is effectively pissing in the wind.

  • If you look at issues like increasing inequality one obvious way to tackle inequality

  • is to have a redistributive tax system.

  • You tax the rich you give some money to the poor.

  • You move a bit of money down the scale.

  • That's all very well but if you overlook the fact that there's another redistributive system

  • which is taking money from the poor and giving it to the rich,

  • then you're not really going to tackle this inequality

  • and the way a debt-based money system works

  • - it guarantees that for every pound of money there's going to be a pound of debt.

  • That debt is typically going to end up with the poor, the lower-middle classes,

  • those people end up with the debt and they end up paying interest on that money

  • which then goes back to the banking sector

  • and gets distributed to the people working in the City or in Wall Street.

  • What this system does overall is it distributes money from the poor to the rich essentially,

  • distributes money from the poorer regions of the UK back to the City of London

  • and it also distributes money from all the small businesses, all the little factories around the UK

  • and distributes that money back into the financial sector.

  • We have a system whereby the activity of actually supplying our nations money

  • occurs under the very same roof as the same organisation that is responsible

  • for profiting from putting together borrowers and lenders

  • i.e. a bank. So, a bank creates our nation's money supply as well as making loans for profit.

  • The government cannot allow the banking system to fail

  • because if it did over 97% of all money would disappear.

  • This is why in the event of a crisis the risk is transferred to the taxpayer.

  • But even during normal times banks receive numerous guarantees and benefits

  • beyond the right to create money.

  • Bill, by the way, I know the Bank of America is a very big bank,

  • it happens that I have $32 there myself.

  • Just between us what assurance do I have that this money is safe?

  • Well, all deposits up to $10,000 are insured by the Federal Government in Washington.

  • That's my guarantee?

  • Yes sir.

  • Have you heard that the Federal Government is about $280 billion in the hole?

  • Banks receive large safety nets from the government.

  • The taxpayer guarantees 85,000 pounds as deposit insurance.

  • And the Bank of England provides liquidity insurance in case a bank runs out of reserve currency.

  • Someone wrote that a big investment bank is like a Giant Vampire Squid

  • wrapped around the face of humanity.

  • Hypnotising politicians. Who throw money at the banks. No strings attached.

  • No matter what damage is done. Trashing the planet. Forcing cuts to things that make life better.

  • Goodbye schools. Goodbye playgrounds. Goodbye jobs. The bankers that we bailed out

  • then gave themselves bonuses that were bigger than the first wave of public spending cuts.

  • Britain alone gave the banks more money than it cost to put a man on the moon 6 times over.

  • Where did our money go? Who let the banks get away with it?

  • Why? Can Vampire Squids ever be useful?

  • No Government yet is brave enough to tame them perhaps they need a plan.

  • Take back our banks

  • Ever increasing debt

  • The spending cuts agenda is an attempt by the government

  • to shift debt from its account to that of the public.

  • This is the Government's response to the bank bail outs

  • and is necessary in a debt based monetary system

  • where increased purchasing power is the result of growing debt and where a diversification of debt

  • provides overall stability and market confidence.

  • Policies such as student fee increases and the privatisation of public services,

  • assets and industry follow the same model.

  • The problem we're facing is that there is this transference from the public debt to private debt

  • which is essentially a way of transferring risk, away from UK plc and the Government

  • on to the heads of individuals and it's going to be the most vulnerable individuals

  • who are going to have the most debt.

  • Thus it's a very regressive policy framework that the Government's embarking on

  • where the risk is moved on to those who are most vulnerable

  • and if there is another financial shock, if there's an oil shock for example,

  • the people who will pay the penalty are the poorest people in society

  • or homeowners for example who will fall into negative equity if interest rates go up even 1 or 2 percent

  • there will be really big problems. So I don't think it's a sensible way forward for us at the moment at all.

  • It's regressive and it's certainly not fair in the terms that the Government is talking about

  • and it's certainly not a case of We are in this together.

  • As more of the country's resources and industries are privatised the private sector takes on more debt.

  • As a result more money is created and there is a boom.

  • Some private equity companies have taken this theory to the extreme,

  • engaging in a practice known as a Leveraged Buy Out,

  • where a company is purchased at an often inflated price

  • and the purchase price is transferred to the business as a debt.

  • The company becomes responsible for the funding of its own purchase.

  • These debts are often so great that the company needs to reduce staff, salaries and research activities.

  • When you have to factor interest as a business,

  • if you have to factor interest repayment into your goods and services,

  • then you have to charge a perpetually higher price as you take on more and more debt.

  • An increase in the diversification of debt results in an increase in the money supply.

  • When the money supply increases more money is available for

  • productive activities and consumption which is the condition for a boom.

  • It's questionable whether we're going to get out of this recession

  • or whether we'll just keep ticking along the way the way that we are now.

  • However if we do, then when we come out of this recession

  • and when growth starts again look at what happens to debt.

  • It will rise and it will keep rising and the faster the economy is growing,

  • the faster the debt will rise and then give it another 3 to 5 years we'll be back where we were.

  • The debt will become too much - people will start defaulting again.

  • It's kind of the system that we're locked into, we can't grow the economy without growing the debt

  • and the debt is the very thing that will bring down the economy.

  • The only option going forward is to reform it to stop banks from creating money as debt.

  • By fixing the monetary system we can prevent the banks from ever causing another financial crisis

  • and we can also make the current public service cuts and the tax rises

  • and the increase in national debt unnecessary.

  • The current monetary system allows the banking sector to extract wealth from the economy,

  • whilst providing nothing productive in return.

  • Why is it that we've got all this technology,

  • all this new efficiency and yet it now requires two people to finance a household

  • whereas in the 50's it only needed one person working?

  • The reason for that is not because these washing machines and everything are more expensive.

  • It's because of all the debt and because the banking sector is effectively creaming it off from everybody else.

  • So a growing banking sector is not a good thing.

  • If the banking sector is growing it's either that it's becoming less efficient

  • or it's becoming a parasite on the rest of the economy.

  • We can talk about the banking sector becoming 4%, 5%, 6% of GDP,

  • what's happening to the rest of the economy? It's becoming 96, 95, 94% of GDP.

  • We've got to get switched on to this now.

  • If we want to have a chance of tackling any of the other big social issues,

  • you've got to figure out the money issue.

