It’s
hardly news that “conservatives” have a problem with Pope Francis. As a rule, they tend to think that he has
gone “too far.” It’s also no secret that
“liberals” have a problem with Francis.
As a rule, they think he hasn’t gone far enough. What neither side has considered is the
possibility that Francis hasn’t actually gone anywhere at all, at least, not in
any substantive way.
Wednesday, September 30, 2015
Tuesday, September 29, 2015
Liberals v. Conservatives v. Pope Francis, I: What He Said
Although the Center for Economic and Social Justice is an
interfaith organization, and nobody’s income is tied to its existence (it’s
all-volunteer), and the Just Third Way is not a faith-based program (although
fully consistent with the natural law-basis of the social teachings of the
Catholic Church), there is a strong and vested interest in the matters Pope
Francis addresses that are not purely religious in nature.
Monday, September 28, 2015
The Power of Calumny
Now that Pope Francis is winging his way back to Rome, and
has probably “deplaned” by now, and let us remark that “deplane” is one of the
more patently offensive neologisms of the twentieth century; whatever happened
to “disembark” . . . “de-ship”? . . . “de-car”? . . . “de-bus”? . . .
“de-train”? . . . but we digress . . . anyway, it’s time to take a brief moment
and talk about . . . calumny.
Friday, September 25, 2015
News from the Network, Vol. 8, No. 39
The news items for this week are mostly
of a report on CESJ’s participation in the World Meeting of Families in
Philadelphia. The CESJ team, consisting
of CESJ president Norman G. Kurland, Marie T. Kurland, and Michael D. Greaney,
Director of Research was there from Monday through Thursday. The team had to miss Friday, September 25,
due to a conflict with previously scheduled meetings.
Thursday, September 24, 2015
World Meeting of Families, II: Second Day Report
Yesterday was a bit more lively than the first day. Judging from the various scheduled book
signings and interviews at the various exhibitors’ booths, the first day,
Tuesday, was more of a get-your-bearings day than anything else. Yesterday, Wednesday, business picked up
quite a bit, even over on the far side where we are.
Wednesday, September 23, 2015
World Meeting of Families, I: First Day Report
Yesterday was our first day at the World Meeting of Families
here in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. We
had a brief trip up on Monday and set up portions of the combined
CESJ/CCC/EEI/CAFFAF booth on Monday afternoon.
We were pleased to see that we are right next to “Priests for Life,” a
group with name recognition that we thought might bring a few people over to
where we are to see what “Economic Justice for the Family” might be.
Tuesday, September 22, 2015
Banks and the Stock Market, IX: Bad Credit v. Good Credit
It took us a while, but we’re now coming to the whole point
of this series: how misuse of the banking system by both the private sector and
the public sector has undermined the basis of a sound market economy and
inhibited (in some cases prevented) economic growth.
Monday, September 21, 2015
Banks and the Stock Market, VIII: Eliminating Fractional Reserve Banking
As we saw last week, the real problem with fractional reserve
banking is not that it allows commercial banks to create money. That’s what commercial banks were invented to
do. The problem is that fractional
reserve banking forces a bank to make a pre-determined amount of loans,
regardless of the actual needs of the market and the economy as a whole. After the repeal of Glass-Steagall, banks
could use “excess reserves” to speculate in the stock market — which, as we’ve
been hinting all along in this series, is not a proper function of a bank.
Friday, September 18, 2015
News from the Network, Vol. 8, No. 38
Oh, look! The world is ending (again). As of this writing, the Dow is down over
250. Not to worry, though. As we’ve pointed out on this blog many, many
times, the stock market is meaningless and has little if anything to do with
the genuine, productive sector of the economy.
So why keep mentioning it?
Because in contrast (or even without any comparison) binary economics and
the Just Third Way represent the only sane alternative.
Thursday, September 17, 2015
Banks and the Stock Market, VII: The Flaws of Fractional Reserve Banking
As we hinted yesterday, the real problem with fractional
reserve banking is not that it permits commercial or mercantile banks to create
money. That is what such banks — a
combination of banks of issue and banks of discount — were invented to do. No, the problem is more subtle than that.
Wednesday, September 16, 2015
Banks and the Stock Market, VI: How Fractional Reserve Banking REALLY Works
Yesterday we dismissed the Keynesian money multiplier as
hooey. It simply does not — and cannot —
work as described in virtually every textbook on the face of the earth. There are two very good reasons for
this. We covered these yesterday in some
detail, but we can state them very simply — as long as you keep yesterday’s explanation
in mind:
Tuesday, September 15, 2015
Banks and the Stock Market, V: Shocking Facts About Fractional Reserve Banking
Yesterday we promised to take a look at what we called “the
baffling puzzle of fractional reserve banking.”
