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== Missing Piece ==
17:52, 6 January 2008 BigK HeX (9,415 bytes) (detailed the economic process)
A fundamental question needs to be answered here, to be included in this article and the other related articles on money creation. I did what I could to look around, but finding anything clear about this topic is daunting, so I figured I'd ask openly here...
Some of this added information could draw dispute, but the references should satisfy any initial issues.
:Frankly, it is to such a degree an essay I think it needs rewrite or removal. ] (]) 22:02, 7 January 2008 (UTC)


Does the Federal Reserve (and central banks in general) hold some permanent debt in order for there to be a net gain in money supply? From what I understand, if the Fed, say, bought a security for $1000, it would remove the same amount of money as if it had sold the security. Now, when a security is created, and in the process money is created, if that same security is sold by the Fed, the same amount of money would be destroyed. The Fed would have to hold some securities and collect payments in order for there to be a net gain in the money supply.
== Essay? Some help, please ==


What am I missing?
There is a comment about the page being too much of an essay. I'm not exactly sure why an "essay" would be a violation of wikipedia policy. The wiki guideline about <i>personal</i> essays refers to inclusion of "personal feelings about a topic (rather than the consensus of experts)." ]] Though I have some feelings about the material, those were not included. I believe I have delivered the material in a pretty straightfoward manner, although I admit the possiblity that unconscious bias may have affected the tone. Also, I assume that standard English writing guidelines are outlined in ], and if so, then I should be within those guideline. The material I added is a simple compilation of factual information, along with the various expert opinions on the facts, as far I am aware. To me, this seems like an acceptable delivery of content in an encyclopedic form. Please help if I'm going astray. ] (]) 00:27, 8 January 2008 (UTC)


] (]) 04:07, 24 April 2010 (UTC)
:The article, as it exists now, has big problems with ] and perhaps ] (I didn't look at the sources in great detail, but most of them seem to be random websites rather than sources which reflect the general consensus of, say, economists). Perhaps another guideline which gives some idea of what is wrong is ]. If you are having trouble seeing that the article reads like someone's argument or speech, rather than an effort to summarize what is known about the topic, I suppose I could try to find examples in this article, but maybe it is better to just point to ] and ] (although I am somewhat disappointed to see that there is only one featured article in economics, ], which is perhaps a bit too academic to be a direct example to follow). A lot of the existing articles on related topics, although they've been on wikipedia a while, are not very good examples to follow as they have some of the same problems. ] (]) 03:01, 10 January 2008 (UTC)


:The Fed's ] do not change the total amount of money and near money in the private sector. They change the ] by replacing near money (mostly treasury securities) with money or vice versa. And they change the amount of bank reserves (since near money does not count as reserves) which affects the banks' ability to lend money (and thus create money from private IOUs) because of the ]. ] (]) 23:30, 24 April 2010 (UTC)
I would appreciate any specific examples that could be given about NPOV violations in this article. It is my belief that the only area which could fail NPOV is my addition to the "Criticisms" section (and then, only due to a lack of a blaancing perspective). All other parts of the article are simply published fact. Disputing any of the other information should be difficult, as they summarize known processes or government-sourced historical data. The majority of the additions that I made should require no "expert" or "mainstream" consensus, as they are not topics of opinion; so, aside from the "criticisms" section, I do have some trouble seeing how it could seem like an essay of opinion. I'd find that analogous to calling an article biased if it focused on the "negative financial impact of being an armed robbery victim," which is to say that sometimes the facts are just ugly, even without any bias. I would concede that some (probably only one or two) of the sources could fail RS, but that part can/should be easy to correct as the information itself is likely sound ... only needing to be quoted from more established sources. Most of the sources are from the Federal Reserve itself, government-published statistics, or economists who support the need for the Fed. Probably the only source that I cited which could be biased against the Fed is the website by "Hanson, Paul C." I have personally combed my additions for bias issues and even unattributed statements with weasel words -- I am confident that any such problems do not currently exist.
However, thanks for bringing up the concern, and for any assistance that you can offer! ] (]) 03:59, 10 January 2008 (UTC)


::These technicalities are not the issue that I am facing. Money is at its root created from the backing of this "near money" (which is only near-money because it is so liquid in secondary markets that use money). Once again, if, say, $1000 of securities are bought by the Fed, it might perhaps create $10,000, from what I understand, if it sold $1000 of the same securities in the same circumstance, it would reduce the money supply by $10,000. If this is true, then the Fed would have to hold onto some securities and collect payments on them for there to be a net gain in the money supply. What am I missing?
:Words like "IOU", "cold hard cash", "almost every single US Dollar", "Americans actually do have to pay for the money", etc. A statement like "If the total amount of loans were repaid to banks, then the entire supply of US dollars would be destroyed" isn't false, it is just worded in an opinionated way. "Occasional Deficit spending is a requirement in a growing economy". "exponential need for more and more money may be contributing directly to inflation in the US. Inflation raises the cost-of-living for everyone, and if inflation exceeds the growth of income, then people are effectively made poorer over time through no fault of their own." "Monetary policy means that the interest rates no longer represent . . .". Especially from this point down, almost every paragraph is infused with some kind of undue emphasis. I mean, "exercise of monetary policy has historically failed to achieve the goals that have been delegated". I'm a bit at a loss if you need this to be pointed out as POV. ] (]) 22:25, 10 January 2008 (UTC)
::] (]) 02:04, 26 April 2010 (UTC)


:::You are not being clear. Why do you thing you are missing something? Certainly the Fed's changes over time. ] (]) 05:49, 26 April 2010 (UTC)
::Agree entirely with Kingdon. I think this article should be outright deleted. Please also limit the amount of linking to this article in other articles until some more opinions are found on this; it comes across as extreme soapboxing.--] (]) 22:48, 10 January 2008 (UTC)
----
::::'''These are my assumptions about how the current monetary system works:'''
::::*Money creation originates through the creation of securities
::::*After this initial creation, much more is created through the banking system through fractional reserve
::::*When the Fed buys and sells securities, it increases or decreases the money supply
::::*Say in a particular scenario, when the Fed creates $1000, $10,000 is created through fractional reserve
::::*If $1000 is taken out of the system, the money supply likewise reduces by $10,000
::::*Assuming all of the above are correct, the only way there can be a net increase in the money supply is if some security is held by the Fed, which it is collecting payments for.
::::- in this case, if all things were constant (interest rates, etc), and supposing the entire money supply was $10,000, that would mean that the Fed would have to hold $1000 in securities, that it is collecting payments for.
::::- my question is: '''is this true, that the only way for there there to be a money supply, the Fed must hold some securities it is collecting payments for? If this is not true, my assumptions above must be incorrect - if that is the case, what is incorrect?'''
----
::::Unless I am mistaken in the above assumptions, this would be the only way the system could logically work.
::::I did find this(the fifth fact, about the Fed holding 7% of the Federal debt). So this does confirm that the Fed does hold some securities that it collects payments for.
::::What I am wondering is, with all of the assumptions above, is this the ''only'' way that the system can necessarily work?
::::] (]) 02:11, 28 April 2010 (UTC)


:::::Yes, the Fed (actually its twelve regional Federal Reserve Banks) does hold a lot of Treasury securities, and obligations of member banks. It also has: gold certificates (representing gold held by the U.S.Treasury department), special drawing rights (SDRs) which are obligations of the International Monetary Fund (IMF), and various other financial assets. The Fed earns interest on these securities which is uses to pay its expenses and increase its capital (when necessary). Any excess after that is paid to the U.S.Treasury. I suggest that you go to the Fed website and read their explanations of their business. I gave a link in my last message.
:::The revisions prior to January 2008, like or , don't really have the NPOV problem. But they do have bad writing, perhaps a ] problem, little wikification, and are rather short. So I'm not sure I'd advocate reverting to one of those revisions rather than say, blanking the page or creating a one sentence stub, if there is a desire to keep an article on the subject, but just not this one. Just because the article has been around since 2003 doesn't mean that it ever was very good. ] (]) 02:19, 11 January 2008 (UTC)
:::::There are other conceivable ways that a Monetary Authority could work. Or you could have a system without any Monetary Authority. ] (]) 03:06, 28 April 2010 (UTC)
::::::Sure. But my underlying question remains, which I have made bold above. ] (]) 06:06, 29 April 2010 (UTC)
::::::So, again:
::::::*''Is it that the only way for there to be a money supply is if the Fed holds some securities?''
::::::or, asked differently,
::::::*''Can there be a money supply without the Fed holding some securities?''
::::::] (]) 06:14, 29 April 2010 (UTC)


This depends on what you mean by "money" and what you mean by "can there be". There are several different definitions of the ], including: M<sub>0</sub>, M<sub>1</sub>, M<sub>2</sub> and M<sub>3</sub>. Most generally, ] is anything which can be freely exchanged for goods and services.<br>
::::Massively repetitive, however, of other articles. Hence I think it should just be deleted.--] (]) 02:26, 11 January 2008 (UTC)


The kind of money which is directly controlled by the Fed is the ] which is the cash (Federal Reserve Notes and coins) in circulation plus deposits in the Federal Reserve Banks. These are the dollar-denominated obligations of the Fed. The Fed is required by law to back the monetary base 100% by various kinds of collateral (i.e. the securities mentioned above). However, absent that law or in defiance of it, it could issue (but has not issued) additional uncollateralized currency or expend its collateral.<br>
:::::Yeah, deleting sounds fine. ] and ] do seem to cover the topic reasonably well. ] (]) 04:03, 11 January 2008 (UTC)


Other forms of money are constrained differently. M<sub>1</sub> includes the monetary base and also includes money created by banks lending using private IOUs as collateral. This is constrained by reserve requirements and capital requirements imposed on the banks. Credit card debt is still another form of money. It is backed by the expectation that the consumer will pay off his credit cards eventually.
:::::: Neither of those topics details the process of implementing monetary policy, as does this article. I find those claims of "massive repetition" to be less-than-credible. ] (]) 05:29, 11 January 2008 (UTC)


If people disregard various state and federal laws, then they could use: gold, silver, copper, cigarettes, silk stockings or other goods as money. Some island tribes have even used token ownership of large (immovable) rocks as money. ] (]) 00:58, 30 April 2010 (UTC)
===@ gregalton===
Why would I limit linking? I'm pretty sure linking articles is encouraged by wikipedia policy ... or are the "more opinions" to which you're referring, required to come from people that you specifically point here? Linking could only help in bringing *more* opinions, ya know ... ? ] (]) 04:37, 11 January 2008 (UTC)
:Yes, within reason, linking is a Good Thing (TM). Linking only to an article that you have contributed to, which (as opined by other editors) has POV issues, creates the impression that one is trying to spread a POV. And on a practical level, spreading links throughout the system this way means that they may have to be redone or removed by someone later.--] (]) 04:50, 11 January 2008 (UTC)


: Greenspan once approached a similar question about the necessity of using US debt securities, and stated that he was "confident" that other tools could be used because (something to the effect that) "the US has the most innovative financial markets in the world. " ] (]) 01:17, 30 April 2010 (UTC)
:: Errr .. that's only if you've assumed that this article's deletion is a foregone conclusion. Unless you're suggesting merger, I'm going to strive for maintaining this information, until such time that I'm convinced that it is in violation of policy or bends guidelines too far.


::Indeed. I personally have advocated using a different kind of collateral for the monetary base. In ], I suggest using: mutual fund shares, stock index futures, warrants, call options, commodity futures, and options to exchange dollars for foreign currency (e.g. call options on Yen). ] (]) 02:55, 30 April 2010 (UTC)
===@Kingdon===
:-"IOU" ... I would disagree. I find no connotation there whatsoever. It is simply the relatable, layman's term for a "treasury security." Admittedly, it is a non-technical term, which may be out-of-place in encyclopedic guidelines, but that could be corrected with more verbiage.
:-"cold hard cash" .. again, I would say there is no connotation. In fact, the phrase is used because there are few acceptable substitutes that convey the correct meaning, due to some ambiguity with the terms for money.
:-"almost every single US Dollar" ... plain fact. But, there is some emphasis there. Emphasis is desired there as it is a vital (and referenced) fact.
:-"Americans actually do have to pay for the money" ... some emphasis there, possibly undue.
:A statement like "If the total amount of loans were repaid to banks, then the entire supply of US dollars would be destroyed" isn't false, it is just worded in an opinionated way.
::I would disagree with the above. It is simple fact. There is no bias in the statement whatsoever. If you are referring to the use of the word "destroyed," because it possibly bothers you in some way, then I should inform you that the word is commonly used by experts in this context (it is the opposite of "creating" money).
:"Occasional Deficit spending is a requirement in a growing economy" ... there is no bias in that statement. If I said "Occasional love-making is a requirement in a growing economy" there would be no contention over the tone. Seeing as there is no ] guideline, I truthfully see no problem with the referenced sentence ... or is it common practice for wikipedia editors to shield visitors from simple *facts* that some could find troubling?
:"exponential need for more and more money may be contributing directly to inflation in the US. Inflation raises the cost-of-living for everyone, and if inflation exceeds the growth of income, then people are effectively made poorer over time through no fault of their own."
:: There probably is some undue emphasis in the above.
:"exercise of monetary policy has historically failed to achieve the goals that have been delegated".
::For this statement, I'd say that you're shooting the messenger. This is a statement of fact ... negative facts do not necessarily denote negative bias. I would be interested in how you would rewrite the statement
:I would say that the totality of the article could be better balanced. Positive opinions are actually difficult the find. What I've found on this topic is that --- even at best --- most regard the Federal Reserve and it's policy as a necessary evil.
:Thanks for the extensive help. ] (]) 04:37, 11 January 2008 (UTC)


::: Bookmarked. Looks like a pretty interesting read. Thanks for the link ] (]) 11:49, 30 April 2010 (UTC)
Its difficult to be objective over a theoretical topic that is the subject of thousands of books and many controversy.. This page should be a reference guide> not a definition <small>—Preceding ] comment added by ] (]) 07:02, 17 January 2008 (UTC)</small><!-- Template:UnsignedIP --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot-->


:I am well aware that there are infinite different kinds of money, and it is in fact not illegal - people can trade gold and silver, frequent flyer miles, and local currencies such as the ], which is officially tax-exempt by the ]. The example of the Yap Islanders you mentioned is a particularly interesting example of the diversity of money. Your idea sounds interesting, and I am looking forward to reading it.
== Deletion and policy ==


:Lets please focus on answering my question, which has assumptions that I have laid out both explicitly (clearly in the points above) and implicitly (I am obviously only referring to the American Dollar). I am only talking about the current paradigm, not any other theory that is not in practice by the Federal Reserve System. In any case, you did go one step closer in addressing the question, and I really appreciate that (as well as the other information and ideas you provided). If you can, please go through my points again (the assumptions I have boxed, and the questions in bold), and try not to get caught up in the technicalities of what I am saying, and address the problem according to my intentions one can infer. I think I have made myself completely clear, but, of course, if there is any further clarification needed, please ask.
:Gregalton proposed:
:] (]) 22:32, 5 May 2010 (UTC)
::Duplicate material covered in other articles, including fractional reserve banking, federal reserve board, etc., ad nauseam.


:: I'm not sure if this talk page is really the proper venue to pose such fact-finding questions.....
:MisterHand proposed:
:: In any case, if you're asking whether the Fed could switch to using other assets as the crucial instrument in conducting monetary policy, then the answer is "yes .... but only in theory." I don't really see that covering this part of the theory is "a missing piece." Basic theories on how the Fed ''could'' function, seem to be a subset of information on '''monetary policy''' in general, and, IMO, best addressed there. ] (]) 22:48, 5 May 2010 (UTC)
::Essay that violates WP:NPOV. Appropriate for a blog, but not for an encyclopedia


:::To NittyG: I still do not understand your question. You seem to be asking <<if the system works the way it works, is that the only way it can work?>>. Duh?
I, personally, support the maintenace of the page in a semblence of it's current state.
:::Please say ''why'' you want to know the answer. Perhaps that will help me figure out what your question is. ] (]) 23:59, 5 May 2010 (UTC)
:I have read ] and would still assert that these following policies would support the case for preservation: ] and ], as well as ] and ], and to some extent, ] and ]. Also, none of the cited reasons for proposed deletion exists in ] except with the possibility of "Content not suitable for an encyclopedia" however, even in checking ] I still find no relevence to this article. Sorry for all of this legal-type mumbo-jumbo.
::::I see. My question is whether that ''is'' the way the system works. I am asking because if it is true, then that is an essential part of explaining how the system works, and that needs to be included in this article and related ones. I rephrased the question, in bold above. ] (]) 20:58, 6 May 2010 (UTC)
I will explain again that the majority of the information is simple present-day "history." The sources are generally incontrovertible, and there is no need to represent a "mainstream" or "majority" viewpoint because these are *not* opinion pieces. Aside from the Criticisms section, the article does not contain a "view" or "perspective" or "pet theory" of monetary policy --- it is relating factual information related to monetary policy, which is mostly uncontestable due to the fact that processes described are at work nearly everyday. I would contend that the information about the <i>implementation of monetary policy in the US</i> is NOT to be found anywhere in wikipedia detailed as on this page. It is also a moderately sized articles (as far as webpages go ...) so I'm sure that this is not likely a merger candidate. Also, no one seems to disputing the accuracy, nor has anyone pointed out any particular source which is problematic, so I am assuming that the only problem is ], although I still hold that the presentation of facts which generally would induce negative emotion does NOT necessarily denote a problem of bias. If it is still truly an issue, I'm willing to work on corrections, and anyone can feel free to ], in regards to the <i>tone</i>. I would be interested in examples of how some of the statements could be better worded. ] (]) 07:10, 11 January 2008 (UTC)


:::::As far as how the system does work now, you are correct.
:Thanks for your notes. I still support deleting the article. It would be better to integrate any new or non-existing information into existing articles. And, please take these comments below as constructively as possible, but I will state upfront that the number of errors and exaggerations in this text - often based on poor sources - is a tedious task to deal with. Where did you get this text? Did you write it yourself or compile it from other sources?
:::::But even with a Monetary Authority (i.e. a central bank like the Fed), there are other ways it could work. The Fed could back the monetary base solely with gold which earns no interest or dividends. Whether this would be better or worse than the current system is a matter of some debate.
:To go through the article (again, any key facts not already in existing articles can be added):
:::::Worse, it could have no collateral at all and rely on using the '']'' laws to force people to use its money and no other kind. This creates a major risk of hyper-inflation and eliminates the Fed's ability to shrink the money supply by monetary means, although shrinking it by running a budget surplus (fiscal means) is still possible (but politically unbelievable).
#How money is created: already covered in ] and ].
:::::Does this answer your question? ] (]) 08:07, 7 May 2010 (UTC)
#Federal reserve and money supply: ditto.
::::::I guess I just need to make sure... You mentioned earlier that it is required by law for the Fed to back the monetary base with some kind of collateral, via securities. Are you saying it is only the law that requires this, or is it a given? Without the law, given the assumption that the monetary base can only be created through securities, under the current regime (again, with my assumptions above), wouldn't the Fed have to keep some securities it collects payments for anyway, since that would destroy the money supply that rests on the monetary base? If it had no securities under the current regime, with or without a law, since the monetary supply is created through securities, having no securities would mean that there would be no monetary base, and therefore no money supply (again, regarding the money supply I'm implicitly referring to, under the current monetary regime).
#How money is placed into circulation: should go in one of the above articles. In this section, I note there are quotes from Hemphill that are not sourced (out of context). The bit about the fed's 'private' status is unbalanced and should be in the fed article.
::::::If it is only the requirement by law that makes the Fed back the monetary base with securities, that is, the Fed can create money even without holding securities under the monetary regime without that law, then something about my assumptions is wrong, and we need to figure out what that is. ] (]) 02:02, 8 May 2010 (UTC)
#Ramifications: riddled with errors and misuse of sources. For example, the statement that Federal Reserve holds 45% of debt is wrong (easily found in the treasury bulletin). 45% is held by government agencies and trust funds, etc. Only $800 bln is held by Fed. The Greenspan quote is misused: he says he's "confident that US financial markets ... can readily adapt." The entire para about the cost of "maintaining the money that is printed by the government" is just wrong: there are no interest costs associated with paper money. There are no interest costs associated with bank reserves at the fed. Interest on debt held by the fed is repaid to the government. The interest costs referred to are paid by the private sector. What we are left with is interest paid by the government for money it has borrowed (and almost half of which it pays to its own agencies and trust funds). The subsequent para "more loans must be created each month" is not suppported by the citations, which say nothing of the sort. Next para makes a broad claim about social conflict - no citation. Next para is also not supported by sources (yes, wage growth has not kept pace with inflation for many, but that is a distinct issue from inflation). The claims about exponential growth are not supported, even if relevant. (Can anyone explain to me why exponential growth of a notional unit of account is bad, anyway? Okay, there are more zeros, but so what?). So essentially, the whole remifications section is original reserach and/or wrong.
#Money supply, interest rates and the economy: covered in other articles.
#Criticism: Artificial influences - covered in ].
#Lack of accountability: the entire bit on audits is nonsense and poorly sourced. The Fed's own page is quite ] about how they are audited. I'm looking at the PWC independent audit now. The only supposedly unusual aspect is limited audits by GAO, as described ], which was specifically put in fed legislation to allow independence (i.e. it would be defying the will of congress to do otherwise). It is also analogous to practice at other central banks - check Bank of Canada website. (And this part should really be in Fed article, if anywhere).
#Fulfilment of goals: original research and completely unbalanced. If there is to be such a section, it should be based on citations of note, and with some balance. (Is the Fed batting .500? Better than many administrations...) There is much excellent and nuanced commentary and research of "success" of fed, including much academic research by current chairman of fed, but this ain't it.
#Public confusion: quoting only McFadden in this section is comical. At any rate, should be in article on Fed.
#Mathematics: Covered in other articles.
:I end where I began. I do not see any content in here that is compelling to keep as a separate article, and little that I would keep at all. I would appreciate comments from other editors, but I for one am not prepared to go through line by line fixing an article that has so little distinct content. (Spent too much time on a few others like this).
:BigK: I would kindly suggest that, as a new user, it would be more productive to contribute to the existing articles.--] (]) 13:23, 11 January 2008 (UTC)
::I agree with everything Gregalton has written here and have submitted the article to ] for opinions from a wider group of editors. -- ] <small>(]|])</small> 14:39, 11 January 2008 (UTC)


