If banks simply held all funds on deposit, did not lend out the funds etc... where would the interest rate come from. Sticking the money under the matress does not generate an interest payment.
I am not denying that and do not want to deviate into the fraudulent and inflationary effects of fractional reserve banking. But this basically means that depositors are in fact a kind of investor.
The banking system for the last hundreds of years is based on deposits being used to generate a higher return, out of which interest is apid to depositors.
Yes, but just because something is doesn't mean it ought to be. Fractional reserve banking is plain and simple fraud. And if, as you said, depositors are not investors, then that is because they assume their money is available at all times. However this is simply not true; if there is a run on a bank the bank is legally allowed to stop payments and seek protection from government and central banks.
Based on your logic banks would not exist unless the guarantee existed.
Fractional reserve banking failed over and over again after its first trials in England by goldsmiths issuing counterfeit (unbacked) warehouse receipts. It was only with the advent of modern central banking and the implicit (later explicit) guarantee through government, that bank failures were stopped.
Without the guarantee banks would still exist, but they would only use capital received through bonds and other direct investment, to loan out. Demand deposits would be exactly that, available on demand 100%.
If Anglo went belly-up, deposiitors in AIB and BOI would equally go looking for their funds.Within days we would have seen Anglo, AIB, BOI etc close. No Pass machines, no cheques etc. If I remeember rightly, that plonker Joe Duffy virtually precipated a run on the banks at one time due to his idiotic comments on national radio.
But this point only highlights the whole fallacy and fraud of the banking system. That when people actually decide they would rather hold cash in hand this is not possible.
Comparing the Northern Rock (a small UK building Society) to AIB, BOI etc makes no sense.
Northern Rock is indeed a small version (relatively speaking) of Anglo here. But this makes no difference when it comes to winding down an operation and selling off viable devisions.
If you think we are over the cliff now, what would it be like if all the main banks closed, there was no cash in the system, the Govt had to bail-out all depositors etc. Yes Banks would have gotten a sharp lesson in moral hazard and the population as a whole an even sharper lesson.
The government does not
have to bail out any company, and should under no circumstances do so. Look at the mess that this government has created! You are also wrongly assuming that banking would simply stop. Bankrupt/insolvent large businesses do not simply close their doors and stop operating. Look at Quinn, it was declared insolvent and an administrator was appointed to see whether it should be liquidated or could continue (and Quinn Insurance is about the same size as Anglo). The same would have been the case with winding down banks in an "orderly" fashion without tax money injected.
I am amused at how associate professors in economics (who know all the theory but never have to actually implement anything) are so certain that those who actually have to make decisions are so foolish.
Yes, a lot of economists are indeed very amusing in their statements. But the most amusing thing is that governments
actually believe that they can plan and steer the economy! It is their very interference and interventions that are causing these continuous bubble/bust cycles. If only they stopped interfering we wouldn't have half the problems we experience.
Whilst I accept that Bond holders should have to take some pain (maybe a lot of pain), so sugest that all the Banks be let go under, that depositors be left swinging and the whole banking system collapse, just seems totally mad.
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Yes bond holders should be affected and depositors would be affected. If you want to protect depositors in the future then make it illegal to fractional reserve on demand deposits; and if people still want to earn money on savings then people should use bonds or debentures. The banking system is such a feeble operation and propping it up with taxpayers money is just plain nonsense. That's not a good system to have, and despite the lenders of last resort it still regularly fails in spectacular fashion.
At the time of the Govt decision, I think they had little choice other than to do as they did. That at least offered breathing space. I expect that in reality we will see an orderly winding down of Anglo, but without the contaigon impact on BOI and AIB. For the State (taxpayer) to minimise the cost of the Anglo guarantee and maximise the proceeds from the assets taken over by NAMA, it requires time. Simply seeking revenge on the Banks for their stupidity and closing them down would have been chaotic (in my opinion).
No, there were plenty of choices, and the most beneficial one would have been an orderly wind down of bankrupt businesses. Yes the bailout offered breathing space, but all that has happened is (a) that the exposure to the taxpayer has increased exponentially, (b) the problem has only been kicked down the road and not dealt with, and (c) an explicit precedence has been sent to banks and their creditors that they will never be allowed to collapse.
Injecting €25b into Anglo is hardly an orderly wind down, especially if little to none of the injected capital will ever be seen again. An orderly wind down would have been taking control and immediately negotiating with bond holders, and not blindly throwing money into a black hole without even knowing what was in it.
Not letting bank investors and creditors feel the full force of the profit and loss system is only encouraging banks to continue making exactly the same mistakes of too high risk and and too high leverage in the future. Absolutely nothing will change now.