How Finance Capital Cripples Industrial Capital: The Role of Fractional Reserve 
Banking



 

[Published in Briefing Notes in Economics, Vol. 4, Issue No. 26 (January 1997).]

Huge amounts of debt have plagued the economies of the United States and many 
less-developed countries during the last two decades. Despite the heavy toll 
that the debt burden is taking on these economies, mainstream economic theories 
have been pitifully inept in explaining the causes or developments that led to 
the proliferation of the debts thus accumulated. According to these theories, 
whether Keynesian or monetarist, the supply of credit is determined by two 
factors: (a) the savings by households and businesses, and (b) the Federal 
Reserve policies that determine reserve requirements and the money supply-the 
so-called fractional reserve banking (FRB), which will be discussed later in 
this essay. 

But the huge sums of credit that financial intermediaries extended to a variety 
of borrowers during the last two decades went far beyond the boundaries set by 
the amount of savings or Federal Reserve money supply regulations. For example, 
in the United States alone the amount of domestic lending during the 1982-90 
period exceeded the amount of household and corporate savings by 23% (Citicorp 
Economics Database, as cited in Pollin, 1992:22). 


Full: http://www.cbpa.drake.edu/hossein-zadeh/papers/HowFinanceCapital.htm 




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