  • The poorest in the world pay for crises

  • even when they've not benefited from the often reckless and speculative booms,

  • like the housing boom in Ireland that preceded that crisis.

  • Over the last 30 years we've seen income differentials increase

  • so that the rich have got much, much richer and ordinary people haven't,

  • they've stayed the same or they've got poorer.

  • One of the ways that the economy was kept going was by providing cheap credit,

  • providing debt to those very people who couldn't really afford things anymore, so they kept buying

  • and when it collapses it's those same people that have to pay once again

  • even though in many ways they were the victims the first time.

  • As a result of the crisis the Bank of England has bought corporate debt

  • and repackaged it at lower rates of interest.

  • Yet the average person is being asked to pay more than ever to borrow on overdrafts and credit cards.

  • Debts between the very wealthy or between governments can always be renegotiated

  • and always have been throughout world history.

  • They're not anything set in stone. It's generally speaking when you have debts owed by the poor to the rich

  • that suddenly debts become a sacred obligation more important than anything else.

  • The idea of renegotiating them becomes unthinkable.

  • Can you pin down exactly what would keep investors happy,

  • make them feel more confident?

  • That's a tough one. Personally it doesn't matter. See I'm a trader -

  • I don't really care about that kind of stuff.

  • Pay your taxes!

  • Were you born in England?

  • If I see an opportunity to make money, I go with that.

  • For most traders, we don't really care that much how they're going to fix the economy,

  • how they're going to fix the whole situation. Our job is to make money from it

  • and personally I've been dreaming about this moment for three years.

  • If you know what to do, you can make a lot of money from this.

  • I have a confession which is, I go to bed every night I dream of another recession,

  • I dream of another moment like this.

  • I dream of another recession, I dream of another moment like this. You can make a lot of money from this.

  • Bruno, Virginia hurt somebody real bad, you oughta help her.

  • Incoming!

  • The way in which you can look across Europe now and see that the new Prime Minister of Greece,

  • not elected, essentially imposed, Papademos - former employee of Goldman Sachs.

  • The new Prime Minister and Finance Minister of Italy - Mario Monti - former employee of Goldman Sachs.

  • The new President of the European Central Bank - former employee of Goldman Sachs.

  • You see these people popping up absolutely everywhere.

  • That's the way to change what we have, take all power and all freedoms away from the people

  • and collect everything into the hands of one small group with absolute power.

  • From the people, without the people, against the people.

  • What's been interesting out of all this is the question of democracy that's been opened up very starkly in Europe,

  • that you have a government of bankers essentially imposed upon you.

  • It's bankers who more or less got us into this mess to put it rather crudely,

  • but that's a good first approximation

  • and then you say OK, Bankers are the people who therefore are going to get us out of it

  • and incidentally there going to run your country now.

  • There's a serious question of democracy that has opened up here.

  • By the way, the banking crisis drove more than a 100 million people back into poverty.

  • The mortality statistics of people who go into poverty rise hugely for a whole range of reasons.

  • So the banking crisis isn't just about becoming poorer - it was about killing people as well.

  • And guess what? We haven't really got to the bottom of it.

  • We never held anybody to account

  • and we haven't done the radical reforming job that we really needed to do

  • because we mistakenly thought If we destabilise the position any further, it'll make matters worse.

  • And guess who took the decisions? All the people who were there in the first place.

  • "I think you ought to know, that the business of one of these businessmen is murder."

  • "Their weapons are modern, their thinking: two thousand years out of date."

  • Resistance to banking fiat monopoly

  • The way that money works and how we use it to do certain types of transactions

  • can be really very important in terms of how over time it steers society in certain directions.

  • How I use money, what I use money for, who's controlling money and where it ends up over time

  • can completely transform society. The kinds of businesses that get preferred by certain types of money systems,

  • so at the moment we have a money system that prefers large businesses

  • that can take a lot of their wealth offshore because that's more efficient for them to do that

  • but that means that money ends up leaving communities.

  • Sometimes I think it's quite amazing that

  • there is very little way of any individual directing money towards their locality.

  • There's no way for me to actually say I have a little bit of savings. I want to invest this in Norwich.

  • I want to invest in businesses that want to set up here.

  • There's no mechanism for people to invest within their locality.

  • You put your money into a mainstream bank and money goes off to wherever.

  • Who knows what this is? Shout!

  • A Brixton Pound! Who knows what it is?

  • It's worth one pound this one so it's exchangeable for one sterling pound.

  • Is this money?

  • Yes!

  • On what basis? People accept it. There're over 200 shops, independent traders.

  • So we represented something like we've agreed, we can choose to represent it to be something

  • and that depends on our mutual consent.

  • Complementary currencies

  • The Bristol Pound Project has been fascinating because I first started reading about money

  • and realised I didn't understand it very well when I started trying to set up a Bristol Pound,

  • so it's been a bit of a journey for me and I think everybody else who's been doing it.

  • We can actually build our own currency systems

  • which work to improve the relationships between people within communities,

  • where people work and share a lot of the economic benefits from the wealth they are creating

  • and they are constantly using that wealth they're creating

  • to build positive relationships with other people within that area.

  • And they can see the impact of the money so when you spend something,

  • if I spend 20% of my wealth on a certain thing I'll see what that 20% of my wealth is doing.

  • I'll see that it is really having a positive effect

  • because those people are using that money to go and do something else

  • which is really good or I can see that it's actually trashing the local woodlands

  • because I was paying that carpenter to go and cut down all the woods

  • and I really like going to the woods with my dog so actually maybe I don't want to do that

  • so you can include all of what would normally get brushed aside as externalities

  • - well externalities are actually our life! It's what we in communities

  • all those externalities are what actually make us live a good life I think.

  • We wanted to help achieve certain things. We wanted to help build community.

  • We wanted to support independent businesses.

  • We want to help preference them over big trans-national corporations

  • because if they've got hold of their money and they can use it with each other

  • then it doesn't disappear up out of large management structures

  • and go offshore and end up in an account in the Cayman Islands.

  • When we talk to businesses they get it pretty intuitively.

  • Governments often shut down these experiments

  • The Bank of England may of course decide that this is a threat to the stability of sterling.

  • At the moment they are reserving their right to take an opinion on it.