Let us look at this from another perspective. Regardless of what the government wants, something cannot be money unless most people are willing to accept it in trade for valuable goods and services. Thus historically money has always originated as a commodity which is widely desired by people. Once money exists, banks and governments can create other forms of money by establishing a linkage to an existing form, e.g. promising to exchange paper money for gold. After such a fiat currency has become the main medium of exchange, the banks or governments often cheat by withdrawing their promise, embezzling the collateral, or replacing some of the collateral with other securities which are nominally but not actually equivalent. In the case of the United States, gold (a commodity with real value) has been mostly replaced as collateral by U.S.Treasury securities (which are based on nothing but the unreliable promise to tax people to raise the means to buy the currency back). Thus money becomes a kind of confidence game or ]. The game can continue as long as the trickster (bank or government) does not get too greedy and no better alternative form of money is available to the public. Otherwise hyper-inflation will occur and destroy the currency. ] (]) 04:43, 8 May 2010 (UTC)
::: Of course you do, MisterHand... Seeing as the "fractional reserve" article stood, and it had definite RS problems, I am confident that this article is much better a candidate for amendment or merger than deletion. ] (]) 15:05, 11 January 2008 (UTC)
::::This article is filled with misleading information, and it would be a waste of time to clean it up since virtually everything that this article talks about is covered in other articles. ] (]) 00:57, 17 January 2008 (UTC)


:Yes, again, I knew all of that, and it does not in any way address the previous entry I made. Lets please focus on the issue I brought up in this discussion :) ] (]) 06:03, 8 May 2010 (UTC)
===To Gregalton===
:: I have no problem integrating the text into other articles. Obviously, that would be a moot point if the text is disputed. Until such disputes subside or are resolved, then it is not really a good option.
:: The 45% number is indeed inaccurate. I misread some sources. I thought that seemed like a pretty large leap from the 8% - 10% that the Fed was holding when I last checked into the topic. Easy to correct.
:: "The Greenspan quote is misused: he says he's '"confident that US financial markets ... can readily adapt.'" ... now that you point it out, I'll concede that the Greenspan quote is misused, but any reasonable person would draw the same conclusions ... it is a "waffling statement" that does not inspire confidence.
:: "there are no interest costs associated with paper money." That is blatantly wrong. Never did I assert that the government pays the interest and you yourself point out that I refer to the interest burden being with the citizens ("The interest costs referred to are paid by the private sector"). You're arguing against something I never said, unless you dispute that the private sectors bears this burden (which is impossible in light of citable facts).
:: "broad claim about social conflict" ... it's somewhat harder to find reliable sources on this, though a multitude of less reliable ones exist. My citation on that one is still pending.
:: "wage growth has not kept pace with inflation for many, but that is a distinct issue from inflation" ... again, I would challenge this statement as being blatantly incorrect. You'll have to cite some sources where I can draw such a conclusion, because any scholarly writing on "real wages" will certainly tell you that wage growth and inflation are fundamentally linked.
:: "claims about exponential growth are not supported" ... inflation is directly tied to the excessive growth of the money supply (whether that growth is exponential or not). Statement may not be relevent. It's removal may be warranted.
:: "Can anyone explain to me why exponential growth of a notional unit of account is bad, anyway? Okay, there are more zeros, but so what?" Explaining it to *you* is not really relelvent is it? ... But, perhaps exponential growth is bad because we don't want ] just to maintain the money supply.... maybe. But, anyways, the more relevent concerns.
::"entire bit on audits is nonsense and poorly sourced" ... find me a reliable source on the independent auditing of the Fed's open market operations, and you or I can easily provide the balancing viewpoint. Audits of their wage payments and operating costs, etc. are quite a different (and much less notable) aspect. I don't dispute that at all. In fact, I quite clearly note that they ARE audited in some forms, and the citation dicusses the results of one such audit. Again, if you want to dispute the facts as I have asserted (and cited) then I challenge to you to one single reliable source that shows strong evidence of audits '''of the open market operations.''' Also, I contend that the sources I cited for this passage are reliable ... one quotes USCA law (for which I even provide a link to the actual text of the law on the Cornell website); and the other source quotes a "Wall Street Journal" article. If that's not strong enough, I'm sure I can dig up the actual article, although it seems less-than-necessary.
::"Fulfilment of goals: original research and completely unbalanced" ... compiling information from reliable sources is NOT original research (even if the information is new to you). Obviously, the Great Depression happened after Fed was established *despite* their mission to prevent such things. If that seems like original research to you .... ummm ... well, I don't know what to tell you. Also, I directly quote a Fed policymaker who says that inflation is ideal if 1 - 2%. I also then quote the Fed's own published statistics on inflation which show an average inflation of 3.4% ... I'm very curious exactly which part of the Fed's mission failure is supposed to consistute original research on my part? Then, I clearly cite reliable sources about the decline of real wages. Again, the Fed's failure is simple historical fact. The fact that I bring it up is not "original research" nor is it bias on my part.
:: "If there is to be such a section, it should be based on citations of note, and with some balance" ... ]! Anyone can certainly feel free to add any balancing perspectives which they feel have been overlooked. Obviously, balance isn't achieved by deletion, or wikipedia would be rather small ....
:: "quoting only McFadden in this section is comical" ... quoting one of the most notable critics of monetary policy in a section about 'criticisms of monetary policy' is comical? That's certainly an interesting stance.
:: "I do not see any content ... " I get the impression that you may be a self-styled "defender of economic truth," which is fine. After reading the "fractional reserve" debacle, I actually was going to contact you about this article for advice on improvement, as you seemed to show some patience with karmaisking and he was not even very reasonable. Unfortunately that patience has expired, but your presence here could prove helpful nonetheless. Thanks for your continued input. ] (]) 15:05, 11 January 2008 (UTC)


:: ] aside, a basic problem is that neither of us here seems to understand your question. You ask "''Is it that the only way for there to be a money supply is if the Fed holds some securities?''" but then simultaneously say ''"I am only talking about the current paradigm, not any other theory that is not in practice by the Federal Reserve System."'' JSpriggs has already summed this up pretty succinctly above when he wrote, <blockquote>To NittyG: I still do not understand your question. You seem to be asking <<if the system works the way it works, is that the only way it can work?>></blockquote>
:::Just to give the flavour for new editors: please see ]. Some notable quotes: He claimed that Jews controlled the American economy, and that the United States had to choose between "'''God and the money changers who have unlawfully taken our gold and lawful money into their possession'''." McFadden also blamed Jews for president Roosevelt's decision to abandon the gold standard, and claimed that "in the United States today, '''the Gentiles have the slips of paper while the Jews have the lawful money'''." McFadden is also remembered for his criticism of the Federal Reserve, which he claimed was created and operated by European banking interests '''who conspired to economically control the United States'''. On June 10, 1932, McFadden made a 25-minute speech before the House of Representatives, in which he accused the Federal Reserve of '''deliberately''' causing the Great Depression. McFadden also claimed that Wall Street bankers '''funded the Bolshevik Revolution through the Federal Reserve banks''' and the European central banks with which it cooperated. In 1932, he moved to impeach President Herbert Hoover, and also introduced a '''resolution bringing conspiracy charges against the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve.''' The impeachment resolution was defeated by a vote of 361 to 8; it was seen as a big vote of confidence to President Hoover from the House." (My emphasis)
:: Your basic questions have already been answered.
:::This is "one of the most notable critics of monetary policy"? Do you truly not see the issue here?
::*''Is it that the only way for there to be a money supply is if the Fed holds some securities?''
:::Burden of interest: I must be missing your point. If I contract to borrow money and pay interest, is that a burden to me? In which case, I'm annoyed about the burden of paying for things I consume, too.
:: Answer: No that is not the only way for there to be a money supply, but the Fed currently only holds US Treasury securities to effect monetary policy (for good reason).
:::Exponential growth: would not require more printing presses. More zeros on the bills. At any rate, I find it hard to believe that you are seriously arguing that the cost of printing money would be a problem. (And please don't compare to Weimar, Zimbabwe, etc - exponential growth of 2-10% does not necessarily mean hyperinflation).
::*''Can there be a money supply without the Fed holding some securities?''
:::As for the 3% or 1-2% inflation, the 1-2% target/consensus is relatively new. A nuanced discussion would a) compare with experience of other central banks/currencies; b) note issues regarding the relative weighting of the Fed's "three-pronged" goals; c) cite historical, academic analyses (Bernanke is a good start); d) distinguish between different periods, chairmen, etc.
:: Answer: Yes there can be a money supply, but currently the Fed chooses (for good reason) to only utilize a holding of US Treasury securities.
:::And, I'm sorry, but I've heard the "SOFIXIT" request before. It is not reasonable to ask others to fix OR/POV articles to this degree. I have made my best suggestion: fix it by deleting it.--] (]) 15:41, 11 January 2008 (UTC)
:: If you're trying to get at something else, you may have to clarify. ] (]) 16:58, 8 May 2010 (UTC)


:::There is one, perhaps obvious, point which none of us has yet mentioned explicitly. The use of a medium of exchange is much more efficient than barter. Thus transactions using money make a profit relative to barter. This profit is divided between the users of money (ordinary people who buy and sell) and the Monetary Authority which takes a cut by inflating the currency and through ]. If the Monetary Authority takes too much, then the users cannot make enough profit to sustain the system and it collapses. This is another way of expressing the last point in my previous message. ] (]) 17:38, 8 May 2010 (UTC)
:::: McFadden is indeed one of the most notable critics of monetary policy in the US. You seem to have fallen into the common trap of confusing notability with <i>credibility</i>. Also, you seem to have personal bias against him. None of that has anything to do with his notability as a critic.
:::: I only refer to interest as a "burden" here. The article quite plainly refers to it as a cost -- the cost of maintaining the money supply. So, again, you're arguing against something that is not stated in the article.
:::: "exponential growth of 2-10% does not necessarily mean hyperinflation" ... and it doesn't NOT mean hyperinflation. Your example of "printing more zeros" is irrelevent as there is little successful precedent in such cases. Simple example ... a printing press has the capability of printing $100 per citizen per day. The average person starts at year #1 with $50 of daily expense. Even with only 3% inflation, the priting presses will be at full capacity in 23 years. Governments have collapsed once that point is reached, even despite your brilliant suggestion that they simply take up everyone's money and add more zeros to them.
:::: "my best suggestion: fix it by deleting it" ... sounds like censorship of verifiable informtion to me. Now that the factual issues are resolved, and weak NPOV arguments stand as the only impediment, I am confident that amedment is the better course. ] (]) 16:02, 11 January 2008 (UTC)


BigK HeX - you must not have really read our conversation. My question has actually not been answered definitively.
:You're right, McFadden is notable, but not credible. Quoting a notable source of low credibility (some would say a noted conspiracy theorist) seems POV to me, unless of course the point is to demonstrate the arguments of conspiracy theorists. This is discussed in WP:Fringe, WP:Undue and also the standard example, Flat Earth.
*First I was told, yes, money can be a wide variety of things, to which I responded that I am implicitly implying the American Dollar.
:I'm not sure I understand at all why the "cost" of interest is different from any other good. There are costs to roads, too. One might reasonably argue that the benefits outweigh the costs, or at least consider the issue. The point that there are costs to having a functional society seems...I don't even know what to say here... banal? (Would there be costs under any feasible alternative?)
*Next, I was told that yes, by law this is the case, to which I responded that my question is whether this is a necessity of the system.
:Actually, it does not mean ], which has a definition (under international accounting rules, generally in excess of 20% per annum). As for examples of countries that have added (and removed) zeroes with no substantial or uncontrolled cost of printing, one could cite Turkey, Brazil, Italy, France, Russia, etc. The only cases I'm aware of where the costs of printing have been said to be problematic are Weimar and perhaps Zimbabwe, where the problem could be said to be runaway hyperinflation (i.e. hyperinflation accelerating so rapidly that you can't add zeroes fast enough).
*I am not asking "if the system works the way it works, is that the only way it can work?" - I am asking ''is this the way the system works?''
:I don't know why you're playing the censorship card. Any valid points, if useful and relevant, can be integrated into existing articles as I've suggested. You are confident amendment is the better course, I and some others are not.--] (]) 16:31, 11 January 2008 (UTC)
- the "assumptions" I noted above are not assumptions I am holding for the sake of a theoretical experiment - they are assumptions that I am holding about how the monetary system ''works'', and whether they are ''wrong'' (I just wrote that out a bit further).
*And this is not ]. As I said twice, the answer to my question needs to be explicated in this article and articles related to it, because it is essential in understanding how the current monetary paradigm functions. I have been entirely on topic, not related to a forum.
Please, go through what I have put between the lines. What I wrote there is very, very clear.
] (]) 04:03, 9 May 2010 (UTC)
:I suppose that the key assumption above is the fifth (''If $1000 is taken out of the system, the money supply likewise reduces by $10,000''). It has been said everywhere I have read that if a certain amount of money (X) is put into the system, and subsequently the money supply multiplies through fractional reserve, the same situation would "run in reverse" if the same amount (X) was taken out of the system. If this is true, then somewhere there has to be a permanent amount of debt, which is what I am trying to figure out. And once again, I am ''only'' talking about the system today, which I am assuming (the first assumption) money only originates through securities, which may also be incorrect. I hope this clarifies things a bit more :) ] (]) 04:23, 9 May 2010 (UTC)
::Frankly, I think we have already answered you more than once. Your assumptions listed are correct generally.
::If the Fed wants to contract the money supply, the main method used is to sell some of its collateral. Suppose XYZ buys a Treasury bill from the Fed for $1000. To do so, XYZ writes a check on its account at ABC national bank. When the check clears, that $1000 is deducted from XYZ's account at ABC national bank, ''and'' $1000 is also deducted from ABC's account at the New York (or other) Federal Reserve Bank. Thus the reserves belonging to ABC are reduced by $1000. So ABC must reduce the demand deposits for which it is liable by $10,000 in order to comply with the ]. Since its obligation to XYZ has already been reduced by $1000, it must reduce its lending or call in loans amounting to $9000 (unless it has excess reserves to spare).
::ABC national bank also must make sure that it has enough capital to remain solvent (not be seized by the FDIC). So even if there were no legal reserve requirement, it would need to maintain a certain amount of reserves to protect itself from runs on the bank and normal fluctuations of withdrawals.
::Ultimately, the payment of any debt that is denominated in U.S. dollars must be convertible to base money (money that is part of the monetary base, i.e. Federal Reserve Notes, U.S. coins, and deposits at the twelve Federal Reserve Banks). This is what makes the monetary base controlling of the much larger amount of other kinds of dollars. If the amount of non-base dollars becomes too large, there will be a run on it, i.e. those who hold non-base money risk losing the value of their money (through default of the entity that created the money) or experiencing a delay in being able to use it.
::Every financial asset is also an obligation of another party. Every dollar you have is owed to you by someone. So yes, there is an enormous amount of debt in the system. Every bank account is an asset for the owner of the account and also a liability of the bank. Every share of stock is an asset for the owner of the share and an obligation (equity) of the company of which it is a share. Every coin in your pocket is an asset for you and a liability of the United States. ] (]) 10:43, 9 May 2010 (UTC)
:::At this point I feel that we have not been able to help each other. I have not been able to explain my question clearly, and you feel that you have already answered it. Perhaps someone can come along and answer my question.
:::To respond - Again, you said that my assumptions are correct ''generally''. I am asking whether they are ''necessarily'' correct within the current monetary practice. Besides this, I have written clearly above my question, and clearly written how my question hasn't been answered.
:::In any case, I'll take another stab at it.
:::The possible answers I am looking for are simple:
:::(1)"Yes, the Fed '''must''' hold some securities it is collecting payments for"
:::(2)"No, there is a circumstance where the Fed can hold '''no''' securities, and still have a money supply"
:::- if #2 is the case, which of the above assumptions do not hold true?
:::Building on your scenario above, where XYZ purchases a security for $1000, and the money supply decreases by $10,000 - in the same circumstance, if XYZ instead ''sold'' the same security to the Fed, under my assumptions, the money supply would likewise increase by $10,000. If the Fed then simultaneously sold the security, the money supply would again reduce by $10,000. If this is is how the money system works in general, then there would be no ''net'' money supply, so the Fed must '''always''' keep some securities it collects payment for.
:::If my question can't be answered to our mutual satisfaction, then I think that we should just hold off. Thanks for your help - I appreciate your time and consideration. ] (]) 17:30, 12 May 2010 (UTC)


:::: You say, ''The possible answers I am looking for are simple:
== Hemphill quote ==
:::::(1)"Yes, the Fed '''must''' hold some securities it is collecting payments for"
:::::(2)"No, there is a circumstance where the Fed can hold '''no''' securities, and still have a money supply"
:::: You already received this answer. From above:
:::::*''Is it that the only way for there to be a money supply is if the Fed holds some securities?''
:::::* Answer: No that is not the only way for there to be a money supply, but the Fed currently only holds US securities.
:::: Unfortunately, it seems the possibly "missing piece" from the article is not really missing, a conclusion which would suggest that this article's talk page has served its purpose for this matter. ] (]) 17:45, 12 May 2010 (UTC)


:::::To BigK Hex: Your statement that "''the Fed currently only holds US securities''" is false. It has many different kinds of assets as part of its collateral. Its collateral includes Special Drawing Rights which are obligations of the International Monetary Fund (not a part of U.S.) and it has swap arrangements with Canada, U.K., Europe, and Switzerland under which it may hold their currencies. It also holds: Agency debt, Mortgage Backed Securities, Repurchase agreements, etc.. See . ] (]) 01:37, 13 May 2010 (UTC)
This quote has been reinserted: "In, summary, almost '''every US Dollar'''<sup>↑↑</sup> '''anywhere in the world represents a''' '''''current outstanding''''' '''loan of some US citizen''' somewhere.]
I do not see this source "sourced." When was it said? In what context? Who is Robert Hemphill (I cannot find him on internet, except in relation to this quote)? Note I don't have a huge problem with the quote itself, if it can be sourced properly. And yes, I contend this is not, as referenced here, a proper source - surely the original quote can be found? The "source" provides no further information as to where they got this.--] (]) 17:02, 11 January 2008 (UTC)


::: Err .. is it NOT a quote. The statement in the article is a conclusion that is '''reinforced''' by the quote. Robert Hemphill was a credit manager of the Atlanta Federal Reserve. I will add multiple citations to buttress the statement in the article, since a Federal Reserve insider is insufficent. ] (]) 17:09, 11 January 2008 (UTC) :::::: Yeah, I shouldn't phrase it as such ... too lazy to qualify it more thoroughly as a reference to collateral for the "bulk of the money supply." Nitty's question seems to regard the general operation of the Fed, and of the assets that the Fed could use to generally support the majority of the money supply. Of course, recent events have prompted all of the quantitative easing and auction facility efforts, making the current definition of "normal" for the Fed's operation difficult to pin down. It may not be wise for me to assume that the Fed will go back to carrying-out business as it did 3 years ago. ] (]) 06:48, 13 May 2010 (UTC)


Also, I think that it is bad for the Fed to use U.S. Treasuries (and other government securities) as collateral. They are not backed by real wealth. Using them enables and encourages the Congress to spend money which it does not really have, a very bad habit. And they are debt rather than equity which makes control of inflation more difficult as I explained at ]. ] (]) 05:53, 14 May 2010 (UTC)
:My point is, the quote and status as an insider are not verified. Other quotes would be welcome.--] (]) 17:34, 11 January 2008 (UTC)


