Hang
Onto Your Wallets: Negative Interest, the War on Cash, and the $10
Trillion Bail-in
By
Ellen Brown
November 23, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" -
In uncertain times,
“cash is king,” but central bankers are systematically moving to
eliminate that option. Is it really about stimulating the economy?
Or is there some deeper, darker threat afoot?
Remember those old ads showing a senior couple
lounging on a warm beach, captioned “Let your money work for you”?
Or
the scene in Mary Poppins where young Michael is being
advised to put his tuppence in the bank, so that it can compound
into “all manner of private enterprise,” including “bonds, chattels,
dividends, shares, shipyards, amalgamations . . . .”?
That may still work if you’re a Wall Street
banker, but if you’re an ordinary saver with your money in the bank,
you may soon be paying the bank to hold your funds rather than the
reverse.
Four European central banks – the European Central
Bank, the Swiss National Bank, Sweden’s Riksbank, and Denmark’s
Nationalbank –
have now imposed negative interest rates on the reserves they
hold for commercial banks; and discussion has turned to whether it’s
time to pass those costs on to consumers. The Bank of Japan and the
Federal Reserve are still at ZIRP (Zero Interest Rate Policy), but
several Fed officials have also begun calling for NIRP (negative
rates).
The stated justification for this move is to
stimulate “demand” by forcing consumers to withdraw their money and
go shopping with it. When an economy is struggling,
it is standard practice for a central bank to cut interest
rates, making saving less attractive. This is supposed to boost
spending and kick-start an economic recovery.
That is the theory, but central banks have already
pushed the prime rate to zero, and still their economies are
languishing. To the uninitiated observer, that means the theory is
wrong and needs to be scrapped. But not to our intrepid central
bankers, who are now experimenting with pushing rates below
zero.
Locking the
Door to Bank Runs: The Cashless Society
The problem with imposing negative interest on
savers, as
explained in the UK Telegraph, is that “there’s a limit, what
economists called the ‘zero lower bound’. Cut rates too deeply, and
savers would end up facing negative returns. In that case, this
could encourage people to take their savings out of the bank and
hoard them in cash. This could slow, rather than boost, the
economy.”
Again, to the ordinary observer, this would seem
to signal that negative interest rates won’t work and the approach
needs to be abandoned. But not to our undaunted central bankers, who
have chosen instead to plug this hole in their leaky theory by
moving to
eliminate cash as an option. If your only choice is to keep
your money in a digital account in a bank and spend it with a bank
card or credit card or checks, negative interest can be imposed with
impunity. This is already happening in Sweden, and other countries
are close behind.
As reported on Wolfstreet.com:
The War on Cash is advancing on all fronts.
One region that has hogged the headlines with its war against
physical currency is Scandinavia. Sweden became the first
country to enlist its own citizens as largely willing guinea
pigs in a dystopian economic experiment: negative interest rates
in a cashless society. As Credit Suisse reports,
no matter where you go or what you want to purchase, you will
find a small ubiquitous sign saying “Vi hanterar ej kontanter”
(“We don’t accept cash”) . . . .
The Lesson of
Gesell’s Decaying Currency
Whether negative interests will actually stimulate
an economic recovery, however, remains in doubt.
Proponents of the theory cite Silvio Gesell and the Wörgl
experiment of the 1930s. As explained by Charles Eisenstein in
Sacred Economics:
The pioneering theoretician of
negative-interest money was the German-Argentinean businessman
Silvio Gesell, who called it “free-money” (Freigeld) . . . . The
system he proposed in his 1906 masterwork, The Natural Economic
Order, was to use paper currency to which a stamp costing a
small fraction of the note’s value had to be affixed
periodically. This effectively attached a maintenance cost to
monetary wealth.
. . . [In 1932], the depressed town of Wörgl,
Austria, issued its own stamp scrip inspired by Gesell . . . .
The Wörgl currency was by all accounts a huge success. Roads
were paved, bridges built, and back taxes were paid. The
unemployment rate plummeted and the economy thrived, attracting
the attention of nearby towns. Mayors and officials from all
over the world began to visit Wörgl until, as in Germany, the
central government abolished the Wörgl currency and the town
slipped back into depression.