  • They've sent us all their rules and regulations

  • and what we've done is that we've got a team of lawyers to give loads of work pro bono

  • to say Right we'll work on this and we'll make it as watertight as we possibly can.

  • In the end what the Bank of England decide to do we don't know.

  • You see a widespread proliferation of alternatives is normally during periods of capitalist crisis.

  • So the Great Depression - you had the rise of a lot of script currencies

  • particularly in North America and experiments in Europe as well.

  • And most of those got extinguished by being made illegal by the authority of the central banks

  • and political forces deciding that they didn't want those experiments to carry on.

  • This monopoly state bank currency that we have is very good at some things.

  • It's very easy to trade internationally with it. It helps big businesses, it cuts down their transaction costs

  • but it's not so good for independent businesses and it's not so good for localities.

  • So if we have a money system where the rules value community

  • and connection between people within communities

  • over time you build up a better and more wealthy basis for a diverse local economy.

  • The bank run

  • A bank run can take three forms. Customers can withdraw their money in cash.

  • However this will not reduce the digital money supply it will merely transfer ownership.

  • Or they can shift their money from the large institutions to smaller more ethical banks

  • such as credit unions, mutual banks or independent building societies.

  • Our next guest has a New Year's resolution that she says will create a better financial system

  • and it's this move your money out of the nation's big banks and into your local community bank.

  • Shifting commercial bank money to these institutions

  • will reduce the monopolistic grip of the big 5 banks.

  • Taiwanese animated news: Christian has declared November 5th as 'Bank Transfer Day'

  • On that day, bank customers vow to close their accounts and deposit the funds with credit unions

  • The third kind of bank run is the international bank run.

  • According to at least one US Senator this is what caused the September 2008 meltdown.

  • Look, I was there when the Secretary and the Chairman of the Federal Reserve came those days

  • and talked with members of Congress about what was going on. It was about September 15th

  • Here are the facts, and we don't even talk about these things

  • on Thursday at about 11 o'clock in the morning the Federal Reserve noticed a tremendous draw down

  • of money market accounts in the United States to the tune of $550 billion

  • was being drawn out in the matter of an hour or two.

  • The Treasury opened up its window to help, they pumped $105 billion into the system

  • and quickly realised they could not stem the tide. We were having an electronic run on the banks.

  • They decided to close the operation, close down the money accounts

  • and announce a guarantee of $250,000 per account

  • so there wouldn't be further panic out there, that's what actually happened.

  • If they had not done that their estimation was by 2 o'clock that afternoon

  • $5.5 trillion would have been drawn out of the money market system of the United States.

  • It would have collapsed the entire economy of the United States

  • and within 24 hours the world economy would have collapsed.

  • International Aspects

  • When money is withdrawn internationally from one currency to another

  • the reserve currency shifts from the national bank of one country

  • to the reserve account of the foreign bank.

  • Foreign banks have relationships with local banks

  • that allow them to hold foreign reserve currencies

  • whilst not being a part of the central bank scheme at the local central bank.

  • For example when £1,000 is transferred into euros a UK bank will agree an exchange rate

  • with a Euro area bank, perhaps 1.15 euros to the pound.

  • The UK bank will then transfer £1,000 of the central reserve currency

  • to the UK partner bank of the European bank

  • whilst the European bank will transfer 1,150 euros of reserve currency to

  • the European partner bank of the UK bank.

  • What happens when currencies and the exchange rate system is no longer managed,

  • what are some of the first consequences?

  • Devaluations.

  • Speculation.

  • Imbalances. Where some countries would accrue more and more of what? What will they accrue?

  • Other currencies, other currencies.

  • The reserve currency needs to be spent in the country of origin or exchanged into other currencies.

  • Most foreign banks do not have deposit taking accounts outside of their national borders

  • and as such the foreign reserves they hold do not come back to them in the form of deposits.

  • When a country accumulates trade imbalances it either accumulates foreign reserve currencies

  • in the case of surplus or spends its own reserves in the case of negative trade balances.

  • Balance of trade is basically the difference between

  • what you're selling abroad and what you're buying from abroad.

  • Now, the feature of the UK is that for a very long period of time

  • it's had a deficit of something called a visible balance of trade

  • which is trading things that you can see.

  • So that is goods that you'd recognise, stuff you can put in containers,

  • it's cars, computers, things that you'd see in a shop.

  • That's been a substantial deficit.

  • I think it opened up in the early 1980s and essentially it hasn't gone away since

  • - if anything it's got wider and wider.

  • Foreign exchange reserves cannot be directly used for domestic spending.

  • The money can only be spent abroad or on imports.

  • A country with a large balance of trade

  • deficit relies on its creditors to spend the imbalances accrued in its own market.

  • There have been proposals in the past

  • to try and create a mechanism for those imbalances to match up.

  • For instance John Maynard Keynes at the end of the Second World War

  • - his original proposal for what became Bretton Woods

  • and the set of institutions set up there like the IMF and World Bank

  • was that there would be a kind of international clearing union.

  • This particularly related to the trade side rather than the financial side directly

  • but the principle was that once trade balances had opened up

  • everybody would bank through an international clearing bank

  • and that would kind of force everyone to eventually reconcile the imbalances

  • that appeared in the real economy.

  • But no such mechanism exists.

  • The accumulated net trade imbalance of the UK is around 800 billion pounds.

  • Currency wars

  • In essence what has happened is that over many years

  • some countries have had big trade surpluses and others big trade deficits.

  • The countries with trade deficits have been spending more than they've been earning

  • so they've had to borrow from abroad and they've been doing this year after year.

  • Countries like that, the United States, ourselves and some other countries in Europe

  • - that cannot go on and there are two ways in which this can come to an end.

  • Either and we've seen this in some of the countries in Europe,

  • if they can't find new ways to become competitive

  • then their ability to repay the debts is called into question.

  • Another way of doing it, which we followed is that we have a credible plan to repay our debts

  • and the value of sterling has fallen by 25%

  • to make our exports more competitive and attractive to overseas buyers

  • and to be more attractive for British consumers to buy from British producers rather than overseas producers.

  • That is what we have done to put in place a framework to rebalance our economy

  • and I'm sure that's the right way to do it.

  • Currency war, also known as competitive devaluation,

  • is a condition where countries compete against each other

  • to achieve a relatively low exchange rate for their currency.