== External links modified ==
:: As to the rest .... I'm not sure on the policy of Fringe ... I thought it did not discourage minority views that received wide notability. I'll have to review the policy. Feel free to remove the text if it does violate any interpretation of Fringe policy, or I'll do it myself if I come to that understanding.
:: "there are costs to having a functional society seems...banal" ..... Banal information that is factual and verifable doesn't seem like a candidate for deletion. Leave it and let it bore readers, IMO. If you can reliably dispute it then plesase delete it as an "egregious factual error"
:: "don't know why you're playing the censorship card" .... I don't know your general history, but the karmaisking debate and the insistence on deletion suggests censorship. The fact that you found this article shortly after Google crawled it, even suggests that you may even actively search for articles of this nature ... if true, it would give further credence to a personal policy of censorship in regards to negative information being disseminated about the Fed. I've seen such persistence before, even in light of incontrovertible evidence, so I am making characterizations about you that may be undue ... but in light of this opposition, the unfound accusations, and the account ban ... it can't be helped. ] (]) 17:09, 11 January 2008 (UTC)


Hello fellow Wikipedians,
:Inclusion of information that tries to make a point ('there are costs') without context or the other side of the argument lack balance. If I said, for example, "maintaining the United States transportation network, particularly roads, has enormous costs to government and society" this would be unbalanced and possibly fringe (repeat as necessary for military, justice system, police, education, etc). While technically true (the costs are large), presenting it with no context whatsoever is POV. "The cost of feeding the American people is a huge drain on private and public finances." Well, yes, but without that "cost" they would die. (This is, of course, facetious, but only partly so). Please see ], which clearly states that "Even when a topic is presented in terms of facts rather than opinion, an article can still radiate an implied stance through either '''selection of which facts to present''', or more subtly their organization." (My emphasis)
:I found the article while eradicating excessive links, especially of fringe topics. The fact that your sources overlap to some degree with that other editor's did not help. I have, of course, apologized for the mistaken identity (and please note that I did not advocate blocking you so hastily but asked for a checkuser, but feel that was an honest mistake on Coren's part, for which he also apologized).
:I have no link to the fed nor particularly care about the Fed's rep. I do care about (what I believe to be) unbalanced POV articles that give undue weight to fringe theories in a purported encyclopedia. I feel particularly strongly about conspiracy theories being pushed here (not saying you're doing so, but for some reason monetary policy attracts the conspiracy-minded).
:And please, "incontrovertible evidence" is a rather loaded phrase, that tends to get thrown around here. I have not made many claims to have ], but have tried to indicate where I believe this article is off track. And yes, I feel it would be better to delete, for reasons I've outlined. Please don't take it personally.--] (]) 17:34, 11 January 2008 (UTC)


I have just added archive links to {{plural:1|one external link|1 external links}} on ]. Please take a moment to review . If necessary, add {{tlx|cbignore}} after the link to keep me from modifying it. Alternatively, you can add {{tlx|nobots|deny{{=}}InternetArchiveBot}} to keep me off the page altogether. I made the following changes:
::I don't take any offense (against you .. Coren's hasty action is another matter). I expected your resistance (as mentioned, I considered preemptively contacting you just so I could get this ball rolling). I don't use the term "incontrovertible evidence" lightly. In this case, I feel justified in using the phrase because the *source* of the information is the very same organization which the information reflects negatively against. I am aware of that ] that cites bias even with facts. I would contend that wikipedia guidelines would lean much more heavily into people "being bold" and adding the balancing perspective than to delete the article for less-than-egregious lopsidedness. The truth of the matter is that the more positive rationales for the Federal Reserve are not readily available in electronic form, and I am trying to keep this article as easy to verify as possible, as some of the information compiled is not well understood. ] (]) 17:45, 11 January 2008 (UTC)
*Added archive http://web.archive.org/web/20060708190506/http://www.frbsf.org:80/education/activities/drecon/answerxml.cfm?selectedurl=/2005/0507.html to http://www.frbsf.org/education/activities/drecon/answerxml.cfm%3Fselectedurl%3D/2005/0507.html


When you have finished reviewing my changes, please set the ''checked'' parameter below to '''true''' to let others know.
::As to the POV-balance of the statements involving "costs of maintaining the money supply" ... most people's first reaction is that simple maintanance of the money supply should NOT be charged to the American public (beyond the cost of printing) and certainly not charged with compound interest. So, including that elaboration would not help with the POV issues, and I intentionally failed to go into that bit of detail. ] (]) 17:59, 11 January 2008 (UTC)


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:I'm not sure I understand your point on the costs of maintaining the money supply. The American "public" does not pay, borrowers do; in fact, to the extent that the American "public" are depositors, they actually get paid for it. As for the actual currency, the American public net-net gets income from seigniorage. The public does, of course, pay for government borrowings, but that is a separate issue (government debt). And, of course, to the extent that any borrowings result in economic growth, they indirectly benefit. There are lots of criticisms and costs that I would agree with, such as the inflation tax in the case of 'excess' money supply growth, but I honestly don't understand your point here.--] (]) 18:11, 11 January 2008 (UTC)


Cheers.—]<small><sub style="margin-left:-14.9ex;color:green;font-family:Comic Sans MS;">]:Online</sub></small> 00:14, 28 February 2016 (UTC)
:: 'Tis a simple point. You may be overanalyzing, maybe? The entirety of American currency is supported by bank loans. Bank loans cost interest. American citizens and businesses are the ones to acquire these loans. Thus, American citizens and businesses are the ones paying the interest costs which support the monetary base. There no hidden message in there. Just a simple conclusion of the costs of the economic process. ] (]) 18:20, 11 January 2008 (UTC)


== External links modified ==
:I guess I am overanalyzing. I'm going to do more so: you are presenting this as a bad thing. I could equally argue that US citizens are being provided a service (access to funds for money). I could also argue that if non-US citizens borrow money (which they do), they are subsidizing US money supply creation. At any rate, I would appreciate a proper citation here: this is (IMO) original research of the synthesis type - you have made a conclusion and implied moral judgment about the allocation of the costs that I don't recall seeing elsewhere. (In contrast, the conclusion that non-US citizens holding US physical currency are making an interest-free loan to the US government is quite standard).--] (]) 18:26, 11 January 2008 (UTC)


Hello fellow Wikipedians,
:: acknowleged. (I'll let you in on this, though ... I am not presenting it as good nor bad. I am simply presenting it, with no connotation of bias either way. The reason I am presenting it is mostly because there is a lot of misinformation that there is ZERO interest cost paid to support the monetary base, despite the facts.) <small>—Preceding ] comment added by ] (] • ]) 18:37, 11 January 2008 (UTC)</small><!-- Template:Unsigned --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot-->


I have just modified 8 external links on ]. Please take a moment to review . If you have any questions, or need the bot to ignore the links, or the page altogether, please visit ] for additional information. I made the following changes:
:It comes across (IMO) as bad. If you say 'most people's reaction is that ... it should NOT be charged to the American public', it's a bit of a contradiction to then say it's neutral. Where do you see someone claiming that there is zero interest cost paid to support the monetary base? I can only see this interpretation if there is confusion about the different definitions of money (M1 through 17 or whatever they're up to now). There is no interest cost for physical currency, and issue costs are swamped by seigniorage; this is probably what such sources are referring to. Costs for the other types of money are borne by those who borrow it, so hard to see that there is an issue. Stating this point without clearly distinguishing between the types of money would be an issue. (Side note: throughout most of the monetary articles, I find there is mass confusion about the distinctions between the different types of money).--] (]) 18:47, 11 January 2008 (UTC)
*Corrected formatting/usage for http://blogs.ft.com/maverecon/2007/10/long-live-debt.html
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When you have finished reviewing my changes, you may follow the instructions on the template below to fix any issues with the URLs.
:: Even if most Americans hold the view that "murder is bad," then me simply reporting that "murder occured" is not biased. I delievered the information in that statement with no connotation ... I cannot help how it may be generally regarded. I won't bother to cite examples but there are economists who insist that the issuance of "Federal Reserve Notes" and "US Notes" is equivalent. As obviated by the economic process as outlined ... it is not equivalent. ] (]) 19:24, 11 January 2008 (UTC)


{{sourcecheck|checked=false|needhelp=}}
:Deceptive analogy; hard to believe you're even attempting to be neutral with an analogy to murder. "Cost" in this context is entirely nebulous, it's not clear if there is a cost, it's not clear who bears this cost (and whether they are getting something for it and contracting of their free will), and it's not clear that you're even speaking of the same type of money. As written, it implies that the "public" bears this cost - not clear and not supported by citations.
:And what is your point about Federal Reserve Notes and US Notes? (Do you really mean obviated here?)--] (]) 21:32, 11 January 2008 (UTC)


Cheers.—] <span style="color:green;font-family:Rockwell">(])</span> 18:54, 23 May 2017 (UTC)
:: Nothing deceptive about the analogy. In just as straightforward a manner, as can be described <i>the occurence</i> of something with as much negative connotation as murder, so here am I being unbiased in the presentation of factual "history."
:: Err .. no .. didn't mean obviated. Meant "made obvious" (not sure where obviated came from.) But, US Notes did not generate any interest so there is no burden to any party, while Federal Reserve Notes (by the involvement of the commercial loan process) do create an interest cost. However, some economists propogate the misinformation that the two must generate equal (or equivalent) costs. This is impossible. I put so much emphasis on this particular point, because I believe that the Federal Reserve, too, propogates this with some deceptive wording of their own ... specifically, their FAQs state "U.S. notes serve no function that is not already served by Federal Reserve notes ..... Both U.S. notes and Federal Reserve notes are part of our national currency and are legal tender. They circulate as money in the same way." This disgustingly ignores the significant difference in interests costs that are generated by the two formerly-competing currencies. US Notes generate zero interest burden, as they are paid directly into circulation as the wages of government employees (mostly Civil War soldiers) and . Federal Reserve Notes, on the other hand, generate $70 billion dollars of interest annually through the process of their injection into circulation (assuming 9% interest on commercial loans). So, obviously, calling the two forms of currency issuance as "equivalent" is incorrect. This may be the source of the misinformation about the "zero cost" of Federal Reserve Notes. While most writings on the costs of Federal Reserve Notes correctly point out the Treasury Rebate of the interest on securities (minus some seignorage), that does not equate into the money being "interest-free" or "equivalent to US Notes," as a matter of simple fact. Speaking of seignorage, if I really wanted to soapbox, one candidate fact would be how the Fed gets to name it's own budget, out of the $30+ billion dollars that receives each year. But, I digress.
::tl;dr ... I have emphasis on the point to hopefully clear up confusion that may or may not be promulgated by articles from the Federal Reserve ] (]) 22:24, 11 January 2008 (UTC)


== External links modified ==
:Please just provide a citation. There is no interest paid on federal reserve notes to holders. You are doing the calculation on an assumed basis (9% on the $800 billion outstanding). If this is the case, surely there should be a good citation.
:According to the fed, the only "interest paid" is paid to the US govt (by the US govt). The "interest" on federal reserve notes is defined in e.g. FRBNY's financial statements: "Interest on Federal Reserve Notes: The Board of Governors requires the Reserve Banks to transfer excess earnings to the U.S. Treasury as interest on Federal Reserve notes, after providing for the costs of operations, payment of dividends, and reservation of an amount necessary to equate surplus with capital paid-in." (see ). Hence, the government gets substantially all of the profit ($12 bln of $14 bln profit, almost all of the balance going to surplus capital (as per statute, see note k)). Since substantially all of the income (operating costs are very low) is from interest on government securities, govt pays interest on outstanding debt to each Federal Reserve bank, which then gives it back to the government.
:This is the only sense in which interest is paid on federal reserve notes, and it is paid TO the government.--] (]) 05:23, 12 January 2008 (UTC)


Hello fellow Wikipedians,
=== @Gregalton ===
:: I had already provided additional citation. I have now expanded the para to fit the citations more appropriately, though.
:: "There is no interest paid on federal reserve notes to holders."
::: I never claimed that the government (or, by extension, that taxpayers) share any flat interest cost. I am well-aware that the interest paid to the Fed for it's portfolio is generally rebated to the treasury. That part is mostly irrelevent to monetary policy.
::: However, if you accept that currency is placed into circulation through the grant of loans, then you must similarly accept that the placement of currency into circulation generates a cost of interest. Simple logic dictates this. It is possible that you do not believe that the loan process is the source of money --- this is a difficult concept to grasp, but THAT part is quite easy to verify with reliable sources.
:: "If this is the case, surely there should be a good citation."
::: That's quite an assumption. Citations are available which support the facts, but even without that, as mentioned, the fact stands as simple logic. I have expanded the text and provided citations as appropriate.
:: "This is the only sense in which interest is paid on federal reserve notes, and it is paid TO the government."
::: You are wrong. You are not the only one, hence my emphasis on the point in the article. (Also, interest isn't paid TO the gov't though it is *rebated* Important technical difference.) More importantly though, emitting currency into circulation DOES come with an attendant interest cost owed to commercial banks by the recipient of the loan. Certainly, loan recipients are aware of the interest cost, just as I am aware of the dollar costs on my hamburger. But, there is also a BIGGER PICTURE ... my hamburger creates an industry for cattle, which supposedly contributes to greenhouse gases .... analogously, the BIGGER PICTURE of an individual's loan is that they are bearing the cost as the end result of the Federal Reserve's desire to expand the monetary base --- as such, the consequence is that interest is required to support the monetary base.
::: I assume you were unaware of this connection ... the bigger picture. That may explain your resistance to this article and earlier deletion. A lot of confusion clouds the issue, which is why I am trying to have it clearly conveyed. It is both cited fact and simple logic, so, IMO, it should be able to stand (unless someone wants to make the case that my sources about loans and such are in error).
:: ] (]) 18:43, 12 January 2008 (UTC)


I have just modified 9 external links on ]. Please take a moment to review . If you have any questions, or need the bot to ignore the links, or the page altogether, please visit ] for additional information. I made the following changes:
:: I've now edited the steps of the "currency into circulation" process to better cite and attribute the info discussed. That should help to verify the accuracy of the content ] (]) 00:23, 13 January 2008 (UTC)
*Added archive https://web.archive.org/web/20080913094649/http://www.tcc.edu/faculty/webpages/CZFu/files/ch08.ppt to http://www.tcc.edu/faculty/webpages/CZFu/files/ch08.ppt
*Added archive https://web.archive.org/web/20071205233524/http://www.minneapolisfed.org/pubs/region/99-03/beige.cfm to http://minneapolisfed.org/pubs/region/99-03/beige.cfm
*Added archive https://web.archive.org/web/20071222121916/http://www.dallasfed.org/educate/everyday/ev4.html to http://www.dallasfed.org/educate/everyday/ev4.html
*Added archive https://web.archive.org/web/20071218212429/http://www.minneapolisfed.org/pubs/region/04-12/davies.cfm to http://minneapolisfed.org/pubs/region/04-12/davies.cfm
*Added archive https://web.archive.org/web/20080111120719/http://www.treas.gov/education/fact-sheets/currency/distribution.shtml to http://www.treas.gov/education/fact-sheets/currency/distribution.shtml
*Added archive https://web.archive.org/web/20080529145608/http://www.bsos.umd.edu/econ/ciecpp6.pdf to http://www.bsos.umd.edu/econ/ciecpp6.pdf
*Added archive https://web.archive.org/web/20080928041720/http://www.oswego.edu/~edunne/fedmyths.html to http://www.oswego.edu/~edunne/fedmyths.html
*Added archive https://web.archive.org/web/20120218122655/http://www.federalreserve.gov/GeneralInfo/fract/sect11b.htm to http://www.federalreserve.gov/GeneralInfo/fract/sect11b.htm
*Added archive https://web.archive.org/web/20071230220607/http://oregonstate.edu/cla/polisci/faculty-research/sahr/sahr.htm to http://oregonstate.edu/cla/polisci/faculty-research/sahr/sahr.htm


When you have finished reviewing my changes, you may follow the instructions on the template below to fix any issues with the URLs.
:::I am disputing a simple contention: you claim that interest is paid on federal reserve notes (cash money). Please provide a source for this statement. This seems a simple requirement and, given how much is written about economics, a good, reliable source should be easy to find.
:::As for the "bigger picture": WP is not the place to push an interpretation of the "big picture." What you believe to be "cited fact" and "simple logic" is actually original research, at minimum of the synthesis type.--] (]) 16:20, 13 January 2008 (UTC)


{{sourcecheck|checked=false|needhelp=}}
==Essay==
This article reads like an essay. It needs a fair bit of work. I added a quick lead, if this is not the purpose of the article please put what is the purpose in the lead. If the article has no puporse, please vote delete at the afd. <small>—Preceding ] comment added by ] (] • ]) 18:56, 11 January 2008 (UTC)</small><!-- Template:Unsigned --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot-->


Cheers.—] <span style="color:green;font-family:Rockwell">(])</span> 20:50, 2 September 2017 (UTC)
== Google caches ==


== External links modified (February 2018) ==
Due to the usually nice speeds and highlighting, I draw a lot of info from the "cached" links on Google searches, as opposed to the direct website. In complying with ], I cited the links to the cached pages. Revert my undo if the direct links would be more appropriate. (If not, then I apologize to EGeek) <small>—Preceding ] comment added by ] (] • ]) 01:11, 13 January 2008 (UTC)</small><!-- Template:Unsigned --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot-->


Hello fellow Wikipedians,
:Good work on keeping with citing policy on this. Although I was doing a ] check through this section at the time and considered the original source to be more reliable than the google cache. Please comment on the other sources I deleted in a different section. --] (]) 01:27, 13 January 2008 (UTC)


I have just modified 4 external links on ]. Please take a moment to review ]. If you have any questions, or need the bot to ignore the links, or the page altogether, please visit ] for additional information. I made the following changes:
== WP:RS ==
*Added archive https://archive.is/20130415102002/http://nesara.org/court_summaries/lewis_v_united_states.htm to http://nesara.org/court_summaries/lewis_v_united_states.htm
*Added archive https://web.archive.org/web/20060513063341/http://www.thestreet.com/options/futuresshocktsc/10244509.html to http://www.thestreet.com/options/futuresshocktsc/10244509.html
*Added archive https://web.archive.org/web/20080529145612/http://phoenix.liu.edu/~uroy/PPT0/macro/monetary_system.ppt to http://phoenix.liu.edu/~uroy/PPT0/macro/monetary_system.ppt
*Added archive https://web.archive.org/web/20071103012632/http://www3.brookings.edu/papers/1996/08useconomics_akerlof.aspx to http://www.brookings.edu/papers/1996/08useconomics_akerlof.aspx


When you have finished reviewing my changes, you may follow the instructions on the template below to fix any issues with the URLs.
EGeek has objected to some sources as violating RS. I do not think the burden is on me to first justify the original inclusion of the sources. ]
Requesting use of the <nowiki>{{verify credibility}}</nowiki> template for now, please --] (]) 01:37, 13 January 2008 (UTC)


{{sourcecheck|checked=false|needhelp=}}
:According to ] the burden is yours, even though I only deleted material. But I will discuss my reason anyway.


Cheers.—] <span style="color:green;font-family:Rockwell">(])</span> 11:23, 4 February 2018 (UTC)
:To be short and "sweet", I removed sources that were self-published (i.e. Blogs) or sources from organizations with an ] agenda. In the case of sources citing a ], if these sources originate from one of the above, the source will eventually get shot down; therefore, this source should be changed anyway. For example, if the were not a reliable source, the should be used instead. --] (]) 02:10, 13 January 2008 (UTC)


== The Fed's change in conducting its monetary policy (ample reserves regime) should be reflected in article ==
:: Thank you for the assistance. But, in order to keep me sane, I'd ask that you please use the <nowiki>{{verify credibility}}</nowiki> (]) for now. It will make it much easier to figure out which ones you are objecting to, so that they can be replaced. If they are deleted, the text becomes unsourced, and I'd have to figure out every sentence that you may have removed attribution from. (Also, I was pretty srue I was diligent in never referencing any blogs.) Again, thank you. ] (]) 02:14, 13 January 2008 (UTC)


The Federal Reserve has changed the way it conducts monetary policy considerably in recent years (formally from 2019) as explained e.g. here and here . I think this should be reflected in the article, implying that the article's present emphasis on controlling the money supply be replaced by an explanation of the way the Fed's administratively set interest rates (IOR and ON RRP) are key to determining the Federal Funds Rate and consequently influencing economy-wide activity. ] (]) 06:52, 30 July 2023 (UTC)
A list of the sources believed to violate ] in section ]
* - ] organization selling something.
* - One citation for this says "American Journal of Economics and Sociology" which is completely wrong. The other says its a source to quote "Robert H. Hem­phill" which is okay if the source is ] and the context ]. The heading of the source says: "From the March 2007 Idaho Observer". The is a newspaper expressing a ] idea, but probably usable to balance bias per ].
* - This is a blog.
* - ] organization. Only use to balance article per ].
-- ] (]) 03:14, 13 January 2008 (UTC)

:: Are you tagging some of the sources based solely on the fact that they are from the Google cache?? If so, would you please remove such tags or explain why you think Google may be biased.--] (]) 09:05, 13 January 2008 (UTC)

::: I tagged sources from google cache because I think they are more unreliable than the original page. I am currently trying to get ] because I failed find anything about the ] or ] of using cache from search engines like google. --] (]) 19:51, 13 January 2008 (UTC)

:: <small># ^ a b Schenk, Robert, Ph.D. From Commodity to Bank-Debt Money. Retrieved on 2008-01-07. “Professor of Economics”</small>
:: Why is this tagged? I can't figure out why an account of banking history related by a is in any way unreliable. Some of these tags are starting to look nearly random. ] (]) 16:56, 13 January 2008 (UTC)

:::See ]. I fail to see where this professor is an expert in U.S. Monetary Policy or banking in general. --] (]) 20:06, 13 January 2008 (UTC)

== Deletions ==

I'd ask that people please not assume that their 1-person "consensus" should override presumption of good faith on my part. I have asserted that all of the information compiled is not the result of original research. I ask that good faith be reciprocated, please. Use of tags where appropriate would be one such act showing good faith, as opposed to heavy-handed deletions.