. . . [T]he Wörgl currency bore a demurrage
rate [a maintenance charge for carrying money] of 1 percent per
month. Contemporary accounts attributed to this the very rapid
velocity of the currencies’ circulation. Instead of generating
interest and growing, accumulation of wealth became a burden,
much like possessions are a burden to the nomadic
hunter-gatherer. As theorized by Gesell, money afflicted with
loss-inducing properties ceased to be preferred over any other
commodity as a store of value.
There is a critical difference, however, between
the Wörgl currency and the modern-day central bankers’ negative
interest scheme. The Wörgl government first issued its new
“free money,” getting it into the local economy and increasing
purchasing power, before taxing a portion of it back. And the
proceeds of the stamp tax went to the city, to be used for the
benefit of the taxpayers. As Eisenstein observes:
It is impossible to prove . . . that the
rejuvenating effects of these currencies came from demurrage and
not from the increase in the money supply . . . .
Today’s central bankers are proposing to tax
existing money, diminishing spending power without
first building it up. And the interest will go to private bankers,
not to the local government.
Consumers today already have very little
discretionary money. Imposing negative interest without first adding
new money into the economy means they will have even less
money to spend. This would be more likely to prompt them to save
their scarce funds than to go on a shopping spree.
People are not keeping their money in the bank
today for the interest (which is already nearly non-existent). It is
for the convenience of writing checks, issuing bank cards, and
storing their money in a “safe” place. They would no doubt be
willing to pay a modest negative interest for that convenience; but
if the fee got too high, they might pull their money out and save it
elsewhere. The fee itself, however, would not drive them to buy
things they did not otherwise need.
Is There a
Bigger Threat than a Sluggish Economy?
The scheme to impose negative interest and
eliminate cash seems so unlikely to stimulate the economy that one
wonders if that is the real motive. Stopping tax evaders and
terrorists (real or presumed) are other proposed justifications for
going cashless. Economist
Martin
Armstrong goes further and suggests that the goal is to gain
totalitarian control over our money. In a cashless society, our
savings can be taxed away by the banks; the threat of bank runs by
worried savers can be eliminated; and the too-big-to-fail banks can
be assured that ample deposits will be there when they need to
confiscate them through bail-ins to stay afloat.
And that may be the real threat on the horizon: a
major derivatives default that hits the largest banks, those that do
the vast majority of derivatives trading. On November 10, 2015, the
Wall Street Journal reported the results of a study requested by
Senator Elizabeth Warren and Rep. Elijah Cummings, involving the
cost to taxpayers of the rollback of the Dodd-Frank Act in the
“cromnibus” spending bill last December.
As Jessica Desvarieux put it on the Real News Network, “the rule
reversal allows banks to keep $10 trillion in swaps trades on their
books, which taxpayers could be on the hook for if the banks need
another bailout.”
The promise of Dodd-Frank, however, was that there
would be “no more taxpayer bailouts.” Instead, insolvent
systemically-risky banks were supposed to “bail in” (confiscate) the
money of their creditors, including their depositors (the largest
class of creditor of any bank). That could explain the push to go
cashless. By quietly eliminating the possibility of cash
withdrawals, the central bank can make sure the deposits are there
to be grabbed when disaster strikes.
If central bankers are seriously trying to
stimulate the economy with negative interest rates, they need to
repeat the Wörgl experiment in full. They need to first get some new
money into the economy, money that goes directly to the consumers
and local businessmen who will spend it. This could be achieved in a
number of ways: with a national dividend; or by using quantitative
easing for infrastructure or low-interest loans to states; or by
funding free tuition for higher education. Consumers will hit the
malls when they have some new discretionary income to spend.
_____________
Ellen Brown is an attorney, founder of the Public
Banking Institute, and author of twelve books including the
best-selling Web of Debt. Her
latest book, The Public
Bank Solution, explores successful public banking models
historically and globally. Her 300+ blog articles are at EllenBrown.com.
Listen to “It’s Our Money
with Ellen Brown” on PRN.FM.