  • As the price to buy a particular currency falls so too does the real price of exports from that country.

  • Domestic industry receives a boost in demand both at home and abroad.

  • It's made British exports appear rather cheaper so they recovered a little bit

  • but because the rest of the world is looking really quite ropey they've started to fall back down again.

  • So what we're looking at is something that is almost like a kind of anarchy and in a way an increasing anarchy.

  • This is what's happened over the last few years

  • where the Brazilian Finance Minister has been the most vocal about this,

  • talking about currency wars,

  • talking about the desire of national governments when confronted by a major recession

  • they think If we could export more we can dig ourselves out of this recession.

  • If we want to export more we depreciate our currency.

  • That makes our goods cheaper everyone else buys them and we'll all be better off.

  • The issue here is if you depreciate its like everyone else appreciates against you.

  • Their stuff becomes more expensive so they're not happy about that.

  • They also want to depreciate

  • and this is where you can see a competitive round of devaluations breaking out.

  • To decrease the value of its national currency

  • a national central bank sells reserve currency into the market.

  • It creates this currency out of nothing by typing numbers into a computer.

  • i.e. a central bank buys foreign reserve currency.

  • The amount a central bank can create is not limited

  • because there is no defined commodity behind the reserve currency.

  • During the long phase of commodity money, the exchange rate would depend on the amount of gold,

  • silver or copper contained in the coins of each country.

  • Similarly after the advent of paper money and the gold standard,

  • the exchange rate depended on the amount of gold

  • the government promised to pay the holder of the bank notes.

  • These amounts did not vary greatly in the short term

  • and as such exchange rates between currencies were relatively stable.

  • After the Second World War currencies were pegged to the dollar

  • and the dollar was backed by gold, this system came to an end in 1971.

  • So, we have a modern financial system where money is now chaotically organised,

  • there is no exchange rate because there is no gold standard system to sustain it,

  • so we don't need it. In fact we believe the market will resolve all the problems of exchange

  • whether your currency should be worth more than mine is a reflection of your economy relative to mine

  • and if that changes the currency and exchange rate can change and if we need that to happen

  • it will happen magically by the efficiency of market and profit seeking. You guys know the rest I think.

  • A currency's value in relation to another currency is determined by the market.

  • If more people want to buy a currency than sell it its value increases.

  • If more people want to sell, its value decreases.

  • The value is set by individual banks as they buy and sell currencies they will adjust the exchange rate.

  • The last study I read in 2007 each day on currency markets $3.2 trillion are traded, each day.

  • Who knows what the global GDP is?

  • $50 trillion? Again Brucey, higher!

  • 60; that's closer. The point is - think about that exchange happening every single day

  • - there's about 260 business days a year.

  • It takes a few weeks to match the global value of every economic transaction that happens everywhere,

  • every day, in a year. It takes a few weeks.

  • Obviously all of us trade currency fairly regularly. If you go abroad you exchange into another currency.

  • That's a form of currency trading - you're swapping your pounds or euros or yen whatever it might be.

  • That happens fairly regularly and that's a conventional part of the trading process.

  • Large corporations have to do this on a regular basis.

  • Where it becomes something that people question

  • and where you get people saying Well hang on, this is speculation!

  • is when you get people realising that currencies move around next to each other

  • and if they move around in value next to each other

  • there's always an opportunity to try and make money out of those changes in value

  • and therefore you can speculate on it.

  • That's the more questionable end of the market,

  • that's the bit of the market that things like a financial transactions tax will try and chop away at

  • because the assumption there and it's not incorrect, is that it just produces instability for everyone else.

  • These people want volatility in the market because that's how they make their money.

  • They want to encourage it and they do encourage it by trading and speculating in the way that they do.

  • By 2010 the foreign exchange market had grown to be the largest and most liquid market in the world

  • with an average of $4 trillion of currency being exchanged every day.

  • Volatility creates a need.

  • What does it do to countries, especially perhaps small ones like developing countries,

  • if there are suddenly huge and instantly fluctuating financial flows? What do they have to do to cope?

  • Increase the production of the products they're selling and sell more

  • Lowering the price

  • And becoming possibly even poorer.

  • Once you start talking about the international system it becomes really quite a peculiar thing

  • in that a lot of it depends on simply sentiment and beliefs about what an economy is like

  • rather more than it depends on anything the economy might or might not actually be doing

  • and that can shift very rapidly because if it's just someone's belief about a currency is supportable

  • then you know they can carry on believing this until whenever

  • - If that belief changes it can change very rapidly in a financial market.

  • The process of financial contagion can take place in just minutes or seconds even.

  • You can just move from being an apparently quite a stable robust economy

  • to being one that suddenly sentiment has turned against you

  • and you find that the markets are picking on you.

  • It can often be not much more than you're simply the next door neighbour

  • of a country that's currently in trouble.

  • Many of the world's financial crises in the past thirty years have been caused by

  • rapid withdrawals of a nation's currency or the currencies of an entire region.

  • This type of activity is often referred to as financial warfare.

  • It's benefited major institutions really quite substantially, like Goldman Sachs for example,

  • or any large bank has done somewhat better out of this set of arrangements

  • than it would have done in a far more regulated environment.

  • It's made people very, very wealthy. It's allowed financial markets to expand absolutely enormously.

  • Anybody involved in that is keen on seeing a deregulated world.

  • In the case of the UK you have a government

  • which has been quite overtly and deliberately and aggressively arguing

  • against any forms of regulation being imposed on those financial markets.

  • But it's not the case that there's someone behind the scenes pulling the strings

  • - this is how things work - quite deliberately, overtly, in front of you. That's the world as it is.

  • It is making some people very rich. They're quite happy with it.

  • I think it is a form of economic warfare.

  • Much of the change in the way that

  • the global economy works over the last thirty years result from this debt,

  • this third world debt because it's given rich countries and banks

  • and the financial sector enormous amounts of power and control

  • over the poorer bits of the world where a lot of the resources are that we like using

  • and that's being used in a way that many people have compared to a form of colonialism.

  • It's a very real direct form of power that's being used over those countries to force those countries to do

  • what are really in the interests of the richest segments of the world that they do.