# <nowiki>{{Synthesis}}</nowiki> ],
# <nowiki>{{cn}}</nowiki>,
# <nowiki>{{dubious}}</nowiki> ], or
# <nowiki>{{or}}</nowiki> ]

Also, I would ask that you make allowances for ], although you are not strictly required to do so. If you are not making such allowances, please note the dispute in this talk page --- a consensus may form. Some editors seem to have no remaining arguments to post, and are resorting to deletions with vague indications of policy violation -- I hope this is not the case. Thanks, again to everyone who is trying to make this the best possible article on monetary policy. --] (]) 15:47, 13 January 2008 (UTC)

:I'd ask that you try to follow NPOV more diligently, and accept deletions and other changes as part of the task of a collaborative process. Making changes to the article does not amount to questioning your good faith.
:As the link that you provided above states with respect to original research: "Neutral point of view '''''requires''' presenting all significant viewpoints'' on an issue, and may include collecting opinions from multiple, possibly biased and/or conflicting, sources. Organizing published facts and opinions — '''without introducing your opinion''' or fabricating new facts, or '''presenting an unpublished conclusion''' — is not original research."
:The "obvious deductions" part claimed sounds nice, but does not apply: read the policy carefully. "More complex logical deductions should, again, not be included under this case." What you are claiming is not equivalent to a simple syllogism nor to basic math. And yes, I know the next part of that sentence reads "they require skills that many readers may not possess." Whether or not I have the skills, you need to demonstrate that your synthesis meets the test of an obvious deduction.--] (]) 19:15, 13 January 2008 (UTC)

:I fail to see the point of tags if you delete without any discussion. --] (]) 20:34, 13 January 2008 (UTC)

::Please see the points and serious concerns I raised above in 'deletions and policy.' I don't believe we are required to flag every potential deletion in advance, particularly where they have been raised in the discussion page and not fixed. I will try to flag, but don't think it is reasonable to expect it in each case, particularly when language is highly POV and (as documented in several cases) outright wrong.--] (]) 20:52, 13 January 2008 (UTC)

:::I apologize ]. I meant the deletion of flags, not sources or material. ] asked me to flag sources that believe were unreliable instead of deleting them. Although not required, I flagged the sources as he asked. Then, he deleted the flags without any discussion because he did not agree. Again, I apologize. I was not clear. --] (]) 23:22, 13 January 2008 (UTC)

::::Oh, I probably read that too quickly...my misinterpretation.--] (]) 23:31, 13 January 2008 (UTC)

:::: I retained many of the flags where there was a question of possible bias, which I will replace with more appropriate sources. However, you seem to have just used the flags willy-nilly, to the point that such flagging itself was confusing. You apparently were even flagging Google caches as being some sort of biased or unreliable source(???), which reinforced the idea that your flagging was rather .... "aggressive" (which even you seem to agree with now that the flags have been reverted by your hand. You did specifically mention issue with 4 links which is very helpful; however, you flagged probably 30 citations, which was simply confusing. I'm requesting reasoning behind each source that you want to dispute/delete. Obviously, I can't know what your rationale is from just seeing the flag. As mentioned above, I am requesting discussion of and contentious material. ] (]) 02:43, 14 January 2008 (UTC)

::::: I have already the Google cache cites as unreliable sources for now; however, all the other sources I marked still stand as unreliable. I flagged the sources for these 3 reasons:

:::::# '''Bias source expressing a fringe theory''' (i.e. )
:::::# Where the reason for the source's existence is to '''persuade the reader to buy something'''. (i.e.
:::::# '''Self-published Source''' where author is an expert in U.S. Monetary Policy or the banking system in general. This also includes '''blogs'''

::::: Please let me know if you have question any particular source after reviewing that the source does not fall into this criteria. I '''deny''' your request to list every single source. --] (]) 03:57, 14 January 2008 (UTC)

:::::: "where author is not an expert" .. this is the general source of our dispute, so far as I can tell. I claim their qualifications make them reliable sources ... you do not. You have gone so far as to challenge a doctor of economics (with 30 years of related experience) whose information simply relates undisputed information about the history of banking that forms part of the curriculum of a well-accredited college's courses. I require your criteria for "expertness" or I can draw nothing from inclusion of your tags and must challenge your use of the tags. I am not sure that we alone will be able to resolve the reliability issue. ] (]) 04:57, 14 January 2008 (UTC)

::::::: I do not question his expertise in general economics or his years as a professor. I question his expertise of the '''current''' banking system per the context of this article. If you used this professor as a source for general economic principles, then I would consider this professor a reliable source. See ]. Also, please review the title in the citation. It reads "From Commodity to Bank-Debt Money" instead of the website's title "Checking-Account Money" per the link. --] (]) 06:06, 14 January 2008 (UTC)

::::::: Okay, I apologize for the confusion. I wrote "where author '''is not''' an expert" instead of "where author '''is''' an expert" I have fixed this above in my comment above. I hope this clears things up. --] (]) 06:11, 14 January 2008 (UTC)

=== References and Reliability ===
:::::::: "If you used this professor as a source for general economic principles" .... that is precisely how I used him as a source. If you're not reading the sources in context, then it will make things rather difficult. I used him to reference the fact that "banks make loans when holding excess reserves." That is a staple of the banking industry in general. I fail to see how such an easily qualified source would be unable to reliably make such an assertion. If you require more intense rigor to reinforce even information that is in general consensus among experts in the field, then I do not believe that I can satisfy you. As mentioned, we hold a fundamental difference of opinion in "expertness" which may not be resolvable on our own. ] (]) 08:04, 14 January 2008 (UTC)
:::::::: As to the title .... the overall exposition is named as cited. It is broken into sections (chapters). I linked directly into the relevent chapter, in order to facilitate verifiability. However, the name is correct as cited. It seems you are perturbed by any usage of economic terms similar to "debt-based" and probably regard such authors as fringe kooks. If so, I contend that the usage of such terms do not (by themselves) impugn the qualifications of sources in making general assertions about their particular fields of study. ] (]) 08:09, 14 January 2008 (UTC)

:Mountain. Molehill. While I don't have a particular problem with the source in question, if it's such a simple, basic concept surely it is covered elsewhere (and in fact it is). It also is a partly ad-driven site, which is not ideal. Just move on rather than see this as an unresolvable issue. For the moment, it's not that problematic a source.
:But this source is the least of the problem - there are still lots of blog, quotes from liberttree (which are mostly unreferenced, etc), and a bunch of others. Please work on those, rather than worrying about a difference of opinion with one source.--] (]) 12:55, 14 January 2008 (UTC)

:: Certainly I'll be working on <i>some</i> of the sourcing, but I wanted to make it clear that EGeek has set the bar so unrealistically high on the matter of "expertness" that even after my edits, the issue will still be standing. Personally, I don't even really see much problem with the "quote" pages, though they may be provided by organizations with agendas ... they are simply compilations of quotes which I feel require less stringent standards ... but that feeling probably is counter to WP:RS (though it still seems pretty reasonable). ] (]) 15:24, 14 January 2008 (UTC)

::: ] on self-published sources says this: <blockquote>Self-published material may, in some circumstances, be acceptable when produced by an established expert on the topic of the article whose work '''in the relevant field''' has previously been published by '''reliable third-party publications'''.</blockquote> I believe this source does not satify the "established expert" exception to the '''No self-published source''' policy.

:::However, ] is right. There are other unreliable sources that require more attention. I have shown that I did not place the flags "willy nilly" per your accusation; thus, I expect these flags to not get deleted this time. I do not intend to delete flag items until you have had a chance to review and discuss them. Then, we can decide what to do.--] (]) 20:13, 14 January 2008 (UTC)

:::: whose work '''in the relevant field''' has previously been published by '''reliable third-party publications'''
::::: ... and how do you know that his work is not accpeted by third-party sources. Certainly you didn't check. You are making assertions that you didn't even bother to check .... hence, "willy-nilly." I would point out that multiple schools of repute utilize Dr. Schenk's "cyber-economics" writings as part of their own curriculum. ] (]) 23:32, 14 January 2008 (UTC)

:::::: I checked every source. I made a good faith effort to check the reliability of every source. I know this professor wrote articles published in many economic magazines and wrote the first online textbook of economics. I know he is widely accepted in his field. His field is '''not''' the banking system. If you have evidence to the contrary, then I will reconsider. --] (]) 01:00, 15 January 2008 (UTC)

::::::: ???
::::::: Are you saying that you are aware that multiple colleges utilize the exact same information that I used from Dr. Schenk, and you <i>are still disputing it</i>? I'd easily contend that the fact that "banks create money" is pretty darn intrinsic to the study of modern economics, and the fact that "banks have a tendency to loan free reserves" should fall well into that expertise, IMHO. ] (]) 04:46, 15 January 2008 (UTC)

:::::::: I'm aware that his "online textbook" in economics has been used by many schools. I also agree that "banks create money" and this money is created by the use of deposits to issue loans. These are two basic principles of ]. I disagree that this professor is an expert in this field, and without any evidence I will not be convinced otherwise.
:::::::: Since ] also feels this source is fine, other unreliable sources are being ignored, and I have failed to present a better source, you are welcome to delete the flag. --] (]) 06:02, 15 January 2008 (UTC)

:Just improve the ones you can easily, first. The problem with the quote farms is that they give no context and it is difficult to confirm, identify the speakers properly, etc, and have a tendency to cherry-pick and leave out issues of relevance. As near as I can figure, for example, Hemphill spoke in 1939 or thereabouts, but this widely circulated quote does not seem to be confirmed by anyone. Editors can disagree about what constitutes a reliable source, but when there are so many that do not seem balanced, it raises questions. While I know it is a separate issue, the debt-based monetary system article is a good example - completely POV and, it turned out, made such egregious misuse of sources that it made the whole article dubious.--] (]) 15:34, 14 January 2008 (UTC)

::Can I make a compromise suggestion here? I kind of disagree with EGeek on this one - it's probably marginally acceptable (but much better sources could be found with little effort). Leave the flag and don't worry about it. Fix all the other ones that are more problematic as soon as possible. We can get to this one later. If you fix all the other ones, heck, I'LL find a replacement source.
::Or in a more general sense: fight less about each individual change and source and try to make this a well-sourced, non-POV article. If YOU are making changes that make it noticeably better, there will be less dispute. You have TWO editors spending a lot of time on this article - more than it warrants in its current condition in my blunt opinion. Take advantage of that rather than disputing each source.--] (]) 05:00, 15 January 2008 (UTC)

== Inflation tax ==
<small>"The net effect would be that citizens effectively can be made poorer over time through no fault of their own. {{see|Inflation tax}}"</small>
I request information on why this was deleted. The page history indicates some belief WP:OR was violated, though I don't see how, as that seems to contradict the editor's statement above <blockquote>"There are lots of criticisms and costs that I would agree with, such as the inflation tax in the case of 'excess' money supply growth"</blockquote> ] (]) 15:53, 13 January 2008 (UTC)

:I flagged the edit line with OR/opinion. The statement "net effect would be that citizens effectively can be made poorer over time through no fault of their own" is highly opinionated original research" (certainly the concept of "fault" is unbalanced). So it is opinion.
:Second, the context of the quote was this: "Thus, an exponential need for increasing amounts of money may be contributing factor towards inflation in the US. Inflation raises the cost-of-living for everyone, and if inflation exceeds the growth of income, then real wages decline." The link to inflation tax is OR: the inflation tax is NOT held to be about real wages, but about those holders of cash balances, as in the article on the inflation tax. Your qualification of "if inflation exceeds the growth of income" makes the link even more tenuous and unrelated. If inflation is exceeding the growth of income, then perhaps there is another cause? What is causing the divergence? The articles cited do not clarify this issue or attribute causality. Hence it is OR.
:Side note: some applications of macroeconomics would say that "income" ''by definition'' equals inflation plus productivity growth, where income is national income (GDP). So you are talking about a distribution of income, either between labour and capital or between different individuals/groups.
:At any rate, deletion based on straightforward reasons as in first two paras above. You misread my previous point: there are contexts in which there is a cost associated with inflation, referred to as inflation tax; this was not meant as blanket approval of your use of the term.--] (]) 19:04, 13 January 2008 (UTC)

::You seem to make no distinction between OR violations and the simple need for more relevent citations. Perhaps you should. Although that could just be the extension of you having no desire to presume good faith on the part of other editors (me, in this case). ] (]) 19:08, 13 January 2008 (UTC)

:::I disagree. I think this is both OR and POV. But if you find the right citations, it can of course go in.
:::And please desist with the good faith accusations. It's tedious.--] (]) 19:25, 13 January 2008 (UTC)

:::I've flagged this statement with "dubious": "Inflation raises the cost-of-living for everyone, and if inflation exceeds the growth of income, then ]s decline."
:::Here is a case where the "obvious deduction and sources make dubious claims:
#Inflation raises the cost of living for everyone: not demonstrably true from sources (in real terms);
#Inflation exceeds the growth of income, then real wages decline: this is actually definitional, so doesn't actually say anything (by definition, if real wages decline, inflation ''has exceeded'' growth in income - that's what a decline in real wages means).
#The sources do not actually support this. Checking through, this is based on the Bureau of Labor Statistics data, notes for which can be found ]. The definition states quite clearly that this is "estimated arithmetic averages (means) of the hourly and weekly earnings of all production and nonsupervisory jobs in the private nonfarm sector of the economy". In other words, this is most emphatically not "everyone"; it is entirely possible from these sources that the real wages of other individuals (e.g. management, rock stars, farmers, what have you) went up, and real wages on average were unchanged (or went up).
:::Grateful other comments, but the "obvious conclusion" would appear to be wrong and original research. (And for this to be a reliable source, it really should have far better and more complete notes, for example, direct from BLS).--] (]) 20:13, 13 January 2008 (UTC)

:::: I'd gladly ... bah. Nevermind. ] (]) 06:13, 14 January 2008 (UTC)

== Assertions about money ==

The article currently makes this claim: "It follows that almost↑↑↑ every printed US Dollar bill anywhere in the world represents a current outstanding loan of some citizen to a US bank somewhere." I am flagging this dubious and questioning the source (a blog at http://www.appropriate-economics.org/asia/thailand/golden.html). Note that the claim that every ''printed'' US dollar bill represents an outstanding loan is not supported by the text, the blog. This represents a significant point of confusion, the different types of money supply (M0 through M3/M4). If 90% of M3 is bank debt, this is not printed money (as well documented by the definition). There is no claim that I can find that bills represent debts of commercial banks.--] (]) 21:40, 13 January 2008 (UTC)

: Although, I'd say this is quite easily "obvious deduction" I could agree with the above. A small step in the process has been neglected, which might make the difference. I'll fill in the missing "link" between loans and bills with text and references. ] (]) 02:47, 14 January 2008 (UTC)

::You say "tomato", I say "factually inaccurate" ;).
::I'll leave you to see how to work whatever the point you're making is, but here's a link that makes it perfectly clear with respect to federal reserve notes (IMO): Or this: "Currency issuing is highly profitable for governments because the issuance of non-interest-bearing central bank currency liabilities gives rise, correspondingly, to comparable holdings of earning assets by the central bank." This is Edward W. Kelley, Jr., member, Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, before the Committee on Banking, Finance and Urban Affairs, U.S. House of Representatives, July 13, 1994 - Statements to the Congress - Transcript.
::Look forward to seeing the reference that closes the loop on the missing link, as it is (for me) a novel and not obvious deduction.--] (]) 03:17, 14 January 2008 (UTC)

== Want to make it clear ==

Although I am being fairly contentious, I do appreciate the effort that the current co-editors are expending. I am very appreciative of the expansion of the text, and hope that the information I compiled will be able to stand, so that this collaboration can help break the trend that many of the economics articles seem to have fallen into when going any further than 'Econ 101.' It's been said that wikipedia is lacking in the economics area of knowledge. This article might be that next bit that fills in a little more of that shadow. ] (]) 03:11, 14 January 2008 (UTC)

:Likewise. And I am trying to retain an open mind on this, but one problem I have is when I do searches to try to find information that makes a credible point, I get non-academic, conspiracy-minded polemics about the Fed being involved in JFK's death and other nonsense. I'm not saying that this is where you are trying to go, but getting some strong references that talk about a fundamentally academic subject in academic terms (not necessarily equations, but credible sources) would make a major difference.--] (]) 03:20, 14 January 2008 (UTC)

:: Indeed. This is <i>precisely</i> why I decided to make this effort. To think that so much confusion exists over such a fundamental issue is disgusting. One would hope that answering such a fundamental question as "how does money get from the Mint, into your pockets" should be something any high-school level student could parrot from memory. Instead, it takes months of digging to finally gather all of the pieces, and then weeks more to strip away the hysterical crud. (Well, at least that's the trouble that I found in doing it. Others' mileage may vary...) In any case, I think I can satisfy your rigorous criteria, and if so, what better place than wikipedia for people to find the answer to such a fundamental and seemingly-easy question as "where does my money come from?" ... as opposed to being bombarded with asinine Truths (TM) that run the gamut from moon-men to worse.
:: The flagging is proving a great help. Now that I have better insight into which text is contentious, I can clarify, and am doing so now. I do have the feeling that the text will become awkward to read, which is counter to my goal of being accessible and verifiable to laymen, but, if it is required for the text to stand, then - obviously - it's a cost I have to accept. ] (]) 03:34, 14 January 2008 (UTC)

:Well, it's frankly not ''that'' easy a topic. Confused a lot of great minds over the years. Let me know if I can help.
:As to the longer term "what the article needs", I still think more on what the monetary policy is, rather than money creation dynamics, would be better. (In fact, I still think most of the content should be in other articles...). A few suggested sources: federal reserve sites actually have a lot of info. So do some other central banks, like the Canadian one (helps get a sense that the federal reserve ''looks'' weird due to the strange structure, but in practice works a lot like other central banks. Textbooks on macroeconomics are surprisingly good and contain much fo the same information, without the screeds and political baggage. Good luck.--] (]) 05:21, 14 January 2008 (UTC)

:: No ... definitely not a simple topic, but certainly fundamental enough ... I'm sad that it's not given at least a brief overview at the high-school level. A lot of this stuff could be generalized into other articles, but nearly all of my information (and certainly, my sources) are centered on the Federal Reserve, and ... .as such, it became information that is pretty specific to the United States (though it can be assumed to be applicable to any nation under a Central Bank) ... but I think I know where assumtions would end up :oD
:: You've already helped a great deal by tagging the relevent info. Instead of checking diffs, I can now just reconstruct and expand the existing text to use the citations more appropriately. There is indeed a lot of info available, but ... as you can see, I'm am striving to include some information that goes beyond the bits in most basic texts, to make this an article that doesn't leave any gaps about the process from Mints to pocket. Thanks for the graciousness in allowing me this extra time. ] (]) 06:11, 14 January 2008 (UTC)

:::Well, it is an article about US monetary policy, so understandable to not have much about other countries. I actually meant that checking what goes on in other countries would give some balance and confirm / deny the extent to which Fed monetary policy and other elements are "normal." For example, lots of countries have had nominally privately-owned central banks (e.g. Canada), and then realised that the nominal ownership did not reflect reality. (Why the Fed hasn't changed is likely due to fear of reopening the political question, but it doesn't matter much since, although nominally private, the ownership rights of the member banks are so restricted that it's hard to equate with ownership). Likewise auditing - Bank of Canada also not audited by auditor general.
:::Likewise for inflation targeting and the 1-2% target, fairly new, Brits were among first, Kiwis in there somewhere, Bernanke talking about it (cautiously).
:::Likewise for fractional reserve and money multiplier - some countries (e.g. Canada) have reduced reserve requirement to zero. Has anything changed? (Is there an infinite money multiplier?) Not really - banks have their own internal measures and targets (usually based on liquidity) that have the same effect as reserves. You could call them reserves or not, but the same analysis applies: when they have more liquid assets than their target (e.g. 'excess reserves'), they make more loans; when they don't have enough, they take measures to acquire/build up more reserves and/or make more reserves. Interesting article essentially claims that the reserve requirement and changes to it actually have no effect (as long as reserve requirement is not binding, e.g. banks' target level of reserves is higher than minimum reserve level); therefore the money multiplier is simply a measure of what is happening, not what the Fed thinks should happen (endogenous to financial system rather than exogenous). Or, as I think put succinctly on one of the sites, "we don't control the money supply - we influence it." (Paraphrased) Sort of like driving a car by moving around in the backseat (imperfect analogy - implies there ''is'' a steering wheel).--] (]) 14:51, 14 January 2008 (UTC)

