There is a steady move by the
States to the establishment of their own State bank following the North Dakota model.
I suspect that as more and more legislators wise up to the natural
benefits and also the natural checks and balances of the system, we will see
almost all States take the plunge. A few
may set up consortiums with other States to provide larger initial size.
In the end, the Fed abandoned it
potential role in supporting finance and indirectly municipal finance because
of the deep damage generated by the collapse of the interbank market. Thus its role is presently moot and it has
left a vacuum into which the States can step.
In the long term this is very
good news for the US economy because it will wrest control of the money
creation power away from the central government which has proven itself
incapable due to the monumental size of it all.
Control was long overdue to devolve downward. The same applies in Canada and elsewhere such as China and India but will be a long time
coming.
Feds To States: "Drop Dead." State Bank Movement Picks Up
Steam
By Ellen Brown (about the author)
opednews.com
"Ford to New York: Drop Dead," said a famous headline in
1975. President Ford had declared
flatly that he would veto any bill calling for "a federal bail-out of New York City ." What he proposed instead was legislation
that would make it easier for the city to go bankrupt.
Now the Federal Treasury and Federal Reserve seem to be saying this to
the states, which are slated to be the first ritual victims in the battle over
the budget ceiling. On May 2, Treasury
Secretary Timothy Geithner said that the Treasury would stop issuing special
securities that help state and local governments pay for their debt. This was to be the first in a series of
"extraordinary measures" taken by the Treasury to avoid default in
the event that Congress failed to raise the debt ceiling on May 16. On May 13, the Secretary said these
extraordinary measures had been set in motion.
The Federal Reserve, too, has declared that it cannot help the states
with their budget problems -- although
those problems were created by the profligate banks under the Fed's
purview. The Fed advanced $12.3
trillion in liquidity and short-term loans to bail out the financial sector
from the 2008 banking collapse, 64 times the $191 billion required to balance
the budgets of all 50 states. But Fed
Chairman Ben Bernanke declared in January that the Fed could not make the same
cheap credit lines available to state and local governments -- not because the
Fed couldn't find the money, but because it was not in the Fed's legislative
mandate.
The federal government can fix its own budget problems by raising its
debt ceiling, and the too-big-to-fail banks have the federal government and
Federal Reserve to fall back on. But
these options are not available to state governments. Like New
York City in 1975, many states are teetering on
bankruptcy.
A Beacon in the Storm
Many states are in trouble, but not all. North
Dakota has consistently boasted large surpluses,
aided by a state-owned bank that is showing landmark profits. On April 20, the Bank of North Dakota (BND) reported profits for 2010 of $62 million, setting a record
for the seventh straight year. The
BND's profits belong to the citizens and are produced without taxation.
Inspired by North Dakota 's
example, twelve states have now introduced bills to form state-owned banks or
to study their feasibility. Eight of
these bills have been introduced just since January, including in Oregon , Washington State , Massachusetts , Arizona , Maryland , New Mexico , Maine and California . Illinois, Virginia, Hawaii
and Louisiana
introduced similar bills in 2010. For
links, dates and text, see here.
The Center for State Innovation, based in Madison ,
Wisconsin , was commissioned to do detailed
analyses for Washington and Oregon . Their conclusion was that a
state-owned bank on the model of the Bank of North Dakota would have a substantial
positive impact on employment, new lending, and government revenue in those
states.
The BND partners with local banks in providing much-needed credit for
local businesses and homeowners. It
also helps with local government funding needs. When North Dakota went over-budget a few
years ago, according to the bank's president Eric Hardmeyer, the BND acted as a
rainy day fund for the state; and when a North Dakota town suffered a massive
flood, the BND provided emergency credit lines to the city. Having a cheap and readily available credit
line with the state's own bank reduces the need for massive rainy-day funds
that are a waste of capital and are largely invested in out-of-state banks at
very modest interest.
What States Can Do with Their Own Banks
Banks create "bank credit" from capital and deposits, as
explained here. The Bank of North Dakota has $2.7
billion in deposits, or $4000 per capita.
The majority of these deposits are drawn from the state's own
revenues. The bank has nearly the same
sum ($2.6 billion) in outstanding loans.
You can get a rough idea of what a state bank could do for your state,
then, by multiplying the population by $4,000.
California, for example, has 37 million people. If it had a state-owned bank that performed
like the BND, it might amass $148 billion in deposits. This $148 billion could then generate $142
billion in credit for the state, assuming the bank could come up with $12
billion in capital to satisfy the 8% capital requirement imposed on banks.
Note that this capital would not be an expenditure. It would just be an investment; and like any
capital investment, it would actually make money for the state. The Bank of North Dakota has had a return on equity in
recent years of 25-26%, and a major portion of this has been returned to the
state treasury. All states have massive
rainy day funds of various sorts. Some
of this money could simply be shifted into equity in the state's own bank.
There are many options for using the state's credit power, but here is
one easy alternative that illustrates the cost-effectiveness of the
approach. Assume California 's state-owned bank invested $142
billion in municipal bonds at 5% interest.
This would give the state $7 billion annually in interest income. California
has outstanding general obligation bonds and revenue bonds of $158 billion, and
$70 billion goes for interest. If California had been
funding its debt through its own bank for the last decade or two, it would have
saved $70 billion on its bonded debt and would be that much richer today.
In a futile attempt to "balance the budget" in a shrinking
economy, we have been pressured into a self-destructive economic model in which
the only alternatives are said to be to slash services, raise taxes, and sell
off public assets. These are not our
only alternatives. What destroyed our
local economies was not excess government spending but was a credit crisis on
Wall Street. We can restore the
prosperity we lost by restoring credit in the state; and we can do that by
taking our deposits out of Wall Street banks and putting them in our own
state-owned bank, to be leveraged into credit for local purposes.
Ellen Brown is an attorney and author of 11 books, including "Web
of Debt: The Shocking Truth About Our Money System," http://webofdebt.com.
She is president of the Public Banking Institute, http://PublicBankingInstitute.org.
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