  • And as a result of that not only have corporations become absolutely huge,

  • made huge amounts of profit and absolutely enormous and all pervasive,

  • but the financial sector has become even bigger than that

  • and the real money to be made in the world today

  • is not by producing anything at all its purely by forms of speculating. Making money from money

  • - that's the most profitable and by far and away the biggest form of economic activity

  • that exists in the world today.

  • To protect themselves, vulnerable countries need to accrue currency from rich countries

  • who create these currencies out of nothing.

  • The Netherlands, first Governor General of Indonesia the man who built the trade routes,

  • fortified them, what I mean by that is built forts along them and fought Spanish fleets and British fleets,

  • said about the development of the Netherlands Empire and Netherlands trade was:

  • 'We cannot make trade without war, nor war without trade.'

  • Money and power.

  • Financial Imperialism

  • So reserves have become the way in which you can insure yourself against what?

  • Speculation. Speculative attack. Falling markets. Bubbles.

  • When a country succumbs to a speculative attack it is asked to deregulate its markets

  • and conform its financial system to that of the dominant party.

  • The big problem that's faced by most developing countries who've got into a debt crises was

  • that they were told by the powers that be in the world, the International Monetary Fund,

  • which in many ways governs the global financial system,

  • that the way to get out of debt is first of all to restructure your economy.

  • especially to increase your exports so you're earning more dollars and then you can pay off your debt

  • which is normally in dollars or some other foreign currency.

  • Unfortunately time and time again that was proved to not be the case at all.

  • Actually countries cut back their public spending to the bone

  • so they stopped growing; they stopped having any potential for growth

  • and what they did produce was aimed at the export market,

  • was aimed at creating dollars.

  • They were paying off their debts but they weren't developing their own economy at all.

  • They were paying far more in debt repayments

  • than they were spending on health or education or anything else and

  • their debts just kept getting bigger and bigger.

  • The country becomes a vassal state

  • allowing large corporations to exploit its natural resources and workforce.

  • Financial Imperialism: Expanding and maintaining imperial power through monetary dominance.

  • It's not even shadowy. There's no great mystery about what's happening here and how the world operates.

  • It's quite blunt. For the last thirty years you've got something pretty much everywhere

  • that generally gets labelled Neo-Liberalism

  • - this idea that you should have floating exchange rates, weak regulation particularly of financial markets,

  • minimal government interference or involvement in what the market does

  • and that's more or less how the world operates.

  • And then there are institutions - the outstanding one at this point is the IMF -

  • that will actively try and enforce this state of affairs.

  • So it's not greatly shadowy, that there are people behind the scenes somewhere

  • trying to manipulate stuff, this is actually quite overt.

  • This is happening and this is how it has been for my entire adult life.

  • This is how the world is operated and it's made some people very wealthy,

  • it's produced enormous concentrations of wealth.

  • So when the International Monetary Fund comes in,

  • in order to try and alleviate a countries debt problems, it imposes a set of conditions.

  • In the 1980s and 90's they called that set of conditions a Structural Adjustment Programme

  • and it tends to take very similar forms wherever it happens.

  • Indeed we can see structural adjustment programmes in essence happening today

  • in countries like Greece and Portugal and Ireland

  • where countries are instructed to decrease the amount they spend on the public sector,

  • they are instructed to liberalise their trade market and liberalise their capital market

  • so money can much more easily come in and out of their economy.

  • The idea is that this will encourage investment to come in from richer parts of the world

  • and that all of their problems will be solved from this investment.

  • In actual fact this is proved time and time again to be completely without foundation.

  • In actual fact what happens is it destroys fledgling industries and capacities

  • in these developing countries

  • and developing countries become completely dependent

  • on goods and services from developed countries

  • and also from capital from developed countries.

  • One of the things the International Monetary Fund is very keen on

  • is telling countries to lower the taxes that should be paid by multinational corporations

  • when they come and operate in a country

  • because then you'll encourage more multinationals to come in.

  • Of course what it also means is the profits that are made by those multinational corporations

  • leave those countries just as quickly

  • - the country itself doesn't benefit. Today many developing countries have got almost no tax base.

  • They've not developed a tax base at all

  • and so they're even more dependent on international capital markets,

  • on the money markets, on creating debt and that's why

  • you have so many countries in the world that have really been robbed

  • of their sovereignty, and it's very difficult to see how democratic societies can evolve

  • or function when a government is

  • more dependent on the diktats of the International Monetary Fund

  • and the money markets than it is on their own people.

  • Financial instruments

  • What we've seen since the 1970s is a dramatic increase in a series of phenomena

  • that have had a stimulative effect

  • on the changes in the financial system that have brought us to

  • the gleaming and shiny metal and steel business that's over there.

  • In case you don't know that's the City of London I'm pointing at.

  • To compensate for the lack of a defined commodity based value underlying currencies,

  • financial institutions developed securitisation as a means to manage risk.

  • You develop securitisation as a means to try and stabilise the whole system

  • this is a set of financial processes and financial innovations

  • that really accelerate from the seventies, eighties onwards.

  • You had a chaotic system that needed to manage risk and you had to innovate.

  • You needed derivatives, options, futures. You have new markets in volatility management tools.

  • Who knows what the term hedging is?

  • Spreading your risk. Managing your risk, insuring against it, precisely.

  • Up until very recently, until the 1960s the Securities and Exchange Commission would be quite clear

  • that derivatives that weren't based on real products like agricultural products

  • - so pork belly futures or whatever -

  • would in fact be essentially a kind of gambling and therefore you weren't allowed to trade them.

  • That changes in the sixties. Everyone can trade currency futures,

  • things that are not based on real products being traded at some point in the future,

  • but are based on the movement of currency prices.

  • Once you have the system of fixed exchange rates breaking down obviously this accelerates enormously

  • so as you get the rollback of government regulation here,

  • you get the market taking over with its own products here

  • and the theory is that the market is better at regulating itself,

  • its more stable than if you have a government interfering all the time.

  • The efficient markets hypothesis - the idea that you have set up a financial market, they're fast,

  • everybody in them is well informed, they all keep a very careful eye on what everyone else is doing

  • - it'll therefore be very stable and reflect real changes in the economy.

  • It's not going to be driven by panics, manias, speculative bubbles. None of this is really going to happen.

  • If there is movement up and down it's because something real is happening

  • and traders and investors in financial markets are responding to it.