== Quick requests ==

BigHex, could you please:
*Edit out the google cache links? Should be easy - I've done one or two.
*Would you agree the footnote about the fed's "private" status can go? It's thoroughly debunked and meaningless now.
*Deal with the other "footnote" styles? They seem to stick out, and I'm sure something is in the ].
*Clear out at as many of the unreliable sources as possible?--] (]) 22:48, 14 January 2008 (UTC)

:: I'm not sure why the cache is a problem. That is directly the source of most of my info. "Editing" them out, would amount to removing the "intermediate source." While they should be equivalent, it is theoretically possible that a check in some Web Archive could show differences between the actual site and the Google cache at the time of access (especially since most of the federal websites are updated to stay current). I suppose I <i>could</i> go back and re-verify the information on the primary site, but that's lower on my priority list than resolving other issues.
:: The Fed footnote ... I see that you clarified the passage as supported by the citation, but even without the legalese, it is widely regarded by experts that the Fed banks are completely private entities. I'm not sure what you mean by "debunked," but the information about it's public/private status could have important bearing on the regard of monetary policy. But, for details, I allow for other articles to cover the topic in depth. Most people assume that monetary policy is implemeted through federal entities ... it clearly is not -- even 5 of the 12 members of the FOMC represent interests that are completely independant of the federal government. I think it forms an important point that could prompt a reader to pursue further investigation.
:: I'll check up on the use of footnotes. But, integrating the text makes it quite unwieldy.
:: I'm still working on the sourcing. EGeek's flags are unusable per the dispute above, so I'm having to use my own discretion. I'll remove blogs ASAP though (except possibly http://mrzine.monthlyreview.org/about.html .. which seems to be the work of a publication with fair editorial involvement .. possibly still questionable though). ] (]) 23:25, 14 January 2008 (UTC)

::: "EGeek's flags are unusable..." So flagging the sources instead of deleting them is useless to you? I did it in the first place because you asked. I have told you why I deleted them and pointed you to the policies and guidelines. If you disagree with with one source, that is fine; however, do not use that one disagreement to justify that all the other sources are still reliable. --] (]) 00:47, 15 January 2008 (UTC)

:::: Yes, I know that you put in special effort only as a courtesy to me. However, I don't just disagree with 1 source ... I disagree with your assessment process. However, that doesn't mean that I have simply discounted your advisement; I left many of your flags there. Seeing as you have denied my request on information about the worthiness of the individual sources, I must fall back on my own judgement. This is (obviously) a faulty situation, seeing as it was my own judgement that prompted me to originally include the sources. ] (]) 04:04, 15 January 2008 (UTC)

:I'll direct you separately to info on the fed; short form, federal reserve banks are technically private, but in practice effectively government "instrumentalities." Could you point me to the experts of which you speak who say the fed banks are "completely private entities"?
:Let me put it a different way: if you own a car, but have signed over all rights to use, operate, and dispose of the car in exchange for $100 a year, do you own the car? (If a bank owns an SPV that owns mortgages, but all the funds flow to noteholders, does the bank "own" the SPV in any meaningful sense? Courts treat this differently...) In the case of the bank-members/owners, they get 6% dividends, and the requirement to be liable for a share of the FRB's liabilities, and all other profits must go to government.
:As for the footnotes, that is why I would suggest removing the non-essential (the bit about the fed ownership) and integrating the key points into text.
:Google cache: better to point directly to the original, not an IP address. Content: no need to re-verify for those.--] (]) 23:49, 14 January 2008 (UTC)
:: Your analogy is inapplicable. The Fed banks maintain significant operations beyond the direct dictate of the BoG (administration, investments, etc). The control of the BoG is significant, but not total. A more appropriate analogy would probably be something like a chartered-flight service. The company hasn't signed over it's functions completely to the gov't, but they do make themselves available when the gov't has need of their service.
:: "Each of the 12 Federal Reserve Banks is separately incorporated, and each has its own president and board of directors." -- cleveland Fed
:: You yourself say "federal reserve banks are technically private," anything else is needless muddling. They are "effectively government 'instrumentalities'" means nearly nothing in the case of the Fed, especially considering the fact that monetary policy is intentionally insulated from politics in Washington; those are mostly contradictory statements --- how can something be a direct tool of the gov't AND also be insulated from the directives of elected officials. The handling of the Fed is a '''long''' ways from how NASA and the Postal Service operate.
:: Moreover, the New York Fed is responsible for moving millions of dollars each day through the Open market operations. By law, we are trusting a private entity with such a responsibility without any independent auditing. So, even though I try to avoid emphasizing this point in the article, I would certainly say that the <i>technicality</i> of their legal status is quite an important one. ] (]) 00:17, 15 January 2008 (UTC)

:::A few responses: this is not just a technicality. I did not say the Fed is like NASA or the post office, which are (I believe) agencies. It is also not true that there is "no independent auditing." As documented.
:::Rather than give parallels, let's try quotes. Can you show me a reliable quote that says they are "completely private entities"?--] (]) 01:13, 15 January 2008 (UTC)
:::See also for more detail about the control of the FOMC and all the significant elements of monetary policy. Or I can find many more.
:::Central banks everywhere are strange creatures: usually creatures of government, usually directly government-owned, but given some independence from usual government control to insulate them from the vagaries of politics.
:::The ironic thing is that the Fed system was designed with the compromise of private ownership under Woodrow Wilson, modified to give most control to government (albeit somewhat indirectly) under Roosevelt, with additional government intervention and control over the years - but retaining the fig leaf of private ownership because the political scene would not accept too much 'gummint' (govt for those of us with teeth). Now, the conspiracy theorists latch on to the private ownership structure - which is technically true, but substantively under government control and with almost none of the benefits of ownership - as an indication it is a cabal of bankers destroying society. Ah well. (There is literally tonnes of stuff in google books on the history of the fed and monetary policy, which is what this article should really be about...)
:::But again, let's stick to quotes.--] (]) 01:13, 15 January 2008 (UTC)

:::And, to go to the source: "The holding of this stock (in the federal reserve system), however, does not carry with it the control and financial interest conveyed to holders of common stock in for-profit organizations. It is merely a legal obligation of Federal Reserve membership, and the stock may not be sold or pledged as collateral for loans." See , pg. 12. So, a) 2000 of the 2900 member banks as at 2004 were obliged to join (by law); b) they do not get the 'control or financial interest' of normal private shareholders; c) they do not get a right to profits beyond a small fixed amount, and they can't sell their shares; and d) they are technically shareholders in banks that have a federal charter, controlled by congress, that subjects it to direct government oversight including partial audits by the GAO. Even their budgets must be approved by the BoG, and the BoG decides how profits, costs and everything else is to be allocated between the 12 banks.
:::You make your own conclusions, but I have trouble concluding that this constitutes private ownership in any meaningful way, and certainly cannot be characterised as "completely private entities." (And they are generally not characterized as such)--] (]) 01:42, 15 January 2008 (UTC)

:::: I say "completely private" here just to make my point that it is waffling non-sense to say otherwise. Either an entity is under the direct control of our elected officials ("public") or it is not. What you say basically amounts to, "they're so well-controlled that they may as well be public... even though they are private business entities." You choose to emphasize one part, to the exclusion of the rest. I do happen to be pretty familiar with the various official descriptions of the Fed; however, all of your quotes have qualifiers that I consider particularly damning. No matter how one wants to "describe" the Fed; descriptions cannot override the (well-known) actuality of its legally-defined independence from elected governance. I could argue that such independence turns those qualifiers into contradictions. "The government controls the Fed so well it's like a tool of the government." versus "The Fed is independent from politicians for the good of the country." It is quite simple fact that the banks themselves are private entities --- it is actually the technicality that they are subject to the dictate of the BoG. I make it quite clear that they receive direction from the Board of Governors.
:::: Also, I'd say that the lack of rights being conferred by the ownership of stock in the Fed is mostly a non-issue; the directors and president of the banks are still the head of private entities. As to the "fig leaf of private ownership," the independence of the even the Board of Governors from elected governance is explicit and legally defined ... the banks themselves are further removed. The issue of the private status of the Federal Reserve banks is not disputed (even beyond tort law), AFAIK. I do not believe that I even intimate that this status is damning in any sense in the article. As with other info, I present it to clear up a common public misconception.
:::: "It is also not true that there is 'no independent auditing.' As documented." ..... Which documentation is that? I do not believe you took me up on the challenge of providing one single account of an independent audit of the open market operations. If you want to dispute the accuracy, you are more than welcome to do so if you have <i>any</i> facts to back-up your feelings on the matter. If these accounting holes exist (as my sources indicate they do), such a large hole in the auditing process is tantamount to a policeman saying, "we got a call about a suspected drug dealer, but we've investigated him for weeks and have never seen any illicit transactions ... so we think he's clean, although we're not allowed to follow him into the rough neighborhoods." .... well something like that anyways. ] (]) 04:00, 15 January 2008 (UTC)

:Just provide citations. You say "completely private entities." You say "widely regarded by experts." I've provided several expert quotes that directly contradict that, including saying "effectively gave control to the federal reserve board."
:You say "without any independent auditing." Not true, as documented - they are audited by several independent organisations. You claim that the lack of auditing of open market operations is particularly significant, but the claim there is no independent auditing is, ahem, factually inaccurate.--] (]) 04:14, 15 January 2008 (UTC)

:: Unless you dispute the validity of the accounts purported to have been given by the Federal Reserve's own Inspector General (along with numerous congresspersons), it is NOT factually inaccurate. Your personal feelings about an inaccuracy cannot be supported by any facts, and so I would hold that your claim of "factual inaccuracy" is actually what lies in error. I would owe you a debt of gratitude if you were to prove me wrong. If ever you come across actual information that proves this as an egregious error, please post it here and delete the text outright. ] (]) 04:26, 15 January 2008 (UTC)

:I've provided a link to the independent audit of their financial statements (as well as a number of other audit documents). Ergo, they are independently audited. From what I can read of the 1993 Inspector General's report (since which date, by the way, there have been changes and statutory revisions) the claim is that it isn't "enough." The issue with GAO is that Congress, which writes the laws about Fed and the GAO, has not authorised GAO to audit certain functions (for well documented reasons that reasonable people can disagree about). That's an entirely different claim than "without any independent auditing," which is the factually inaccurate claim you keep repeating.--] (]) 04:46, 15 January 2008 (UTC)
:: I'm not sure if I understand you. I'm certain that I make it clear in the article that the Fed is independently audited. Where is the link you've provided? Does it show audits of the FRB of New York's near-daily OMOs? I'm very interested in this ..... ] (]) 04:52, 15 January 2008 (UTC)

:::Do you have any reason or source to assert that the independent audit done excludes OMOs? The sources so far only say that the GAO cannot audit OMOs.--] (]) 14:49, 15 January 2008 (UTC)

:::: Awww .. passing up on my challenge. You're no fun! ] (]) 04:56, 16 January 2008 (UTC)
=== OMOs ===
Info on Fed banks' legal statuses has been cited and the text has been simplified. ] (]) 05:40, 16 January 2008 (UTC)

:I'm unclear what you think you've proven, but a) OMOs affect the financial position of the federal reserve banks (specifically, the New York Fed); and b) the financial position and earnings of the fed are audited. Independently. I'm not sure how you think they "exclude" OMOs or how this constitutes what you claim. The sources quoted state that GAO does not audit OMO. This is a different statement from "never been independently audited."
:That said, I've only glanced at the article after your most recent revisions but it appears you've attempted to make the text a bit more neutral. Much appreciated.
:Now, if other sources can be improved or deleted it would be a big step forward and maintain momentum. (I don't personally think the WSJ quote indirectly quoted from a completely POV source meets the test, but one step at a time.)--] (]) 05:54, 16 January 2008 (UTC)

:: Well ... I never held an agenda of making the text biased. ;-) It's just that where the information reflects negatively, I pull no punches and candy-coat nothing. However, I have been taking cues from your edits that seems to have a significant effect on the tone, and incorporation of your text has added much-needed balance on topics that I did not have readily compiled in my old notes.
:: Yes .. baby steps. Though I expected some resistance, being new to the editing process, I did not expect so much objection to the sources I used in my notes (especially when glancing through so many economics articles that have ZERO citations). Finding alternate sources is an unexpected challenge, but I have faith in the veracity of the information I'm providing (minus a few acknowledged errors), so I believe it is a challenege that I can meet in a reasonable timespan. I have already prioritized sourcing of some of the info as low-priority, and removed the corresponding text until I have time to delve into those areas. (Basically, I already know that filtering out the kook-conspiracy stuff in those areas will be extraordinarily time-consuming.) ] (]) 06:16, 16 January 2008 (UTC)

:I think you would find starting with reliable sources would be much more productive than starting with some theory/"facts"/conclusions and subsequently "filtering out the kook conspiracy stuff." (It begs the question where the theory/facts/conclusions came from, for one). There is plenty on monetary policy and the fed of a nuanced but critical nature. Ben Bernanke, for example, pretty much made his academic bones on the causes of the depression, much of the blame for which he lays at the door of the Fed at the time, and his textbooks are good. Alan Blinder (former governor) has written standard textbooks on macroeconomics and is also not without criticism. Metzler's history is useful. Volcker certainly disagreed with the course taken by his predecessors. How much time would have been saved compared to trying to "filter" if you'd started with sources such as those? I daresay one might even learn something.--] (]) 14:43, 16 January 2008 (UTC)

:: As to "what I think I am proving" .... well, I'm not allowed to soapbox, so I am just presenting the info and allowing people to draw their own conclusions.
:: But I will respond to your point about audits by saying this ... selling liquor affected Al Capone's financial position greatly, too. It would have been interesting to see the Dept. of Justice's case against him if they were allowed to audit everything *except* his liquor purchases and sales. If you really want me to soapbox, then I'd say "to commit the perfect crime, you don't have to be intelligent, just in charge of the investigation that follows." ] (]) 06:40, 16 January 2008 (UTC)

:It's hard to argue with such logic (allegations based on allusion to proven criminals), but it's good to see that you "have no agenda".--] (]) 14:43, 16 January 2008 (UTC)

:: No .... I don't have an "agenda " (which is distinctly different from having well-researched interests). I didn't start my research with any agenda of "trashing the Fed," but if I find parts of the economic landscape that look a cesspool and smell like a cesspool, I'm not going to call it "slightly dirty recycled water." People deserve the ability to learn about the most powerful organization in the country without reading about moon-men taking over the world, nor having to wade through articles so full of euphemism that they practically describe rainbow-colored unicorns prancing about.
:: It was your choice to present a huge accounting loophole as a non-issue ("I'm unclear what you think you've proven....") Regardless of how I exemplified the issue, you would have been unable to cogently argue for it, so your feigned indignation on this point now is as good a concession as any other --- certainly the easy route. ] (]) 18:26, 16 January 2008 (UTC)

:The Fed's financial statements are audited, independently, by a well-known third party accounting firm. All open market operations are reflected in the Federal Reserve Bank's financial statements. What "accounting loophole" are you referring to? If you think this is not the case, please provide a reference.--] (]) 18:30, 16 January 2008 (UTC)

:: Were we arguing the points in the opposite manner, I think you'd probably describe the above text as a "synthesis without references." As you're well-aware, I've already provided direct quotes from reliable sources ... you choose to remain intransigent in your disbelief, which is an issue you'll have to work through on your end. You're obviously an intelligent person, so I'm not sure why you would persist in some strange claim that basically amounts to "you can sure as hell figure out whether a person is on the up-and-up by just looking at their savings account and their property ... it doesn't even matter if you can't investigate their checking activities." Audits exist solely to reinforce trust ... a partial audit inspires even less than partial trust. ] (]) 18:50, 16 January 2008 (UTC)

:Okay, last effort: have you actually ''read'' the ''actual audit''?
:You can download (as one example) the FRB-New York's financial statements . This include such gems as:
#Independence: "To ensure auditor independence, the Board of Governors requires that PwC be independent in all matters relating to the audit."
#Accuracy: "In our opinion, the financial statements referred to above present fairly, in all material respects, the financial position of the Bank as of December 31, 2006 and 2005, and results of its operations for the years then ended, on the basis of accounting described in Note 3."
#Internal control: "A company’s internal control over financial reporting includes those policies and procedures that (i) pertain to the maintenance of records that, in reasonable detail, accurately and fairly reflect the transactions and dispositions of the assets of the company; (ii) provide reasonable assurance that transactions are recorded as necessary to permit preparation of financial statements in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles, and that receipts and expenditures of the company are being made only in accordance with authorizations of management and directors of the company; and (iii) provide reasonable assurance regarding prevention or timely detection of unauthorized acquisition, use, or disposition of the company’s assets that could have a material effect on the financial statements."
#Open market operations: "The FOMC, in the conduct of monetary policy, establishes policy regarding domestic open market operations, oversees these operations, and annually issues authorizations and directives to the Bank for its execution of transactions. The Bank is authorized and directed by the FOMC to conduct operations in domestic markets, including the direct purchase and sale of U.S. government securities, the purchase of securities under agreements to resell, the sale of securities under agreements to repurchase, and the lending of U.S. government securities. The Bank executes these open market transactions at the direction of the FOMC and holds the resulting securities, with the exception of securities purchased under agreements to resell, in the portfolio known as the System Open Market Account (“SOMA”).
#"SOMA": " U.S. Government Securities and Investments Denominated in ForeignCurrencies: U.S. government securities and investments denominated in foreign currencies comprising the SOMA are recorded at cost, on a settlement-date basis, and adjusted for amortization of premiums or accretion of discounts on a straight-line basis. Interest income is accrued on a straight-line basis. Gains and losses resulting from sales of securities are determined by specific issues based on average cost." ... "U.S. government securities held in the SOMA are lent to U.S. government securities dealers in order to facilitate the effective functioning of the domestic securities market. Securities-lending transactions are fully collateralized by other U.S. government securities and the collateral taken is in excess of the market value of the securities loaned. The Bank charges the dealer a fee for borrowing securities and the fees are reported as a component of “Other income.” etc in much greater detail.
:So, the audit opinion by PWC establishes: a) the auditor is independent, and does an audit (hence "independent audit"); b) the auditor checks both the facts on record and the internal system to record those facts and events, and expresses an opinion on whether these numbers reflect the actual situation for the balance sheet and income; c) The Bank here executes OMOs at the direction of the FOMC, and holds them in an account called SOMA; d) in substantial detail the policies for accounting for these operations and the portfolio are explained and the results published.
:This is what is referred to as an independent audit, and the contents explicitly identify that the OMOs are included in this audit and the published financial statements.--] (]) 23:17, 16 January 2008 (UTC)

:: Have '''you''' actually <i>read</i> the <i>actual audit</i>? If so, you certainly do read selectively :o(
:: It ALSO includes such gems as
::: <i>"The Bank’s management is responsible for maintaining effective internal control over financial reporting and for its assessment of the effectiveness of internal control over financial reporting. Our responsibility is to express opinions on management’s assessment and on the effectiveness of the Bank’s internal control over financial reporting based on our audit."</i>
:::: Let's paraphrase that as "It's up to the Bank to perform the audits ... we at PriceWaterhouseCooper just make sure that their audit methods are sound." Yeah... really trust-inspiring stuff there.
::: <i>"Because of its inherent limitations, internal control over financial reporting may not prevent or detect misstatements."</i>
:::: Oh ... yes. You closed the case on this one. ] (]) 23:54, 16 January 2008 (UTC)

:Ummm - I read the part in the sentence you quoted that says '''based on our audit'''. This is what is known as the '''audit opinion.''' They perform the audit itself and express that opinion according to the '''audit standards''' (also specified). All of this seems to support my contention that this is '''an audit.''' Do you have something else in mind?--] (]) 00:10, 17 January 2008 (UTC)

:: Wow, you're persistent in your faith. The '''actual''' way to read that is that it is "'''based on our audit <i>of the Bank's auditing <u>methods</u> (and <u>not</u> a comprehensive audit of their transactions)</i>'''." ] (]) 01:25, 17 January 2008 (UTC)

:There are TWO audit opinions here. They ''audited'' the Bank's financial statements - as written. They ''audited'' the Bank's internal controls over financial reporting: "We conducted our '''audit''' of internal control over financial reporting in accordance with generally accepted auditing standards as established by the Auditing Standards Board (United States) and in accordance with the '''auditing standards''' of the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (United States). Those standards require that we plan and perform the '''audit''' to obtain reasonable assurance about whether effective internal control over financial reporting was maintained in all material respects. An '''audit of internal control over financial reporting''' includes obtaining an understanding of internal control over financial reporting, evaluating management’s assessment, testing and evaluating the design and operating effectiveness of internal control, and performing such other procedures as we consider necessary in the circumstances. We believe that our '''audit''' provides a reasonable basis for our opinions."--] (]) 01:41, 17 January 2008 (UTC)

