PART 2: WHAT'S WRONG WITH THE TEXTBOOK MULTIPLIER
MODEL?
We've seen the two main ideas that the general
public have about the way banks work. Both
of them are wrong. That's not too surprising,
after all, unlike the Positive Money team
most people don't spend their time obsessing
about how banks work. And banking is complex,
which means that most people give up trying
to understand it.
But what about economics or finance students?
Most of these students and graduates have
a slightly better understanding of banking.
They get taught about something called the
'money multiplier'.
The money multiplier story says that banks
actually create much of the money in the economy.
Here's how the story goes:
A man walks into a bank and deposits his salary
of £1000 in cash.
Now the bank knows that, on average, the customer
won't need the whole of his £1000 returned
all at once. He's probably going to spend
a little bit of his salary each day over the
course of the month. So the bank assumes that
much of the money deposited is 'idle'
or spare and won't be needed on any particular
day.
It keeps back a small 'reserve' of say
10% of the money deposited with it (in this
case £100), and lends out the other £900
to somebody who needs a loan.
So the borrower takes this £900 and spends
it at a local car dealer.
The car dealer doesn't want to keep that
much cash in its office, so it takes the money
back to another bank.
Now the bank again realises that it can use
the bulk of the money to make another loan.
It keeps back 10% - £90 -- and lend out
the other £810 to make another loan.
Whoever borrows the £810 spends it, and it
comes back to one of the banks again. Whichever
bank receives it then keeps back 10% i.e.
£81, and makes a new loan of £729.
This process of relending continues, with
the same money being lent over and over again,
but with 10% of the money being put in the
reserve every time.
Note that every one of the customers who paid
money into the bank still thinks that their
money is there, in the bank. The numbers on
their bank statement confirm that the money
is still there.
Even though there is still only £1000 in
cash flowing around, the sum total of everyone's
bank account balances has been increasing,
and so has the total amount of debt.
Supposedly this process continues, until after
around 200 cycles, almost all of the original
money is now in reserves, and only a fraction
of a penny is being relent. By now, the sum
total of all bank accounts adds up to about
£10,000.
So the multiplier model that is still taught
in many universities implies that this repeated
process of a bank taking money from a customer,
putting a little bit into a reserve, and then
lending out the rest can create money out
of nothing, because the same money is double-counted
every time is it relent.
The model says that if the reserve ratio -- that's
the percentage of customers' money that
the banks have to keep in a reserve -- is
10%, then the total amount of money will grow
to roughly 10 times the amount of cash in
the economy.
You can imagine this model as a pyramid. The
cash is the base of the pyramid ,and then,
depending on the reserve ratio, the banks
multiply up the total amount of money by relending
it over and over again.
The fact is that what we've just shown you
is completely wrong. It's an inaccurate
and outdated way of describing how the banking
system works. In fact, banks in the UK haven't
worked like this for years.
But despite that, this model is still used
most of the time whenever people talk about
how money is created, whether in universities
or on videos on the internet. Before we spent
5 months researching exactly how the system
worked, we used to think it worked like this
too.
The fact that this pyramid model is still
used is a problem for three reasons:
Firstly, this model implies that banks have
to wait until someone puts money into a bank
before they can start making loans. This implies
that banks just react passively to what customers
do, and that they wait for people with savings
to come along before they start lending. This
is not how it really works, as we'll see
later.
Secondly, it implies that the central bank
has ultimate control over the total amount
of money in the economy. They can control
the amount of money by changing either the
reserve ratio -- that's the percentage
of customers' money that banks have to keep
in reserve - or the amount of 'base money'
-- cash -- at the bottom of the pyramid.
For example, if the Bank of England sets a
legal reserve ratio ---- and this reserve
ratio is 10%, then the total money supply
can grow to 10 times the amount of cash in
the economy. If the Bank of England then increases
the reserve ratio to 20%, then the money supply
can only grow to 5 times the amount of cash
in the economy. If the reserve ratio was dropped
to 5%, then the money supply would grow to
20 times the amount of cash in the economy.
Alternatively, the Bank of England could change
how much cash there was in the economy in
the first place. If it printed another £1000
and put that into the economy, and the reserve
ratio is still 10%, then the theory says that
the money supply will increase by a total
of £10,000, after the banks have gone through
the process of repeatedly re-lending that
money. This process is described as altering
the amount of 'base money' in the economy.
But the most significant implication of this
model is that the Bank of England, or the
Federal Reserve or European Central Bank,
has complete control over how much money there
really is in the economy. If they change the
size of the base -- by pumping more 'base
money' into the system -- then the total
amount of money should increase. If they change
the reserve ratio, then the steepness of the
sides of the pyramid will change. But eventually,
the reserve ratio stops the money supply growing
any further. At some point we reach the top
of the pyramid and the money supply stops
growing. So there's absolutely no possibility
that the money supply can get out of control.
There's just one small problem. Almost everything
about this description of banking is wrong.
In fact, Professor Charles Goodhart, of the
London School of Economics and an advisor
to the Bank of England for over 30 years,
described this model as "such an incomplete
way of describing the process of the determination
of the stock of money that it amounts to mis-instruction."
It might be forgivable for textbooks to be
out of date if the rules had changed in the
last couple of years -- after all, a lot
of rules and regulations changed during the
financial crisis. But Professor Goodhart actually
said this in 1984. 27 years, later university
students are still learning a description
of banking that is completely inaccurate.
This is a big problem. If these students then
go on to become economists and advisors to
the government, and they don't even really
understand how money works, then our economy
could end up in a real mess.
Oh wait...it already is!
Now, I have to point out that these videos
do apply to the UK, and we haven't had time
to confirm exactly how things work in the
USA and Europe. But for those of you in the
US, a paper published in 1992 refers to a
textbook still used in universities today
-- and states that "the multiplier model...is
at best a misleading and incomplete model,
and at worst a completely mis-specified model'.
Here's the bottom line when it comes to
the 'money multiplier':
1. There's no reserve ratio in the UK anymore,
and there hasn't been for a long time.
2. The Bank of England doesn't have any
real control over the amount of cash, or even
electronic 'base money' (which we'll
talk about later).
3. And the Bank of England certainly doesn't
have control over how much money there is
in the economy in total.
It's not just economics graduates who have
the wrong information. Even people working
in the Treasury still believe it works according
to the textbook. We've had letters from
the Treasury saying things like this:
In relation to the point about the control
of money, it is the Bank of England alone
which has control over the monetary base.
This consists of currency (banknotes and coins)
and reserves held by commercial banks at the
Bank of England. Commercial banks are responsible
for extending credit to individuals and businesses
and have no authority to create or print money,
digital or otherwise.
Allowing people with an incomplete understanding
of how money works to manage our economy is
very dangerous. It's like allowing engineering
students who don't understand gravity to
build skyscrapers.