  • So that's the efficient markets hypothesis.

  • The practice - I think what you see in 2008 is the end of that process -

  • the appearance of a crisis so major that belief that

  • it'll simply be self-stabilising and self-regulating really can't carry on.

  • The practice carries on anyway but you can't really argue in the same way that you used to

  • It's good or It's necessary or This is OK for the world.

  • In the last decade we had a new innovation - something called a credit default swap.

  • A way of buying insurance against a company you invested in going bust

  • and in 2002 they were worth less than $1 trillion. In 2007 they were worth $60 trillion.

  • That's five years.

  • Everybody is suddenly sitting there saying Oh! These CDO's we've made

  • don't in fact provide the kind of stability that we thought.

  • The maths that's inside of them is complete nonsense it turns out.

  • There's far more risk attached to trying to securitise risk and securitise debt

  • in the way that we have done this than we thought. And we now think these things are now worthless!

  • The attempt to get more and more complex ways of regulating and shaping a financial market

  • and trying to make a quick buck out of it, helped produce the opposite effect to what its apologists said

  • - which is, it led to a spectacular crash.

  • What we saw as a result of this very different situation was one phenomenon above all,

  • one sector above all grew, and that was the financial sector.

  • While the financial sector benefits enormously from the current monetary system,

  • the system is neither stable nor fair.

  • The assumption in what the Bank of England does right now

  • is that the cash that we hold is backed up by government debt,

  • The government can back up its promises by the fact that it can tax the public.

  • So what they're implying is that cash is backed up by government debt,

  • when government debt is backed up by the ability of the government to get cash from the public.

  • Time and time again over the past thirty years

  • we've seen private debts being transformed into public debts,

  • and ultimately the price of that debt is being paid by the public in the debtor country.

  • This is why spending cuts are necessary.

  • The system is designed to make certain people very rich

  • at the expense of a nation's citizens and tax payers.

  • The system lowers the standard of living of the majority

  • and distributes this wealth amongst the privileged.

  • So what we are left with is a financial system since the early seventies that has no fixed exchange rates

  • that suddenly has increasingly open financial borders,

  • that has central banks having to manage without having any control

  • because there's nothing here where the gold used to be.

  • Chaotically they have to ease quantitatively. They have to lend as a lender of last resort.

  • Throughout history monetary systems were designed to give

  • the dominant international power an advantage

  • and this power is fiercely defended and expanded on.

  • And they flee in terror from an incredible bogey man.

  • An American flag is burned at the height of the demonstration.

  • Both President Johnson and Francisco Franco were vilified.

  • A new low in public protest added strain on Spanish-American relations.

  • Order in the court, order in the court

  • I want Americans and all the world to know

  • Come on fire

  • I want Americans and all the world to know,

  • America has no regard for conventions of war or rules of morality.

  • Fire

  • Objection overruled.

  • International currency reform

  • What I would like to see is a new kind of currency that is backed by something that is scarce

  • and that we need and we value. Something like energy or renewable energy, for example,

  • a kilowatt hour backed currency would be very interesting to me.

  • We need to start valuing things that are most scarce

  • and that we need to survive as a human race in the long run.

  • Backing an international currency with something like that will generate enormous investment in,

  • for example, renewable energy, if that's the primary international unit of account that is being used.

  • Another option is a basket of currencies so you mix up the value of different currencies

  • to create a very solid currency that people have confidence in.

  • Perhaps even better would be a basket of commodities with which to back up international currencies.

  • Now if it was possible, internationally, some way or another,

  • to get all these increasingly competing national economies together

  • and say We're all going to sit down and write out an agreement,

  • somewhat like the Bretton Woods agreement

  • which will allow for, unlike Bretton Woods,

  • some currencies to be pegged against different baskets of goods

  • more appropriate to their national economies.

  • If you could arrange for that to happen then that would be nice

  • and you can see how that would start to create a kind of order

  • in the international macro economy which is otherwise lacking.

  • The real difficulty there is just political who on Earth is going to do this?

  • Who is the force that is going to make this thing happen?

  • Creating a monetary system which is both fair and stable is possible and can be achieved.

  • What are international organisations for if not for such a purpose?

  • National currency reform

  • Banks are the most heavily subsidised businesses in the world, specially protected by governments.

  • While the money runs out for the rest of us, the largest private banks still thrive.

  • This is because they get the biggest subsidy of them all: the licence to print money.

  • Hard to believe? Martin Wolf, the Chief Economics Editor of the Financial Times, said it recently:

  • "The essence of the contemporary monetary system

  • is the creation of money out of nothing by private banks' often foolish lending"

  • You heard that right. Private banks create money out of nothing.

  • Then, they loan it to us and ask for interest on top.

  • If you've ever wondered why the bank buildings around the world soar higher

  • than any palace or spire ever did, you now have the answer.

  • But the banks don't simply print money using secret printing presses in their basements. They don't have to.

  • Like so many other things these days, printing money has now gone digital.

  • With the popular use of debit cards, electronic fund transfers and internet banking,

  • only 3% of the money in the UK is now made of paper and metal coin.

  • The other 97% is entirely in computers.

  • Electronic money is convenient for everyone, but it's especially convenient for the private banks,

  • since they own, run and control the entire digital money system.

  • And what do they do with this special privilege?

  • Do they channel new money, the blood supply of the nation,

  • towards the things we need like hospitals, schools, universities and public transport?

  • Not if it doesn't make a profit for them.

  • Instead, they use their licence to print money to gamble on the financial markets

  • and push house prices out of reach of ordinary people

  • by pumping hundreds of billions of pounds into risky mortgages.

  • This is exactly how the banks caused the financial crisis

  • and now the rest of us are being asked to pay for it.

  • If we can't afford to run hospitals and build schools,

  • can we really afford to subsidise the financial industry?

  • Should we have to live with less so the bankers can have more?

  • This is ludicrous and it's time to put a stop to it.

  • The private banks can't be trusted to hold the reigns to our entire economy.

  • We need to take away the banks' power to create money out of nothing.

  • This will stop them from causing yet another financial meltdown

  • and allow us to afford the crucial services that we as a society need.

  • Democratise the money supply

  • What does a progressive financial system look like? And I want to hear what some of you think.

  • Who thinks, for example, that we should ban banks from creating money?