:: Ahhh yes ... the <i>other</i> audit. The one on finacial statements.... And exactly which of the OMO activities are we inferring from the financial position statements listed? :o(
:: All in all ... it's a mighty comprehensive audit. An independent company makes sure that the statements put together by the bank are consistent, and then they make sure the bank is using "good rules" when that bank audits itself and is putting together those statements (well .... except that whole "internal control over financial reporting may not detect misstatements" part ... but nevermind that). So ... if nothing else, at a bare minimum we learn from these audits that the accounting is clean or that the Fed has the resources to "cook thier books" evenly. All the while, no one from the outside actually is allowed to peek into any of the vaults. Very confidence-boosting, to be sure. ] (]) 03:51, 17 January 2008 (UTC)

:Ah yes, allegations and insinuations - a fine argument. This is clearly not productive; you've already decided what the Truth (TM) is, and have no idea what an audit is anyway. So, continue trolling, it's not worth discussing with you.--] (]) 04:12, 17 January 2008 (UTC)

:: No, this line is not productive if you're trying to prove that the audits provide oversight that is in any way comprehensive, especially with regard to OMOs. I don't have to allege or insinuate *anything* --- they do that well enough with their own words and disclaimer; and it's generally accepted that "]" can nullify any assurances given by financial audits; moreover, the OMO transactions are not externally audited. So, what I do know abouts audits is more than enough to let me also know that the methods used by the Fed don't inspire much trust. ] (]) 14:48, 17 January 2008 (UTC)

:Your source for claiming OMO transactions are not externally audited are the WSJ and NYTimes articles cited (1989 and 1983)?--] (]) 16:27, 17 January 2008 (UTC)

:: Among others, but feel free to begin any dispute with those (as necessary to improve the factual accuracy of the article). If I'm wrong then that area needs to be improved. But, a limited financial audit is a different thing from external auditing of OMO transactions, and a far-cry from a fraud-prevention investigation. ] (]) 17:55, 17 January 2008 (UTC)

==== We're gonna audit like it's 1999 ====
:The law was changed in 1999 to require annual independent audit (see , known as 12USC248b). So the pre-1999 discussion has been overtaken by events. Now, you may believe that this type of audit is insufficient, but that is distinct from the claim that there is no independent audit; but at any rateplease provide more recent independent citations - otherwise we are giving undue weight to criticisms and this point should be relegated to history.--] (]) 18:40, 17 January 2008 (UTC)

:: Citing irrelevent legal developments ... do you mean that seriously? Feel free to add the note about changes in the audit of financial statements, but I will support my text until something '''relevent''' about <i>OMO transactions</i> proves an error ... otherwise, you may be relying on factually inaccrate synthesis. ] (]) 05:37, 18 January 2008 (UTC)
:: Here's a quote describing your law ...
:::In 1999, Senator Harry Reid (D-NV) inserted an amendment in the Gramm-Leach-Bliley (GLB) Act imposing fairly stringent independent audit requirements on the Fed. Like most of its proposed forbears, Reid’s measure '''exempted the central bank’s monetary policy operations from outside audits.'''
::: Predictably, the Fed objected to Senator Reid’s amendment and convinced Congress to replace it with a bare-bones provision that ''essentially formalized the central bank’s '''existing''' practice''. As a result, the GLB Act signed by President Clinton requires only that the Board of Governors “order” an annual independent audit of financial statements filed by each Reserve Bank as well as the Board itself – with no definition of the term “independent” and none of the additional auditing authority sought by Senator Reid.
:: Also, from 2006 are the following suggestions
::: a seven point program that would bring the Federal Reserve up to speed for 21st century democracy:
::: 1 Regular open press conferences by the Chairman. Alan Greenspan and his predecessors never held press conferences.
::: 2 Adhere to the Budget Act which requires the submission of a formal annual budget subject to review by OMB and the Congress. (Currently the Federal Reserve prepares a limited in house budget and gives it self approval).
::: 3 Require congressional appropriations for all Federal Reserve activities. Currently the Federal Reserve finances whatever it pleases with public funds derived from the buying and selling of government bonds in the market as part of its control of the money supply. Surplus funds are returned to the U. S. Treasury annually.
::: 4 Allow the early release of Minutes of Federal Open Market Committee meetings with exceptions for national security issues.
::: 5 Hold open meetings on all issues not involving monetary policy.
::: 6 Require full audits by the Government Accountability Office (GAO). Currently the Fed refuses to allow GAO to audit anything involving monetary policy as defined by the Fed itself.
::: 7 Support legislation to prohibit commercial bank officials from serving on the boards of the 12 Federal Reserve District Banks.
:: Anyways, let's not try "gaming the system" here with a load of citation BS. Or, if you're just taking shots in the dark to support your unwarranted faith in "the system" then let's not waste each other's time like that, please. Putting your efforts into discovering The Whole Truth, stripped of all of the whitewash would be a great use of your intellect, though. :o( ] (]) 08:00, 19 January 2008 (UTC)

:Please provide a source. Please don't waste your time with rants about me - my point is simply that including criticisms from 1983 - particularly ones that specifically request an independent audit, which was then provided for in law - is unbalanced. More recent and hence relevant criticisms are welcome.
:And with respect to my faith in 'the system', you have no idea what I believe. I simply think an article should attempt to have some balance, which the current version makes little attempt to establish.--] (]) 15:30, 19 January 2008 (UTC)

:: AFAIK, criticisms ARE the predominant opinion in regards to the Fed. But, I do agree that more balance would be a worthy effort. If the other issues die down, I'd have more time to expand those areas. I actually have already started a section which attempts to balance the negativity of the criticisms. I'll be doing more in the coming days to help with balance.
:: In regards to the audit issue though, I still hold that the legal revision was irrelevant to the contentions in that part of the article (OMOs). It couldn't hurt to note the revision, but it still has no bearing on monetary policy transactions. ] (]) 00:19, 20 January 2008 (UTC)

==Sources==

I missed the remark about the approach to sources. Textbooks and such are certainly not a bad way to go. I've never seen the currency process outlined in one place, as explicitly as I detailed it. In particular, nearly every summation of the process skips over the final commercial loan process. Your apparent rejection to the notion would indicate that learning certain approaches don't tell the full story. The fact that the full story is not laid out, prompted some investigation into the less conventional "theories," which was not fruitless. I am aware of Bernarke's investigations into the Depression, and even his subsequent apology to Milton Friedman. Historic failures of the Fed are easy to research, but I think it'd be be useful if the common person could get a brief but explicit overview of the stuff that is more mired in confusion. ] (]) 23:14, 16 January 2008 (UTC)

:Basic macroeconomics and banking textbooks cover this. I don't think that having this article repeat information covered in several other WP articles is the way to avoid more confusion, and while the "less conventional" sources hold out the promise of easy understanding, it's often because they're spouting nonsense. Usually, of course, with just enough non-nonsense to sound plausible, or substantial misuse of terminology.--] (]) 01:46, 17 January 2008 (UTC)

:: According to the editors in the AfD, there is no consensus that this material is duplicated, so this particular argument is very unlikely to stand. ] (]) 03:51, 17 January 2008 (UTC)

::: That is incorrect. There was no consensus on '''deletion'''. --] (]) 18:59, 19 January 2008 (UTC)

== Inflation and wages ==

:I'm going to delete unless a good reason is given the bit on wages and inflation. The Rick Wolff article does not support the contention, that the fall in real wages is due to inflation - the article doesn't even mention inflation. For more detailed discussion on this, see also Krugman, Conscience of a Liberal, pp. 124-133, for example. The fall in real wages is, quite simply, a question of distribution of income, not an inflation issue. He gives the specific citation that wages would be 35 percent higher in real terms if wage distribution had remained unchanged (including adjustments for higher than CPI increases in nonwage labour costs, e.g. medical insurance).
:I'm sure there's a point that could be made about wages and inflation, but this ain't it.--] (]) 03:49, 15 January 2008 (UTC)

:: That's fine. I'll fill it in with better info later. ] (]) 03:51, 15 January 2008 (UTC)

:::Done. I'd greatly appreciate if other ones with citation requests, particularly those marked dubious, were removed as well (it would be better if you could do it). When good cites are found later to support these points, they can always be reinstated.--] (]) 03:55, 15 January 2008 (UTC)

:::: By your judgement versus mine, those would be pretty different results. I agree with the assessment of the text on real wages as you described above; however, I still support the currency issue which you hold as dubious. Most of that text is already cited with information from the Federal Reserve websites, so I believe the sourcing is currently sufficient (though I don't mind providing stronger citations). Apparently you'd like more direct quotes on the matter as opposed to summations. I do not believe that such a request merits a policy of "having to perform a deletion until the request is fulfilled." ] (]) 04:16, 15 January 2008 (UTC)

:Yes, please just provide citation in the article or directly here. My issue with the line that "Thus, an exponential need for increasing amounts of money may be contributing factor towards inflation in the US" is that a) it's synthesis; b) it's meaningless (exponential growth is the way it's measured, if it were additive, it would be falling inflation); c) it seems to imply a causal link (not even clear to what) that I don't see anywhere else; and d) it seems to be implying something bad that is not supported by text.
:Even the strict monetary rule proponents (e.g. Friedman, Bundesbank) agree that for prices to remain stable, money supply has to grow with GDP, and if GDP growth is constant, it's exponential. If y grows by 2% a year, y(x) = y(0)(1 + 2%)^x, where x is the number of years from y(0). It's exponential by definition, by simple math. So what?--] (]) 04:36, 15 January 2008 (UTC)
:: Well ... as you yourself say, I don't contend that the situation is bad, good, or indifferent. I just present the information. I'll reword that as necessary though. You make a good point here that it is currently muddled. ] (]) 04:41, 15 January 2008 (UTC)

== Article on monetary policy - the education of Ben Bernanke ==

One could do worse than use this NYTimes article as an anchor: --] (]) 23:21, 16 January 2008 (UTC)

: It does look like an intersting source to mine for a new section that could be added about specific trends in monetary policy. Would be good to compare and contrast with various policy stances by Greenspan and William McChesney Martin, et. al. ] (]) 01:33, 17 January 2008 (UTC)

== Should this be moved? ==
It seems that this text might really be good for the main article on money creation
: In the United States, the two primary types of money reported by the Federal Reserve are M1 and M2.<ref>http://www.federalreserve.gov/releases/H6/Current/ Federal Reserve, "Money Stock Measures", January 10,2008. </ref> M1 money consists of physical cash outstanding, travelers' checks and demand deposits. M2 (broad money) includes all of M1, plus savings deposits, small-value time deposits and retail money market funds. In addition, many economists and others refer to M0 (also known as the ], physical cash outstanding plus reserves with the central bank) and M3, a somewhat broader measure than M2.

: The difference between these alternative measures is significant: as at December, 2007, the value of M1 was $1,364 billion, while M2 was over $7.5 trillion (approximately five times more than M1, and slightly less than ten times the amount of physical currency in circulation).

The difference between these alternative measures is significant: as at December, 2007, the value of M1 was $1,364 billion, while M2 was over $7.5 trillion (approximately five times more than M1, and slightly less than ten times the amount of physical currency in circulation).
] (]) 09:16, 19 January 2008 (UTC)

:Since the article in current form keeps referring to "money" without distinction between the types, it may be useful. But then, I still believe that much of the article should be merged into articles about money creation, rather than attempting to come up with a new version of the existing WP articles.--] (]) 15:33, 19 January 2008 (UTC)

:: Specifically, which parts should be merged into which articles? ] (]) 00:32, 20 January 2008 (UTC)

:::The "]" and "]" sections should be moved to the ] article. While the "]" section sounds better in the ] article, this section explains money creation through the Federal Reserve.

:::I believe the "]" section is important to provide background information and article links related to the main topic. --] (]) 03:06, 20 January 2008 (UTC)

:::: ] has mentioned that the Federal Reserve article is too large as it stands (per ]). I would agree with that. Maybe the whole set of articles needs an overhaul to be more logically structured? ] (]) 15:00, 20 January 2008 (UTC)

:::::Then other articles could be made to branch off of that article per ]. The criticism section of ] could be broken off to a different article. Another article could explain day-to-day operations of how the Federal Reserve expands or contracts the money supply. --] (]) 18:42, 20 January 2008 (UTC)

== Currency and loan interest ==

I have provided direct quotes to reinforce the summations in sections related to currency and interest. I have removed some of the tags, as well. I'd ask that editors refrain from deleting the text or distorting its meaning or level of emphasis, without a credible (verifiable) dispute. Feel free to raise any source concerns here, in regards to the new sources. I assert that the "Daly" source is reliable, though. ] (]) 16:48, 18 January 2008 (UTC)

:So your best source is an economist who explicitly rejects mainstream economics? While notable, it is not a mainstream view, and I doubt that anyone would consider Daly a noted expert on monetary policy.--] (]) 15:39, 19 January 2008 (UTC)

:: To me, ''any'' of my sources is just fine. You wanted a source whom I could '''explicitly''' quote. Daly serves that particular purpose fine in the quoted passage about the current system, since it can stand independent of the alternate theories. You're more than welcome to prove him a liar, if you can cite a source that claims that commercial banks do NOT generally charge interest on loans. I'd probably also say its something of a fallacy to claim that someone is not an expert in something just because they do not believe in it--there are plenty of Hebrew/Islamic/etc experts on the Bible. ] (]) 00:11, 20 January 2008 (UTC)

== The Purpose of this Article ==

According to the first line:<blockquote>"The purpose of this article is to explain the current implementation of monetary policy in the United States"</blockquote>
Instead, this article explains function of ], ], and common criticism for each, which can be found in other articles.

This article never mentions:
*''']'''
*'''Strong/weak dollar policy''' - actually, no mention of Foreign Currency Operations at all
*'''Core''' ]
*'''Robust Policies'''
*'''Current Goals'''
or even...
*'''Current Policy'''

Therefore, this article is not about '''current''' implementation of monetary policy in the United States. What is the purpose of this article? --] (]) 19:50, 19 January 2008 (UTC)

: My god ... all that text about the United States' Federal Reserve and the methods it uses to influence the economy using the monetary base ... and it turns out that stuff is ''not'' about the implementation of monetary policy??
: I'd say that half of that stuff you are suggesting (CPI, inflation targeting, robust policies) seem to pertain to "monetary policy" in general, and not anything particular to the United States. Certainly, a brief foray into those topics could be useful. On the US-specific stuff, the text does briefly touch on the goals of the recent Fed leaders, and anyone can feel free to add a new section and expand into those areas. Something on the goals of the recent Fed Governors would be pretty nice. Gregalton has suggested a link which would be of use. ] (]) 00:01, 20 January 2008 (UTC)

::I apologize. I will be more specific. While articles like ] and ] describe the different methods and tools of monetary control, this article says it explains "the current implementation of monetary policy in the United States"; however, this article only explains ] and the tools of the ].

::For this article to "explain the current implementation of monetary policy in the United States", it should answer these questions:

::*'''What is the ] current inflation target?'''
::*'''Does the Fed support a strong or weak dollar?'''
::*'''How does the Fed use Core CPI? How important is this measure to its current policy?'''
::*'''What Robust Policies are used during times of economic uncertainty?'''
::*'''What are the Fed's current goals?''' (Hint: This was a 1977 amendment to the Federal Reserve Act)

::"all that text about the United States' Federal Reserve and the methods it uses to influence the economy" belong on the ] that explains the "Federal Reserve and the methods it uses to influence the economy". This article's context does not match its lead; therefore, '''what is the purpose of this article?''' --] (]) 02:45, 20 January 2008 (UTC)

::: Well, technically, implementation and design goals are two different things. Implementation is the "how," while the goals are the "why." By analogy, you can talk about *how* an airline company moves people around (by just reviewing their flight schedules), but you don't necessarily know why the schedule is designed as it is. In any case, including information about policy goals would be useful information. ] (]) 15:20, 20 January 2008 (UTC)

::::From your analogy, the "how" would not be the day-to-operations. The "how" would be the strategy to achieve their goals. The goals would be the "what". The goals and the strategy answer the questions:
::::*'''What''' are we trying to achieve?
::::*'''How''' will we achieve it?
::::Implementation is more about long-term strategy than it is the day-to-day operations. Details of the day-to-day operations of the Federal Reserve do not belong in an article whose purpose is to explain how the Federal Reserve attempts to achieve the monetary policy goals it has been assigned. --] (]) 18:34, 20 January 2008 (UTC)

::::: Although you probably won't believe it, I'll go ahead and say it. Strategy is not implementation. Strategy could easily be included in this article, but that does not mean that the current information about day-to-day operation is misplaced here. ] (]) 06:39, 22 January 2008 (UTC)

:::::: "Strategy is not implementation" I agree. That is why I compared strategy to day-to-day activities and '''not''' implementation. Monetary policy is a means to achieve the goals of monetary policy, and open market operations, which is what this article is mostly talking about) is one of the tools. --] (]) 20:45, 22 January 2008 (UTC)

::::::: Ahhh .. perhaps the part you won't believe is that the day-to-day operations *are* the implementation; the strategy is something different. If I don't do it myself, a discussion in strategy would be pretty nice. That info is probably not the easiest to find, though. ] (]) 21:56, 22 January 2008 (UTC)

:::::::: No. I do not believe it.
::::::::
::::::::'''implement''' - carry out accomplish; to provide instruments or means of expression for.
::::::::'''operations''' - performance of a practical work or of something involving the practical application of principles or processes.
::::::::'''strategy''' - a careful plan or method.

::::::::
::::::::'''implement''' - to put a plan or system into operation
::::::::'''operation''' - an activity which is planned to achieve something
::::::::'''strategy''' - a detailed plan for achieving success in situations such as war, politics, business, industry or sport, or the skill of planning for such situations.

::::::::
::::::::'''implement''' - carry out or fulfill something: to put something into effect or action
::::::::'''operation''' - the state of functioning or of being in effect
::::::::'''strategy''' - a carefully devised plan of action to achieve a goal, or the art of developing or carrying out such a plan

::::::::
::::::::'''implementation''' - any article used in some activity, esp. an instrument, tool, or utensil.
::::::::'''operations''' - an act or instance, process, or manner of functioning or operating.
::::::::'''strategy''' - a plan, method, or series of maneuvers or stratagems for obtaining a specific goal or result

:::::::::
::::::::''']''' - the realization of an application, or execution of a plan, idea, model, design, specification, standard, algorithm, or policy.
::::::::'''operations''' - the method by which a device performs its function. ()
::::::::''']''' - a long term plan of action designed to achieve a particular goal

::::::::As I wrote before, I agree that "strategy is not implementation". I also agree content on monetary strategy would be useful. --] (]) 05:09, 23 January 2008 (UTC)

== Problem with Money Creation Section ==

There is a consistency issue with the first paragraph of money creation describing the money supply during different periods of time. The present day and 1959 sources cited show the amount of currency (M0) in circulation while the 1933 shows the amount of M1 ]. --] (]) 21:33, 20 January 2008 (UTC)

There are two other problems with this section:
# #8 and #9 explain the normal functions of ] covered in another article; thus, not required for explanation of the Federal Reserve's daily operations.
# Most of the last few paragraphs of the section contain bogus arguements from ] or unreliable sources or misstatements from reliable sources. Due to ], if the fringe sources and related statements remain, sources and related statements with an opposing viewpoint must be added. --] (]) 00:39, 21 January 2008 (UTC)

:: It is a bit inconsistent, but the text shows there being "less than" the M1 amount, which would still be true.
:: #8 and #9 are not extensive parts of the article, so I support any duplication there, as they are critical parts of the monetary policy process. I think the "duplicate material" arguments are starting to stretch pretty far.
:: The fringe allegations made above are inspecific. I will continue to support the sources. If someone would like to add an alternate perspective that is directly relevent, please feel free. I doubt that any of the sources are"misstated." Please be specific in pointing that out, if possible. ] (]) 17:42, 21 January 2008 (UTC)

:::I agree than the "less than" comment still works since "M0" is less than "M1". I also understand that "M0" data from the early 1930s is a little harder to find; however, I think this statement would confuse the reader between the differences in "M0" and "M1" throughout the article.

::: #8 and #9 does not involve monetary policy. Free reserves are a function of the ] system. Open market operations' affect on free reserves is already covered in the last part of this section.

::: Ecological Economics is a ] theory; therefore, Herman Daly's article is a POV reference and requires an opposing view or deletion. The quote from '''Robert Hemphill''' in the '''Financial Sense''' article, for which I also question its reliability, is actually a quote from another source that quotes Robert Hemphill, - "Griffin, G. Edward, The Creature From Jekyll Island, American Media, 1998, p. 185."