To be frank, however, it’s not all that great a puzzle. The problem is that banking itself is so
loaded with misconceptions that the mysterious functioning of the different
types of banks that we discussed yesterday can assume conspiratorial
incomprehensibility.
Monday, September 14, 2015
Banks and the Stock Market, IV: The Types of Banks
As we saw last week, there are many different kinds of
money. There is currency — what most
people think of as money — and then there are the things that currency stands
for: 1) existing wealth, and 2) future wealth.
As we also saw last week, there can be intermediate steps between
currency and what currency ultimately stands for.
Friday, September 11, 2015
News from the Network, Vol. 8, No. 37
As of this writing, the stock market
is waiting with bated breath for the latest decision of the Federal Reserve
over interest rates. It doesn’t matter a
hill of beans, though. No significant
amount of credit is being channeled to the primary productive market, and none
at all to making ordinary people productive through capital ownership. Instead, it’s all going to bolster stock
prices which bear less and less resemblance to reality every day.
Thursday, September 10, 2015
Banks and the Stock Market, V: The Forms of Money
Ask most people to show you what money is, and they will
pull out a dollar bill, a pound note, a crown, franc, or some other piece of
currency — assuming they have some, and they are reasonably certain you’re not
going to grab it and run off down the street or try to guilt them into giving
it to you just because you’re rich enough to be carrying around such enormous
amounts of cash.
Wednesday, September 9, 2015
Banks and the Stock Market, IV: Money Manipulation and the Economics of Reality
As we saw in yesterday’s blog posting, per Say’s Law of Markets
(and basic common sense), we don’t really purchase what others produce with money, but with what we produce by means
of our labor or capital. This is, in
fact, one of the reasons why the currency — the measurement of “money” — must
be uniform and standard with a fixed value.
Tuesday, September 8, 2015
Banks and the Stock Market, III: Banking Principle Economics
Banking Principle economics is a little more straightforward
than Currency Principle economics. This may
be because there is only one surviving school of Banking Principle economics:
binary economics, what its principal developer, lawyer-economist Louis O.
Kelso, called “the economics of reality.”
Monday, September 7, 2015
Banks and the Stock Market, II: Currency Principle v. Banking Principle
Here’s a little game for you to play the next time you’re in
a situation in which someone is ranting about “the banksters.” First ask him or her, “Say, what is a bankster, anyway?” If the ranter manages to answer that one to
your satisfaction (instead of dodging the question with some variation of “If
you don’t know, I’m certainly not going to tell you”), ask, “And just what the
heck is a bank?” If the first question
didn’t stump the ranter, the second definitely will.
Friday, September 4, 2015
News from the Network, Vol. 8, No. 36
A number of interesting developments
have happened this week. Of course,
interesting things happen every week, but don’t make for very interesting
reading. The results of networking and
politicking are newsworthy, but not the networking and politicking itself. . .
.
Thursday, September 3, 2015
Banks and the Stock Market, I: The Stock Market
If you’ve been reading this blog over the past couple of
weeks, you might start wondering if the financial system has any relevance to
the real world at all — and we couldn’t blame you. After all, as Adam Smith pointed out in The Wealth of Nations over two hundred
years ago, the basic postulate of economics is “Consumption is the sole end and
purpose of all production.” Wall Street
seems geared toward making money as an end in itself, not as a tool to
facilitate production or consumption.
Wednesday, September 2, 2015
Hedging Your Bets
When we were taking principles of investment finance in
college (centuries ago), we learned various ways of valuing shares on the stock
market. Mostly this was because (as we
were taught) the easiest way to buy a company is to purchase its shares on the
secondary market. (It’s not. The 100% S-Corp ESOP is, under current law,
the best way, but it doesn’t apply to anyone who doesn’t work in that
particular company. . . .)
Tuesday, September 1, 2015
How Not to Cause a Great Depression
We probably should have said something about this yesterday,
but we were looking at what we think is the single most important factor that
caused the Great Depression of 1930-1940: a sudden decline in the value of
business loan collateral, and the lack of a replacement collateral when
traditional collateral went down the tubes.
Today we’re looking at one of the “causes behind the causes”: lack of
internal control in the financial services industry.
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