  • Control over how money is created and what it's used for is a democratic issue.

  • You currently have the profit seeking banking sector - not accountable to anybody other than themselves -

  • who are creating up to £200 billion a year of new spending power

  • and deciding where in the economy that goes.

  • Monetary reformers believe that that entire money supply should be for the benefit of the public

  • and should never be created by a private organisation as debt.

  • Democratising the money supply - what that means is putting the power

  • to issue and allocate money back into hands of people

  • and taking it away from private organisations, institutions that don't actually represent the people,

  • that aren't democratically accountable to the people.

  • The banks aren't democratically accountable to the people,

  • they're accountable to their shareholders and their shareholders only.

  • Now they're underwritten by us by the taxpayer but they're not accountable to us.

  • That doesn't make any sense at all.

  • So, if you democratise the monetary system, you are subjecting it to the same kinds of discipline

  • as the education system, as the health service and other key publicly needed services.

  • There is no reason that money should be viewed as any different.

  • It is a fundamentally important service that everybody needs.

  • I can't survive without enough money, nobody can.

  • So it cannot be controlled purely by this small elite of big banks as it is in the UK.

  • We do need a different system.

  • should be completely separate from the activity of banking.

  • What we need to do now is update that law from 1844 to make the digital money real money.

  • It could be electronic money, but it needs to be classified as money.

  • We just want banks to be like every other private company in the economy - to be subject to market discipline.

  • The problem is that now we're in this hybrid model

  • where we have no control over how they spend the money

  • which creates our money, but also we're reliant on them to create our money.

  • We're all constantly in debt. We'll be in debt pretty much for the rest of our lives

  • and the younger generations have it even worse than the older generations.

  • I've just been reading a report from the United Nations Environment Programme

  • and they say we need $2 trillion a year.

  • Two trillion - can you imagine what two trillion is? It's a lot of money

  • - $2 trillion a year to finance the greening of the economy,

  • to move away from poisonous carbon which is poisoning the atmosphere to alternatives to carbon.

  • When the banks collapsed in 2007-9, we found according to the Bank of England, not me,

  • the Bank of England tells me that we raised $14 trillion in a year to bail out the banks

  • so against that $2 trillion a year to bail out the ecosystem is no big deal.

  • This kind of model doesn't make any sense either from an orthodox free market perspective

  • because these banks are monopolists - effectively they monopolise credit creation

  • so they don't obey the rules of any free market discipline.

  • Yet at the same time, they are not producing

  • socially or environmentally beneficial outcomes along any real scale.

  • All that money does is enable us to do what we can do

  • and once we get our heads around that we can make money work for what we need.

  • The power to create money is so powerful.

  • You've got to be very concerned about who has that power.

  • If it's somebody who's going to benefit from creating the money

  • then they're going to have the incentive to create more than the economy actually needs.

  • The same would probably happen if you give that power to politicians.

  • You know you can't trust the politicians to be trying to please voters

  • and to have power over creating money at the same time.

  • It's a real conflict of interest. The only thing you really can do

  • is to give it to somebody who has no conflict of interest

  • - an independent, transparent, accountable body.

  • Money could be allocated according to the needs and desires of the population.

  • Systems could be put in place to allow for direct democratic allocation of funds either wholly or partially.

  • A framework and rules could be established to incorporate up to date economic theory

  • into how much money should be created and for what types of purposes.

  • The Government would no longer be able to get access to large sums of money to pursue armed conflict

  • if this was not sanctioned by the populace.

  • We would be able to see exactly what they're doing with the power to create money.

  • We would be able to see how much they're creating and where that money is going.

  • And that is pretty much the only way we can get control over

  • the power to create money and stop it being abused.

  • The Money Reform Party was established in 2005 just after the 2005 general election.

  • The idea of the Money Reform Party was that we would have this basic core issue

  • that people would agree with.

  • They might disagree on other issues, that's fair enough, there are different ways of going about it

  • but that was the idea - to go for what you might call the lowest common denominator

  • to attract people with disparate views.

  • Getting elected to Parliament is not the issue

  • - it's getting the issue of money reform into the public domain

  • so people will begin to talk about it.

  • Safe banking

  • Banks should not be able to gamble with your money without your permission

  • so what they would need to do is to offer two types of account.

  • One is a safe account, a transactions account'.

  • Put your money in there - the bank doesn't lend it. They don't put it at any risk whatsoever.

  • The other is an investment account where you put your money in for a certain period of time

  • and then the bank takes that away and they invest it.

  • What happens when you use these two types of account is

  • that in the event that a bank fails, the money in the safe accounts is still there - it's not at risk.

  • So you just move all the safe accounts to a bank that is still healthy.

  • Those people who put their money in the investment account - they don't lose everything

  • but they have to wait for the standard liquidation procedure

  • to find out how much of the assets of the banks will be returned to them.

  • It means that the government then never needs to bail out a bank. Banks can be allowed to fail.

  • The system would actually be how people think it is

  • - that when you put your money in the bank it's really safe -

  • or at least they used to think perhaps before the 2008 crisis.

  • There's a spectrum of opportunities there that we're just not exploring at the moment and

  • that's what's upsetting me - that we're not even experimenting

  • when we know that the system we have now is fundamentally flawed.

  • We've just had the biggest crisis since the Second World War, since the 1930's really.

  • We know we have a system where the creators of money are underwritten by us anyway.

  • It's kind of the worst of both worlds the situation we have at the moment

  • which is why we need to start thinking of genuine alternatives.

  • So when we're talking about what life is going to be like in the post reformed system

  • - it doesn't mean that you can't borrow,

  • it doesn't mean that you have to save up for 50 years before you can buy a house.

  • It does mean that you might not be able to buy a house that's 10 or 12 times your income

  • but on the flip side, it means that the house that you want to buy

  • probably shouldn't cost you 10 or 12 times your income.

  • Houses should be affordable as should everything else. You'll still be able to get a mortgage.

  • You'll still be able to get finance for a car. Businesses will still get investment.

  • It just means that debt won't be so high. It won't be such a huge feature of people's lives.

  • Person to person banking

  • Person to person banking has been around for a while. It's essentially the eBay of banking,

  • so it allows borrowers and lenders to be put together in a marketplace.

  • Default rates at the largest peer to peer lender, Zopa, are 0.7%.