::: Also, this section explains more about the function of open market operations on money supply than it does about "money creation". Money creation is a function of ], not a function of the ], or ]. --] (]) 23:56, 21 January 2008 (UTC)

], in regards to to this section, open market operations use reserves which are part of the '''M1''' money supply, not necessarily currency ("M0"). I have provided a between our two different edits. --] (]) 00:39, 22 January 2008 (UTC)

Also, regarding this quote:<blockquote>"For the vast majority of US money in circulation, each of the printed US dollars throughout the world represents a current outstanding loan of some citizen to a US bank."</blockquote> This statement cites a , the (Austrian Economics is ] when it comes to money), and the , which is also a ] form of economics. The other sources use M1 and M2 money, not M0. I have corrected this statement. --] (]) 01:25, 22 January 2008 (UTC)

: The compromise statement is perfectly fine. Thanks :o)
: As for "ecological economics," this wiki article doesn't delve into any discussion of ecological economics. The point of the WP:FRINGE policy is to provide balance against '''theories''' so that none are given "undue weight." I don't discuss *any* theory in Money Creation section, so there is no balance required, in my (possibly wrong) opinion. But, I mean ... by analogy, you're kinda saying that I need a "balancing perspective" ''from a Christian'', because I quoted a Rabbi who says that Christians believe that Jesus Christ is the messiah. The quoted section of ecological economics is a ''summation of'' '''actual''' ''events''. So, I do not believe that any fringe policies can apply ''unless'' you're claiming that Daly is engaging in some sort of "revisionist history" (ala, "Holocaust didn't happen") type of thing. In short, I'm am using his summation of facts, not his proposal of any theory, and, in this context, I still support that he is a qualified expert.
: As for "duplication of information" on fractional reserve banking, I will still support the inclusion of text. Removing such crucial text is like saying that Grant's tactics in the civil war should not be included in an article on Ulysses Grant, becasue they exist in the "Civil War" article. I think that's stretching things quite a bit. Not only that, but fractional reserve banking alone is a general concept and has ZERO to do with monetary policy on its own, so I would doubt that any discussion of monetary policy exists in that article. As such, I highly doubt that the consequences using fractional reserve banking in monetary policy is discussed ... meaning that this information is NOT duplicated. This information is not widely available, so I feel compelled to vigorously support the elaboration of the implementation of monetary policy as it currently flows. ] (]) 04:11, 22 January 2008 (UTC)

:: "this wiki article doesn't delve into any discussion of ecological economics" which is why an ecological economist does not need to be sourced. According to ], POV context and sources must balance with opposing POV context and sources. It does not matter if its a theory.

:: My other point about #8 and #9 was that the material was repeated (although reworded) in the paragraph below it. The point of free reserves has everything to do with a fractional reserve system. If "fractional reserve banking alone is a general concept and has ZERO to do with monetary policy", then why does monetary policy include a reserve requirement? --] (]) 20:33, 22 January 2008 (UTC)

::: According to what I read in WP:NPOV (specifically, ]) no balance is needed. This is the presentation of plain fact. There are no opinions involved. I believe our fundamental difference lies in this point. It would help if you explain where you see some sort of "subjective view" here, in regards to the use of Daly's material. I honestly cannot understand how a factual conclusion can be biased ... certainly it can be ''wrong'' but that's a bit of a different matter from what you're suggesting. I think he's well-qualified enough to trump either of our beliefs in the matter, but a conflicting expert statement would be quite interesting.
::: Fractional reserve banking (on its own) does not have anything to do with monetary policy. Monetary policy, on the other hand, does use the fractional reserve system. That distinction probably does have bearing on how the two articles should be structured. Anyhoo, I'll try to cut out any text that is getting duplicated or reworded in the same section. ] (]) 03:17, 23 January 2008 (UTC)

::::"I honestly cannot understand how a factual conclusion can be biased ..." If I am colorblind and say, "This apple is black." Was that a fact? Was that an opinion? Was it an observation from my Point Of View? Citing a source who is critical of the fractional reserve banking system to explain the cost of the fractional reserve banking system is POV. --] (]) 05:52, 23 January 2008 (UTC)

::::: That's still not bias; it's inaccuracy from an unreliable source. Your usage of the term "POV" stretches beyong its intended meaning. POV in wikipedia refers to matters of subjective opinion. Daly is not "colorblind" to neoclassical economics. He's still an expert in the branch, whether he holds it in high regard or not. More importantly, the quoted section has *nothing* to do with either theory of economics. THAT seems to be the point you keep missing. I'm having difficulty understanding your argument here .... it's like you're saying that I could NOT quote a Linux using computer engineer who says that "stanndard installations of Windows Vista can use X amount of disk space" just because that person doesn't like Microsoft's policies.
::::: I would think that the best argument here would be to impeach Daly's credibility in making the summation. However, I'm pretty sure he is well-qualified in the context used by the article, so I will continue to support him as a reliable source. ] (]) 13:21, 23 January 2008 (UTC)

:A far better argument would be to find an unimpeachable source - given that macro textbooks that cover this subject have been written by, among others, the current head of the Fed, it should not be difficult. To rely on this source with no qualification demonstrates that the goal is to search for citations that support a POV, rather than creating a neutral encylopedic article.--] (]) 20:11, 23 January 2008 (UTC)

:: "Support a POV" would again point to some subjective material. I still cannot find where there is any subjectivity in the Daly quote. If you want to claim that he doesn't know what he's talking about, then please assert that instead.
:: Anyways, I'm not relying on this source as if he were some sole bastion of truth. I provide him as a source at your request for an expert that could be quote explicitly. All of the other sources provide the same conclusion, but you wanted to dispute that.
:: I would conjecture that the very fact that you two are resistant to these conclusions shows that common texts do not delve into the matter. So, perhaps finding discussion of the subject is more difficult than you assert. It is exactly because people with a decent background in economics (such as yourself) are unaware of these conclusions, that I emphasize it. ] (]) 00:54, 24 January 2008 (UTC)

:The fact that common texts do not "delve into the matter" indicates that this is original research or a fringe opinion; to give it prominence in an article on monetary policy is out of place and not NPOV. Two editors have specifically requested a better source; please provide.--] (]) 04:06, 24 January 2008 (UTC)

:: As made obvious by the fact that an expert asserts it, it is not "original research." I contend that it is not a "fringe opinion," especially since no one here has provided a "mainstream counter-argument." Just claiming that a source violates policy is NOT the same as showing that a source violates policy. I doubt that wikipedia uses "baseless contention" as a legitimate way to dispute a source ... otherwise anyone could pick a random policy and claim that the author should remove the source. So, for now, the fact that two editors dispute it makes no difference to me at this time, since neither can provide any decent reason for disputing the source. I doubt either opposing editor here feels competent in disputing a renowned economist on the strength of their own credentials, so please provide verifiable evidence from a reliable source that proves this to be an error or a minority belief. Until such time, I will vigorously support the source and related material. (Note that discussions of only the US Treasury's interest burden are not relevent to the material in contention.) ] (]) 05:47, 24 January 2008 (UTC)

::: Yep, an expert. Sure. He uses the money supply, GDP, and interest rates, but fails to correlate those with inflation. Inflation is the ] of economic growth. Either this guy did not understand his own statement, or his field does not cover this subject very accurately. While the application of physics to sociology is quite interesting, and I think it could evolve into something in the future. I fail to see where the ] currently accepts this ] for use in economics or monetary theory. --] (]) 07:49, 25 January 2008 (UTC)

:::: Are you asserting that you, personally, are a more qualified economist? Interesting .... Anyhoo, to re-focus this current contention, I believe that the article has zero discussion of any heterodox economic theories. The issue at hand is whether Daly's examination of '''current monetary policy''' reaches a suspect conclusion ... perhaps held contrary to some other "mainstream" conclusion. If it can be shown that there is a contrary "mainstream" conclusion about the fact that the money supply requires loans (and subsequent interest) in order to circulate, then please show it with verifiable references. If some "mainstream" summation cannot be shown, then it also cannot be shown that the ''quoted'' Daly text is a fringe "opinion." ] (]) 00:08, 26 January 2008 (UTC)

:Placing undue emphasis can also be POV. I say it is a fringe opinion, and unless you can provide a better quote, it should stay out. At issue is that (to my knowledge) no mainstream economist places the emphasis on lending being "required" for the money supply; it is simply definitional (the money supply is affected by the demand for money). The characterization of the money supply "requiring" lending and implying that this means a dependency on borrowed money is a common feature of crackpot monetary conspiracy theorists and not found in mainstream writing.

:In this sense, the citation of an economist explicitly opposed to economic growth and most of the other tenets of mainstream economics is POV as it places undue emphasis on a non-typical characterization.--] (]) 05:12, 26 January 2008 (UTC)

::::: I do not consider myself an expert in ]. I do consider Daly a notable expert in ecological economics. The problem is, as Daly himself puts it in , "...ecological economics focuses on the physical or real economy...". As I have shown in I found, ecological economic monetary theories are too underdeveloped to be considered a reliable source. --] (]) 05:35, 26 January 2008 (UTC)

:: I will again assert that neither of you is qualified to say "it is fringe because *I* say so." Please show it is fringe by ''posting'' verifiable info about someone "in the mainstream" who reaches an alternate (contradictory) conclusion. Until, I will support the inclusion of the text as I wrote it. Also, I'd tend to think that logical facts cannot be given "undue weight," so until it is proven somehow that Daly's assessment of monetary policy is some economics version of Flat Earth, I will continue to emphasize it. ] (]) 17:06, 27 January 2008 (UTC)

::: What if Herman Daly says so? From :<blockquote>"...why is there virtually no dialogue between the ecological economists and the mainstream economists..."(p.2)</blockquote><blockquote>"Under our current fractional reserve banking system, favored by the neoclassical mainstream..."(p.10)</blockquote><blockquote>"If we follow mainstream economists..."(p.26)</blockquote>
::: Herman Daly's own words show that there is a separation between mainstream economics and ecological economics. Other ecological sources not only show this separation, but also complain about it. Since ecological economics is separate from mainstream economics, it is a fringe theory. --] (]) 20:45, 27 January 2008 (UTC)

:Certainly not a reliable source on monetary economics. Neither would a labor economist or any one of dozens of other subfields. If there were for some reason a shortage of macroeconomists, monetary economists or textbooks on macreconomics...--] (]) 20:51, 27 January 2008 (UTC)

:: EGeek .. you continue to miss the point, so I'd ask that you re-read this section to see what is really being argued. Differentiation between ecological economics and neoclassicism is not under dispute.
:: Gregalton .. you have any proof for such an assertion? Seems pretty far-fetched to assert that Daly is an idiot in monetary economics when he was chosen to LEAD THE WORLD BANK. Err ... yeah. ] (]) 23:18, 27 January 2008 (UTC)

:: ...of environmental development affairs. That is an appropriate position for an ecological economist.
::My current dispute is the differentiation between mainstream economics and ecological economics. If ecological economics is not part of the "mainstream", then it is a "fringe" theory, not a "the presentation of plain fact"; therefore, ] does not apply. If you want to try to prove that interest represents a cost that requires constant injection of money, then use sources that cite ] or his work. He is more notable and more represented in the mainstream than Professor Daly. --] (]) 01:59, 28 January 2008 (UTC)

::: Again, the article section in question quotes NOTHING of ecological economics, nor neoclassicism. The relevant part of the article is a summation of monetary policy, and, in particular, a summation of the involvement of fractional reserve banking in monetary policy. The summation is fact that should be freely useful under WP:ASF, seeing as no ''relevant'' contradiction has been pointed out here. ] (]) 02:23, 28 January 2008 (UTC)

:::: Your own POV about relevancy does not matter. ] is for simple facts that are not disputed. I posted a source that disputed the "fact"; therefore, it is not really a fact. --] (]) 02:44, 28 January 2008 (UTC)

== NPOV tag should be added ==

NPOV tag and maybe some other tags should be added to this article due to abovementioned concerns. --] (]) 23:26, 27 January 2008 (UTC)

: Could be true, but there may be a difference between POV issues and simply not using euphemisms. ] (]) 00:00, 28 January 2008 (UTC)

== Money Creation (Part 2) ==

I made a new section due to the length of the old one. In response to the that ] made:<blockquote>"uninformed edit rv... non-incorporated *businesses* do NOT receive loans (plz research) ...also E Miller disputes Daly's correlation w/ GDP...says zero about quote used in article"</blockquote> I give my response.

# Both corporate and non-corporate businesses receive loans from banks. It normally requires a strict business plan and length of operational turnover. There is also statistical data available on non-corporate business loans. So your statement "non-incorporated businesses do NOT receive loans" is false.
# Daly says, <blockquote>Under our current fractional reserve banking system, favored by the neoclassical mainstream, the money supply is a by-product of private commercial activities of lending and borrowing, rather than a public utility for effecting exchange. Over 95% of our money supply is created by the private banking system (demand deposits) and bears interest as a condition of its existence. Unless loans are repaid at interest and renewed, the money supply will shrink and transactions will be more difficult. Fractional reserve money is therefore not neutral with respect to the scale of the physical economy—it requires growth of GDP to keep the money supply from declining.(pp.10-11)</blockquote> Miller says, <blockquote>The growth of fractional-reserve fiat money is better understood as a response to the financing needs of economic activities, not the cause of those activities. For it to be the reverse would require the money supply to be exogenously set and not demand-determined (endogenous). Strangely, the first part of the excerpt suggests that Daly understands that money is endogenous to demand, though his conclusion does not logically follow from it.(p.72)</blockquote> You can find the Daly quote on page 70. Miller made a point that financing activities are a product of the demand for those activities, not the financing activities themselves. Daly ignores his own statement about GDP growth and concludes that the money supply requires GDP growth instead of the reverse. --] (]) 02:35, 28 January 2008 (UTC)

=== Money Creation (elaboration) ===
"Both corporate and non-corporate businesses ... statistical data available on non-corporate business loans."
You're asserting facts without verifiable references. AFAIK, non-incorporated "businesses" are NOT granted loans. Some ''person'' within the company must prove credibility and also accept the liability. Corporations are granted citizen-status for liability purposes. In either case, it is ultimately a citizen accepting the loan... whether person or corporation. ] (]) 03:00, 28 January 2008 (UTC)

"Daly ignores his own statement about GDP growth and concludes that the money supply requires GDP growth instead of the reverse."
Err ... again, you keep arguing against something that is ''completely'' absent in the wiki article. I have no dispute on this point for now, as it seems irrelevant right now.
EGeek, I'd ask that we limit discussion to topics actually broached in the wiki article. Ecological economics is nowhere mentioned (n-o-w-h-e-r-e .. in case you missed that). So, all of these strange tangents about economics theory are interesting, but really have no bearing on the wiki article. Let's please stick to the wiki stuff. I used a single quote from Daly that has no basis in any theories of economics, so if you want to censor that statement, then please find a '''verifiable''' contradiction. ] (]) 03:00, 28 January 2008 (UTC)

"Miller made a point that financing activities are a product of the demand for those activities, not the financing activities themselves."
This is the most relevant contention that I could find, so I'll comment here using an analogy. Increases in the aggregate public demand for Cadillacs require a commensurate increase of income taxes paid within the Cadillac company (by the additional workers who produce the extra Cadillacs). Just because demand is the initial impetus, this does not negate a summation of costs.
] (]) 03:00, 28 January 2008 (UTC)

=== RfC Daly ===
{{RFCecon | section=RfC Daly !! reason= Discussion is not being engaged. Steps in a process involving monetary policy are cited, and a logical conclusion about the use of those cited steps is quoted from Herman Daly. An editor is disputing the validity of the quote citing: A) unreliable source, claiming that the economist is ignorant in monetary economics; B) egregious factual error, without providing any verifiable contradiction; C) fringe, without providing any evidence of an existing "mainstream counterargument." Requests have been made for relevant and verifiable info that could contradict the cited text in contention; however, 3RR is being warned while the verifiable material under contention is being deleted without providing the requested contradictions (other than the "common knowledge" of the editor himself). This dispute is primarily centered on the ] section of the article. Should a "consensus" of one or two people be allowed to cite their own common knowledge as legitimate dispute for a conclusion reached by a noted prefessional? Others statements in contention are minor but may need opinions. (see this about citizens and bank loans)!! | time=06:34, 28 January 2008 (UTC)}}
Discussion is not being engaged. Steps in a process involving monetary policy are cited, and a logical conclusion about the use of those cited steps is quoted from Herman Daly. An editor is disputing the validity of the quote citing: A) unreliable source, claiming that the economist is ignorant in monetary economics; B) egregious factual error, without providing any verifiable contradiction; C) fringe, without providing any evidence of an existing "mainstream counterargument." Requests have been made for relevant and verifiable info that could contradict the cited text in contention; however, 3RR is being warned while the verifiable material under contention is being deleted without providing the requested contradictions (other than the "common knowledge" of the editor himself). This dispute is primarily centered on the ] section of the article. Should a "consensus" of one or two people be allowed to cite their own common knowledge as legitimate dispute for a conclusion reached by a noted prefessional? Others statements in contention are minor but may need opinions. (see this about citizens and bank loans) ] (]) 06:34, 28 January 2008 (UTC)

:I welcome this RfC. A few points:
#No-one said that Daly is "ignorant." All that is stated is that this is not his field of specialisation.
#According to ], a reliable source is scholarly. The source cited does not appear to be a scholarly publication in the sense of vetted, but self-published.
#According to ] and ] "fairly representing all majority and significant-minority viewpoints that have been published by reliable sources, in rough proportion to the prominence of each view." This view is not prominent.
#According to ], "Self-published material may, in some circumstances, be acceptable when produced by an established expert on the topic of the article whose work in the relevant field has previously been published by reliable third-party publications." Note that "whose work '''in the relevant field'''" is bolded in the policy. As can be seen in the article and Daly's background, his area of expertise is not at all in the area of monetary policy or macroeconomics, but ecological economics. The article itself notes that ecological economics is separate from 'mainstream economics', let alone monetary policy/macroeconomics.
#BigK Hex asks for sources specifically contradicting Daly. This is proving a negative. This work is so outside the mainstream that it has ''no'' visibility amongst macroeconomist/monetary policy specialists.
:There are plenty of reliable sources available on this subject. The editor above wants to use specific formulations and present it as ''fact''. To do so, rather than use sources on a well-researched subject from absolutely unimpeachable sources (such as, for example, textbooks by the current head of the Federal Reserve which are widely available), the editor has had to resort to obscure works by non-specialists that just happen to use the formulation he wishes to promote. This clearly demonstrates a personal agenda and violation of ]. It gives undue attention to borderline sources and fringe interpretations, while overstating the case (justified by 'the facts themselves are such', a classic formulation of POV pushers.
:As it is, this entire article resembles a POV fork from ] rather than an article on US monetary policy.--] (]) 08:00, 28 January 2008 (UTC)

# "No-one said that Daly is "ignorant." ... this is not his field of specialisation."
## You certainly do dance with euphemisms. As stated in the RfC, you have very certainly claimed he is ignorant in monetary economics, enough to be considered unreliable.
# "According to ], a reliable source is scholarly ..... According to ], 'Self-published material may...'"
## I guess the publisher, the '''''University''''' '''of Maryland''', isn't accredited well enough for you ... ? Your unfounded censorship is the only thing that is not reliable, nor verifiable in this matter.
# "This view is not prominent."
## Awww .. yet you refuse to show '''''any''''' evidence of "the" prominent view. Amazing how that works. According to wikipedia policy, YOU are engaging in original research, and trying to counter my verifiable text with it. That is unacceptable. Until such time that someone scholarly publishes your "prominent" view, my text should be allowable.
# "BigK Hex asks for sources specifically contradicting Daly."
## Well ... that seems like a pretty reasonable response to deletion of verifiable material, yet you keep refusing it, and have opted to continue the unwarranted deletions.
# "This is proving a negative. This work is so outside the mainstream that it has ''no'' visibility amongst macroeconomist/monetary policy specialists."
## lol .. you sure do have a lot of trouble proving that the Earth is round here. Your inability to find your supposed "mainstream" view is NOT a justification according to any wikipedia policy, guideline, or essay. In fact it is against WP:WQT which states <blockquote> '''Concede a point when you have no response to it, or admit when you disagree based on intuition or taste'''; Argue facts; Don't ignore questions; Recognize your own biases and keep them in check; etc.</blockquote>
# "editor has had to resort to obscure works by non-specialists that just happen to use the formulation he wishes to promote .... a classic formulation of POV pushers"
## Oh yes ... a work published by an accredited university and written by a notable expert in economics that is so obscure that it has links all over Google. And .... also. I used textbooks that similarly support the same conclusion. You refuted those, demanding an explicit quote. You have your explicit quote, and you refute it with vague, baseless, unfounded, unproven, random allegations of "policy violations." A classic formulation for censors who have no factual "high ground." It must be awfully nice to edit articles in your fashion. If you don't like something ... just claim that it is "fringe" even if it is obvious and verifiable, then conspire with enough editors to avoid 3RR in pushing your own POV censorship, without providing a single shred of evidence. ] (]) 13:10, 28 January 2008 (UTC)

*Does not appear to be '''published by''' the University of Maryland. At least, judging by the actual link. It is simply carried on the personal website of a professor there. This does still not obviate the point that the field of specialisation is NOT monetary policy or macroeconomics, and specifically states - repeatedly - that ecological economics is outside of mainstream economics.--] (]) 13:29, 28 January 2008 (UTC)

:: Then it's a good thing that I don't use any of his theories on ecological economics.
:: Also, the source is '''published''' on the University's website, specifically by their School of Public Policy. If you want to make an assertion that the school is disavowing these publications, then please do so directly and '''then prove it'''. Otherwise, let's avoid frivolous commentary. ] (]) 13:54, 28 January 2008 (UTC)

:If you have any evidence that this publication is peer reviewed, please provide it. On ecological economics, Daly would be a notable source.--] (]) 15:56, 28 January 2008 (UTC)

:: You want *me* to do your homework for you??? YOU are the one making unfounded assertions. However, in an effort to move past this stonewalling I will accede to your undue request.
:: Firstly, I'd note that you are cherry-picking sources fairly conveniently :o(
:: Your buddy EGeek has already provided evidence of peer review () ''in this wiki article'' and it stands right in the ''same passage'' as the usage of the source you are disputing. This source does NOT contradict Daly's summation of monetary policy, though Miller does contradict Daly's asserted link between GDP and the money supply.
:: That is somewhat weak evidence of peer-review, but I thought it was interesting how you manage to raise such untenable arguments. In any case, I'll go ahead and provide solid evidence that the Daly source certainly meets the WP:RS guidelines. Specifically, I'll assert that the Daly source was given in the proper academic environment - see http://ir.lib.sfu.ca/retrieve/2935/etd2244.pdf and then please refrain from raising any further disputes of cited and verifiable text that you are unwilling to prove yourself (outside of your "intuition"). Making edits based on no verifiable dispute is very ] behavior, in my opinion. ] (]) 16:29, 28 January 2008 (UTC)

:Peer reviewed refers to peer reviewed ''publications.'' Not that a peer happened to review it, but that a publication is consistently reviewed by peers prior to publication.--] (]) 19:41, 28 January 2008 (UTC)

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Missing Piece

A fundamental question needs to be answered here, to be included in this article and the other related articles on money creation. I did what I could to look around, but finding anything clear about this topic is daunting, so I figured I'd ask openly here...

