Money can not create money. ... The creation of money in our country is reserved to the banks ...
Are we talking about from an individual's point of view, or from society's point of view? It's true in either case that accumulated capital can generate wealth, but the mechanics are different. Since we were discussing the distributive effects, I was coming from an individual's point of view. In that case, even if we're talking about physical dollar bills instead of accumulated capital in the abstract, money can make money. I can trade you a $1 bill today for two $1 bills a year from now. As far as my wallet is concerned, the dollar bill done replicated.From society's point of view, dollar bills don't replicate; but wealth (in the form of accumulated capital) can generate wealth. If someone offers you $20 to hammer a bunch of nails (because that's how much value would be added by doing so) but you don't have a hammer, I can buy you a hammer for $10 and then we can split the $10 profit. My $10 investment just increased my own capital by $5, and it increased society's capital by $10 (even more if the hammer still has value after the job is done).
As I said before, a person can use money to obtain more money.You can say that from this point of view or that point of view that it looks like it is being "created", but that is just a word choice to describe the fact that it is being obtained.In our current monetary system there are only two events that create dollars:1) Printing by the Federal Reserve... The 12 private Federal Reserve banks print them out of thin air and then uses them to buy assets, usually US Treasury bonds. They can also eliminate dollars from existence by selling their assets, such as US Treasury bonds.2) Fractional Reserve Lending.... A bank holds your deposit in the bank as the reserve for the loans it makes from it. The reserve ratio limit determines just how much money that can be created from this process. For example, if the reserve ratio limit is 10%, and you deposit $10,000 in a bank, that bank can lend out $100,000. Prior to electronic systems, it took quite a while for your $10,000 to produce $100,000 in the banking system, as the bank could only loan out $9,000 first, and then that $9,000 would eventually get deposited into the banking system (the same bank or a different bank) allowing another $8,100 loan to be created from it, and then $7,290 is created from it, and then $6,561 is created from it, etc, etc.... until the $10,000 produced $100,000 (or $90,000... I forget which). But with electronic banking today, that round about process isn't even necessary anymore. The bank can just take that $10,000 deposit and immediately generate a $100,000 loan from it. And like the Federal Reserve can eliminate dollars by selling their assets, Fractional Reserve Lending eliminates dollars when loans are paid back. Their reserve limit allows them to create the dollars into existence again with a new loan... assuming a qualified applicant wants the loan.5 to 7% of the dollars are created from Federal Reserve Printing. 93 to 95% of the dollars are created from Fractional Reserve Lending. ZERO of the dollars are created by someone investing their own money to "create" more money. They are just obtaining money created from Federal Reserve Printing or Fractional Reserve Lending. The currency aspect is a facinating aspect of it all, given how wealth, whether nominal or real, changes based on the creation of more houses, ashtrays, mudpies, etc... as well as the destruction of houses, ashtrays, mudpies, etc... Just in a barter system without currency these wealth changes, or appearence of wealth changes, hold true. But add a currency that is also experiencing creation and elimination and the distribution of wealth can occur even when no assets are being created or destroyed at all.To understand what is going on now, the baby boom generation produced a massive amount of currency into existence through the fractional reserve lending money creation process. They borrowed money to buy houses, cars, funiture, vacations, college eductations for their kids. When a huge percentage of the population is in their "debt generation" period of their life, the economy is flooded with dollars and booms. This is why the 80's and 90's were so good.But when that same generation then begins to approach retirement, they are motivate to eliminate their debts. When they do this, they are eliminating Fractional Reserve Lending created money from existence. This is no different than the rock falling on the house and making the other 9 houses cost more. When dollars are eliminated, they are worth more, which means prices of goods become cheaper. While we'd love this from a loaf of bread, gallon of gas, gallon of milk aspect, this effect is devestating to those who own assets such as stocks and real estate as those are investments that are supposed to obtain more money for those people (or create money if you'd like to use that word). So the rich, those who own assets such as stocks and real estate, HATE IT when money is elimintated from existence, causing their investments to go down in value.So if the baby boomers are having such an impact on the existence of Fractional Reserve Lended dollars, how can we stop prices from falling? Easy... offset it with dollars created by the Federal Reserve.What we are experiencing today is a massive force of deflation (the elimination of Fractional Reserve Lended dollars) with an equally massive force of inflation (the creation of Federal Reserve Notes). As long as the Federal Reserve can print at the same rate that the baby boomers are eliminating dollars, things appear like everything is okay.But here's the problem.... the dollar isn't just a US currency. It's the world reserve currency. Nearly every country in the world uses it to conduct international trade. So while we don't experience drastically rising prices from the Federal Reserve printing because we have the baby boom generation offsetting it with their negative effect on the Fractional Reserve lending system... other countries don't have a baby generation problem in their banking system. So they DO experience inflation as a result of our Federal Reserve printing. A good way to describe this is that we export our inflation, which is something that only the keeper of the world's reserve currency can do. To make a long story short, we are the cause of currency wars. Other countries are having to manipulate their currencies to offset the negative effects they experience from what we are doing. One of the results of this is that dollars are coming back into the US. This is causing US assets such as stocks and real esetate to rise, despite average household income still falling.And THAT is why the rich are getting richer and the poor are getting poorer. It's an issue with our currency... how it is created, how it is eliminated, and how it is currently flowing internationally.