  • Risk is minimised by pooling funds

  • so that each investor's contribution to a specific loan remains minimal.

  • There's a site which is about currency exchange,

  • so again, bypassing the kind of mainstream banking or currency exchange system

  • and just doing it person to person. I think a lot of the interesting stuff

  • that's going to happen around currencies and around money more generally

  • is to do with the impact of the internet. My gut feeling is that we will see

  • more and more of those types of systems.

  • We will also see more and more applications and things using our phones

  • than we would ever have imagined

  • and I think we're only just at the beginning of that.

  • Barriers to reform

  • The issue of monetary reform has historically been a very sensitive issue

  • because of the incredible power, wealth and privileges it bestows.

  • In an age where analytic thought and a scientific approach are held in such high esteem

  • there is no justifiable argument for keeping the mechanics and implications

  • of the monetary process such a taboo subject.

  • As democratic citizens we have the right to demand a monetary system

  • which is both stable and beneficial to society.

  • The banking lobby is very powerful. I suspect that they won't be in favour of these kinds of models

  • although ultimately one could argue that it's a much more stable footing for banks.

  • The coalition government has set up an Independent Commission on Banking, the ICB

  • and their remit is to essentially make recommendations to the government

  • on how the banking sector can be fixed.

  • Their remit includes figuring out how they can prevent future bailouts.

  • When they held their public meetings around the country,

  • at each of those meetings of the five panellists at that meeting,

  • at least about three of them were representatives of the big banks. It's a bizarre relationship.

  • If you were going to try and improve building regulations,

  • you wouldn't hire a cowboy builder, who'd built a building that collapsed.

  • So why are we asking the banks for advice on what we should do about banking?

  • The Independent Commission on Banking recommended two major reforms.

  • The first was the implementation of greater capital and loss absorbing capacity.

  • This in effect is complementary to Basel three

  • and will not differentiate the UK banking system from the rest of Europe.

  • The second recommendation was the ring-fencing of retail banks.

  • Although portrayed as harsh to the banks, it can also be interpreted as a benefit,

  • as retail banks will now have a lower capital requirement ratio than investment banks.

  • There's this cosy relationship between the government and the banks.

  • In the middle of the crisis, I spoke to somebody who was working in the Treasury in the middle of the crisis

  • and he said pretty much every second person that he spoke to was working for one of the big banks.

  • So when it comes to a decision about whether you let one of these toxic banks fail

  • or whether you rescue it,

  • what kind of recommendation are you going to get from somebody who works in that bank?

  • I've got a whole string of letters and cards from various politicians over the years.

  • Really you get letters which in most cases say nothing at all apart from Thank you very much.

  • Thank you for your letter or thank you for your DVD. I'll have a look at it.

  • Or in the case, of course, letters to the last Prime Minister a couple of years ago,

  • Thank you for your letter to the Prime Minister, it's been passed on to the Treasury

  • who will no doubt respond to you directly in due course.

  • And of course, I'm still waiting about two years later for any sort of response from the Treasury.

  • David Cameron is the son of a stockbroker at Panmure Gordon.

  • Nick Clegg's father was chairman of United Trust Bank.

  • Nick Clegg has had previous employment in the banking sector.

  • 18 of 23 cabinet members are millionaires.

  • 1% of UK citizens are millionaires, but 78% of the cabinet are millionaires.

  • "This is the banking fraternities feeding station."

  • Banks balance sheets are now 4 times GDP at 6 trillion pounds. They are holding the public hostage.

  • Their wealth has become so great through gaming the financial system that we are at a tipping point

  • whereby a single bank could now take down the entire economy.

  • "Eat her, eat her now, eat her! She's a public sector worker! Eat her! Suck her blood, Drink her dry!"

  • We can't let the banks go back to business as usual because if they do then all we're going to see is

  • more debt, more poverty, more inequality and another crisis in 5 or 10 years

  • which we're going to have to pay for again.

  • It is a political issue, ultimately, because the reforms that are required can only be achieved by Parliament.

  • We don't need a very big Act of Parliament. All it has to do is basically prevent the clearing banks

  • from creating currency based on the debt of their borrowers - that's it. You stop that.

  • This is George. George worked in a big bank in the City of London.

  • But one day without warning George's bank went bust. Luckily, the government rescued the bank

  • and George kept his job but the greedy government wanted something in return for their help.

  • They demanded a higher tax on George's salary and bonus.

  • For someone with a high cost lifestyle like George,

  • a shock like this can be devastating.

  • Now George struggles to afford the rent on his riverside apartment in central London.

  • The tyres on his Aston Martin are wearing thin and are barely road legal.

  • Unless George's situation improves - or unless someone like you helps him -

  • then George may even be forced to walk to past the next Saville Row tailors

  • and buy his suit from Topshop or Next.

  • Even if George had anything to celebrate he can no longer afford the champagne to celebrate with.

  • George is not alone. Countless others are suffering like him.

  • No-one knows how long it'll be until the good times return.

  • But with your help George can turn his life around.

  • A simple monthly donation from you can bring a bit of sunshine back to George's life.

  • Just £395 will help him celebrate minor achievements with a magnum of Cristal champagne.

  • As little as £900 will help George buy a new set of tyres for his Aston Martin.

  • £2000 can help George recover his self-esteem with a suit from

  • a prestigious Saville Row tailor. But even a small amount will help.

  • Just £200 will buy a meal for George and his girlfriend Experience.

  • Just £200 extra will buy the drinks.

  • By adopting a banker you won't just be supporting someone like George in a time of need

  • - you'll also be supporting the trendy wine bars of the City of London,

  • the luxury car makers of Italy and the tailors of Saville Row.

  • You'll be doing your patriotic duty to support Britain's greatest industry in its time of need.

  • And when the good times return and George gets his bonus back,

  • the taxes he pays will help fund the public services that the rest of you scroungers depend on.

  • So please, until the good times return for George and those like him, will you give today?

How is money created? Where does it come from? Who benefits?

字幕與單字

單字即點即查 點擊單字可以查詢單字解釋

B1 中級 美國腔

97%自有--經濟真相紀錄片--排隊被剪掉了 (97% Owned - Economic Truth documentary - Queuepolitely cut)

  • 162 25
    王惟惟 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日
影片單字