Does the Federal Reserve (and central banks in general) hold some permanent debt in order for there to be a net gain in money supply? From what I understand, if the Fed, say, bought a security for $1000, it would remove the same amount of money as if it had sold the security. Now, when a security is created, and in the process money is created, if that same security is sold by the Fed, the same amount of money would be destroyed. The Fed would have to hold some securities and collect payments in order for there to be a net gain in the money supply.

What am I missing?

NittyG (talk) 04:07, 24 April 2010 (UTC)

The Fed's open market operations do not change the total amount of money and near money in the private sector. They change the liquidity by replacing near money (mostly treasury securities) with money or vice versa. And they change the amount of bank reserves (since near money does not count as reserves) which affects the banks' ability to lend money (and thus create money from private IOUs) because of the reserve requirement. JRSpriggs (talk) 23:30, 24 April 2010 (UTC)
These technicalities are not the issue that I am facing. Money is at its root created from the backing of this "near money" (which is only near-money because it is so liquid in secondary markets that use money). Once again, if, say, $1000 of securities are bought by the Fed, it might perhaps create $10,000, from what I understand, if it sold $1000 of the same securities in the same circumstance, it would reduce the money supply by $10,000. If this is true, then the Fed would have to hold onto some securities and collect payments on them for there to be a net gain in the money supply. What am I missing?
NittyG (talk) 02:04, 26 April 2010 (UTC)
You are not being clear. Why do you thing you are missing something? Certainly the Fed's balance sheet changes over time. JRSpriggs (talk) 05:49, 26 April 2010 (UTC)

These are my assumptions about how the current monetary system works:
  • Money creation originates through the creation of securities
  • After this initial creation, much more is created through the banking system through fractional reserve
  • When the Fed buys and sells securities, it increases or decreases the money supply
  • Say in a particular scenario, when the Fed creates $1000, $10,000 is created through fractional reserve
  • If $1000 is taken out of the system, the money supply likewise reduces by $10,000
  • Assuming all of the above are correct, the only way there can be a net increase in the money supply is if some security is held by the Fed, which it is collecting payments for.
- in this case, if all things were constant (interest rates, etc), and supposing the entire money supply was $10,000, that would mean that the Fed would have to hold $1000 in securities, that it is collecting payments for.
- my question is: is this true, that the only way for there there to be a money supply, the Fed must hold some securities it is collecting payments for? If this is not true, my assumptions above must be incorrect - if that is the case, what is incorrect?

Unless I am mistaken in the above assumptions, this would be the only way the system could logically work.
I did find this(the fifth fact, about the Fed holding 7% of the Federal debt). So this does confirm that the Fed does hold some securities that it collects payments for.
What I am wondering is, with all of the assumptions above, is this the only way that the system can necessarily work?
NittyG (talk) 02:11, 28 April 2010 (UTC)
Yes, the Fed (actually its twelve regional Federal Reserve Banks) does hold a lot of Treasury securities, and obligations of member banks. It also has: gold certificates (representing gold held by the U.S.Treasury department), special drawing rights (SDRs) which are obligations of the International Monetary Fund (IMF), and various other financial assets. The Fed earns interest on these securities which is uses to pay its expenses and increase its capital (when necessary). Any excess after that is paid to the U.S.Treasury. I suggest that you go to the Fed website and read their explanations of their business. I gave a link in my last message.
There are other conceivable ways that a Monetary Authority could work. Or you could have a system without any Monetary Authority. JRSpriggs (talk) 03:06, 28 April 2010 (UTC)
Sure. But my underlying question remains, which I have made bold above. NittyG (talk) 06:06, 29 April 2010 (UTC)
So, again:
  • Is it that the only way for there to be a money supply is if the Fed holds some securities?
or, asked differently,
  • Can there be a money supply without the Fed holding some securities?
NittyG (talk) 06:14, 29 April 2010 (UTC)

This depends on what you mean by "money" and what you mean by "can there be". There are several different definitions of the money supply, including: M0, M1, M2 and M3. Most generally, money is anything which can be freely exchanged for goods and services.

The kind of money which is directly controlled by the Fed is the monetary base which is the cash (Federal Reserve Notes and coins) in circulation plus deposits in the Federal Reserve Banks. These are the dollar-denominated obligations of the Fed. The Fed is required by law to back the monetary base 100% by various kinds of collateral (i.e. the securities mentioned above). However, absent that law or in defiance of it, it could issue (but has not issued) additional uncollateralized currency or expend its collateral.

Other forms of money are constrained differently. M1 includes the monetary base and also includes money created by banks lending using private IOUs as collateral. This is constrained by reserve requirements and capital requirements imposed on the banks. Credit card debt is still another form of money. It is backed by the expectation that the consumer will pay off his credit cards eventually.

If people disregard various state and federal laws, then they could use: gold, silver, copper, cigarettes, silk stockings or other goods as money. Some island tribes have even used token ownership of large (immovable) rocks as money. JRSpriggs (talk) 00:58, 30 April 2010 (UTC)

Greenspan once approached a similar question about the necessity of using US debt securities, and stated that he was "confident" that other tools could be used because (something to the effect that) "the US has the most innovative financial markets in the world. " BigK HeX (talk) 01:17, 30 April 2010 (UTC)
Indeed. I personally have advocated using a different kind of collateral for the monetary base. In User:JRSpriggs/Optimal monetary policy, I suggest using: mutual fund shares, stock index futures, warrants, call options, commodity futures, and options to exchange dollars for foreign currency (e.g. call options on Yen). JRSpriggs (talk) 02:55, 30 April 2010 (UTC)
Bookmarked. Looks like a pretty interesting read. Thanks for the link BigK HeX (talk) 11:49, 30 April 2010 (UTC)
I am well aware that there are infinite different kinds of money, and it is in fact not illegal - people can trade gold and silver, frequent flyer miles, and local currencies such as the Ithaca HOUR, which is officially tax-exempt by the IRS. The example of the Yap Islanders you mentioned is a particularly interesting example of the diversity of money. Your idea sounds interesting, and I am looking forward to reading it.
Lets please focus on answering my question, which has assumptions that I have laid out both explicitly (clearly in the points above) and implicitly (I am obviously only referring to the American Dollar). I am only talking about the current paradigm, not any other theory that is not in practice by the Federal Reserve System. In any case, you did go one step closer in addressing the question, and I really appreciate that (as well as the other information and ideas you provided). If you can, please go through my points again (the assumptions I have boxed, and the questions in bold), and try not to get caught up in the technicalities of what I am saying, and address the problem according to my intentions one can infer. I think I have made myself completely clear, but, of course, if there is any further clarification needed, please ask.
NittyG (talk) 22:32, 5 May 2010 (UTC)
I'm not sure if this talk page is really the proper venue to pose such fact-finding questions.....
In any case, if you're asking whether the Fed could switch to using other assets as the crucial instrument in conducting monetary policy, then the answer is "yes .... but only in theory." I don't really see that covering this part of the theory is "a missing piece." Basic theories on how the Fed could function, seem to be a subset of information on monetary policy in general, and, IMO, best addressed there. BigK HeX (talk) 22:48, 5 May 2010 (UTC)
To NittyG: I still do not understand your question. You seem to be asking <<if the system works the way it works, is that the only way it can work?>>. Duh?
Please say why you want to know the answer. Perhaps that will help me figure out what your question is. JRSpriggs (talk) 23:59, 5 May 2010 (UTC)
I see. My question is whether that is the way the system works. I am asking because if it is true, then that is an essential part of explaining how the system works, and that needs to be included in this article and related ones. I rephrased the question, in bold above. NittyG (talk) 20:58, 6 May 2010 (UTC)
As far as how the system does work now, you are correct.
But even with a Monetary Authority (i.e. a central bank like the Fed), there are other ways it could work. The Fed could back the monetary base solely with gold which earns no interest or dividends. Whether this would be better or worse than the current system is a matter of some debate.
Worse, it could have no collateral at all and rely on using the legal tender laws to force people to use its money and no other kind. This creates a major risk of hyper-inflation and eliminates the Fed's ability to shrink the money supply by monetary means, although shrinking it by running a budget surplus (fiscal means) is still possible (but politically unbelievable).
Does this answer your question? JRSpriggs (talk) 08:07, 7 May 2010 (UTC)
I guess I just need to make sure... You mentioned earlier that it is required by law for the Fed to back the monetary base with some kind of collateral, via securities. Are you saying it is only the law that requires this, or is it a given? Without the law, given the assumption that the monetary base can only be created through securities, under the current regime (again, with my assumptions above), wouldn't the Fed have to keep some securities it collects payments for anyway, since that would destroy the money supply that rests on the monetary base? If it had no securities under the current regime, with or without a law, since the monetary supply is created through securities, having no securities would mean that there would be no monetary base, and therefore no money supply (again, regarding the money supply I'm implicitly referring to, under the current monetary regime).
If it is only the requirement by law that makes the Fed back the monetary base with securities, that is, the Fed can create money even without holding securities under the monetary regime without that law, then something about my assumptions is wrong, and we need to figure out what that is. NittyG (talk) 02:02, 8 May 2010 (UTC)

Let us look at this from another perspective. Regardless of what the government wants, something cannot be money unless most people are willing to accept it in trade for valuable goods and services. Thus historically money has always originated as a commodity which is widely desired by people. Once money exists, banks and governments can create other forms of money by establishing a linkage to an existing form, e.g. promising to exchange paper money for gold. After such a fiat currency has become the main medium of exchange, the banks or governments often cheat by withdrawing their promise, embezzling the collateral, or replacing some of the collateral with other securities which are nominally but not actually equivalent. In the case of the United States, gold (a commodity with real value) has been mostly replaced as collateral by U.S.Treasury securities (which are based on nothing but the unreliable promise to tax people to raise the means to buy the currency back). Thus money becomes a kind of confidence game or Ponzi scheme. The game can continue as long as the trickster (bank or government) does not get too greedy and no better alternative form of money is available to the public. Otherwise hyper-inflation will occur and destroy the currency. JRSpriggs (talk) 04:43, 8 May 2010 (UTC)

Yes, again, I knew all of that, and it does not in any way address the previous entry I made. Lets please focus on the issue I brought up in this discussion :) NittyG (talk) 06:03, 8 May 2010 (UTC)
WP:NOT aside, a basic problem is that neither of us here seems to understand your question. You ask "Is it that the only way for there to be a money supply is if the Fed holds some securities?" but then simultaneously say "I am only talking about the current paradigm, not any other theory that is not in practice by the Federal Reserve System." JSpriggs has already summed this up pretty succinctly above when he wrote,

To NittyG: I still do not understand your question. You seem to be asking <<if the system works the way it works, is that the only way it can work?>>

Your basic questions have already been answered.
  • Is it that the only way for there to be a money supply is if the Fed holds some securities?
Answer: No that is not the only way for there to be a money supply, but the Fed currently only holds US Treasury securities to effect monetary policy (for good reason).
  • Can there be a money supply without the Fed holding some securities?
Answer: Yes there can be a money supply, but currently the Fed chooses (for good reason) to only utilize a holding of US Treasury securities.
If you're trying to get at something else, you may have to clarify. BigK HeX (talk) 16:58, 8 May 2010 (UTC)
There is one, perhaps obvious, point which none of us has yet mentioned explicitly. The use of a medium of exchange is much more efficient than barter. Thus transactions using money make a profit relative to barter. This profit is divided between the users of money (ordinary people who buy and sell) and the Monetary Authority which takes a cut by inflating the currency and through seigniorage. If the Monetary Authority takes too much, then the users cannot make enough profit to sustain the system and it collapses. This is another way of expressing the last point in my previous message. JRSpriggs (talk) 17:38, 8 May 2010 (UTC)

BigK HeX - you must not have really read our conversation. My question has actually not been answered definitively.

  • First I was told, yes, money can be a wide variety of things, to which I responded that I am implicitly implying the American Dollar.
  • Next, I was told that yes, by law this is the case, to which I responded that my question is whether this is a necessity of the system.
  • I am not asking "if the system works the way it works, is that the only way it can work?" - I am asking is this the way the system works?

- the "assumptions" I noted above are not assumptions I am holding for the sake of a theoretical experiment - they are assumptions that I am holding about how the monetary system works, and whether they are wrong (I just wrote that out a bit further).

  • And this is not WP:NOT. As I said twice, the answer to my question needs to be explicated in this article and articles related to it, because it is essential in understanding how the current monetary paradigm functions. I have been entirely on topic, not related to a forum.

Please, go through what I have put between the lines. What I wrote there is very, very clear. NittyG (talk) 04:03, 9 May 2010 (UTC)

I suppose that the key assumption above is the fifth (If $1000 is taken out of the system, the money supply likewise reduces by $10,000). It has been said everywhere I have read that if a certain amount of money (X) is put into the system, and subsequently the money supply multiplies through fractional reserve, the same situation would "run in reverse" if the same amount (X) was taken out of the system. If this is true, then somewhere there has to be a permanent amount of debt, which is what I am trying to figure out. And once again, I am only talking about the system today, which I am assuming (the first assumption) money only originates through securities, which may also be incorrect. I hope this clarifies things a bit more :) NittyG (talk) 04:23, 9 May 2010 (UTC)
Frankly, I think we have already answered you more than once. Your assumptions listed are correct generally.
If the Fed wants to contract the money supply, the main method used is to sell some of its collateral. Suppose XYZ buys a Treasury bill from the Fed for $1000. To do so, XYZ writes a check on its account at ABC national bank. When the check clears, that $1000 is deducted from XYZ's account at ABC national bank, and $1000 is also deducted from ABC's account at the New York (or other) Federal Reserve Bank. Thus the reserves belonging to ABC are reduced by $1000. So ABC must reduce the demand deposits for which it is liable by $10,000 in order to comply with the reserve requirement. Since its obligation to XYZ has already been reduced by $1000, it must reduce its lending or call in loans amounting to $9000 (unless it has excess reserves to spare).
ABC national bank also must make sure that it has enough capital to remain solvent (not be seized by the FDIC). So even if there were no legal reserve requirement, it would need to maintain a certain amount of reserves to protect itself from runs on the bank and normal fluctuations of withdrawals.
Ultimately, the payment of any debt that is denominated in U.S. dollars must be convertible to base money (money that is part of the monetary base, i.e. Federal Reserve Notes, U.S. coins, and deposits at the twelve Federal Reserve Banks). This is what makes the monetary base controlling of the much larger amount of other kinds of dollars. If the amount of non-base dollars becomes too large, there will be a run on it, i.e. those who hold non-base money risk losing the value of their money (through default of the entity that created the money) or experiencing a delay in being able to use it.
Every financial asset is also an obligation of another party. Every dollar you have is owed to you by someone. So yes, there is an enormous amount of debt in the system. Every bank account is an asset for the owner of the account and also a liability of the bank. Every share of stock is an asset for the owner of the share and an obligation (equity) of the company of which it is a share. Every coin in your pocket is an asset for you and a liability of the United States. JRSpriggs (talk) 10:43, 9 May 2010 (UTC)
At this point I feel that we have not been able to help each other. I have not been able to explain my question clearly, and you feel that you have already answered it. Perhaps someone can come along and answer my question.
To respond - Again, you said that my assumptions are correct generally. I am asking whether they are necessarily correct within the current monetary practice. Besides this, I have written clearly above my question, and clearly written how my question hasn't been answered.
In any case, I'll take another stab at it.
The possible answers I am looking for are simple:
(1)"Yes, the Fed must hold some securities it is collecting payments for"
(2)"No, there is a circumstance where the Fed can hold no securities, and still have a money supply"
- if #2 is the case, which of the above assumptions do not hold true?
Building on your scenario above, where XYZ purchases a security for $1000, and the money supply decreases by $10,000 - in the same circumstance, if XYZ instead sold the same security to the Fed, under my assumptions, the money supply would likewise increase by $10,000. If the Fed then simultaneously sold the security, the money supply would again reduce by $10,000. If this is is how the money system works in general, then there would be no net money supply, so the Fed must always keep some securities it collects payment for.
If my question can't be answered to our mutual satisfaction, then I think that we should just hold off. Thanks for your help - I appreciate your time and consideration. NittyG (talk) 17:30, 12 May 2010 (UTC)
You say, The possible answers I am looking for are simple:
(1)"Yes, the Fed must hold some securities it is collecting payments for"
(2)"No, there is a circumstance where the Fed can hold no securities, and still have a money supply"
You already received this answer. From above:
  • Is it that the only way for there to be a money supply is if the Fed holds some securities?
  • Answer: No that is not the only way for there to be a money supply, but the Fed currently only holds US securities.
Unfortunately, it seems the possibly "missing piece" from the article is not really missing, a conclusion which would suggest that this article's talk page has served its purpose for this matter. BigK HeX (talk) 17:45, 12 May 2010 (UTC)
To BigK Hex: Your statement that "the Fed currently only holds US securities" is false. It has many different kinds of assets as part of its collateral. Its collateral includes Special Drawing Rights which are obligations of the International Monetary Fund (not a part of U.S.) and it has swap arrangements with Canada, U.K., Europe, and Switzerland under which it may hold their currencies. It also holds: Agency debt, Mortgage Backed Securities, Repurchase agreements, etc.. See the list of asset types. JRSpriggs (talk) 01:37, 13 May 2010 (UTC)
Yeah, I shouldn't phrase it as such ... too lazy to qualify it more thoroughly as a reference to collateral for the "bulk of the money supply." Nitty's question seems to regard the general operation of the Fed, and of the assets that the Fed could use to generally support the majority of the money supply. Of course, recent events have prompted all of the quantitative easing and auction facility efforts, making the current definition of "normal" for the Fed's operation difficult to pin down. It may not be wise for me to assume that the Fed will go back to carrying-out business as it did 3 years ago. BigK HeX (talk) 06:48, 13 May 2010 (UTC)

Also, I think that it is bad for the Fed to use U.S. Treasuries (and other government securities) as collateral. They are not backed by real wealth. Using them enables and encourages the Congress to spend money which it does not really have, a very bad habit. And they are debt rather than equity which makes control of inflation more difficult as I explained at User:JRSpriggs/Optimal monetary policy. JRSpriggs (talk) 05:53, 14 May 2010 (UTC)

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The Fed's change in conducting its monetary policy (ample reserves regime) should be reflected in article

The Federal Reserve has changed the way it conducts monetary policy considerably in recent years (formally from 2019) as explained e.g. here and here . I think this should be reflected in the article, implying that the article's present emphasis on controlling the money supply be replaced by an explanation of the way the Fed's administratively set interest rates (IOR and ON RRP) are key to determining the Federal Funds Rate and consequently influencing economy-wide activity. Økonom (talk) 06:52, 30 July 2023 (UTC)

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