Monday, December 24, 2012

Scottish Public Banking Explored





 Simply put, the power of banking is explicitly the power to create money and to place it to account.

For that reason alone it needs to be progressively localized. I go so far as asserting that it needs to be available even at the local model community level as a core operating tool. It certainly need to be available wherever capital is already concentrated as in the State house, the big city council and were as in Scotland, reckless banking has wiped out the capital base available to local lending.

In fact the centralizing of banking authority is a retrogressive activity that needs to be avoided however logical it appears.

Iceland did it right by quickly reinstating middle class credit and nationalizing the local banking system.

In Scotland, they are relearning the power of local banking after watching it all swept away.

Ensuring Scottish Sovereignty: Exploring the Public Bank Option

Posted: 12/07/2012 2:42 pm

Ellen Brown


The Royal Bank of Scotland (RBS) and the Bank of Scotland have been pillars of Scotland's economy and culture for over three centuries. So when the RBS was nationalized by the London-based UK government following the 2008 banking crisis, and the Bank of Scotland was acquired by the London-based Lloyds Bank, it came as a shock to the Scots. They no longer owned their oldest and most venerable banks.

Another surprise turn of events was the triumph of the Scottish National Party (SNP) in the 2011 Scottish parliamentary election. Scotland is still part of the United Kingdom, but it has had its own parliament since 1999, similar to U.S. states. The SNP has rallied around the call for independence from the UK since its founding in 1934, but it was a minority party until the 2011 victory, which gave it an overall majority in the Scottish Parliament.

Scottish independence is now on the table. A bill has been introduced to the Scottish Parliament with the intention of holding a referendum on the issue in 2014.

Arguments in favor of independence include that it will allow the Scottish people to make decisions for Scotland themselves, on such contentious issues as having nuclear weapons in their seas and being part of NATO. They can also directly access the profits from the North Sea oil off Scotland's coast.

Arguments against independence include that Scotland's levels of public spending (which are higher than in the rest of the UK) would be difficult to sustain without raising taxes. North Sea oil revenues will eventually decline.

One way budgetary problems might be relieved would be for Scotland to have its own publicly-owned bank, one that served the interests of the Scottish people.  True economic sovereignty means having control over the national currency, credit and debt.

The Public Bank Option

It was in that context that I was asked to give a presentation on public banking at RSA Scotland (the Royal Society of Arts) in Edinburgh on Nov. 22.  Among other attendees were a special adviser and a civil servant from the Scottish government.  The presentation was followed by one by public sector consultant Ralph Leishman, director of 4-consulting, who made the public bank option concrete with specific proposals fitting the Scottish context.  He suggested that the Scottish Investment Bank (SIB) be licensed as a depository bank, on the model of the state-owned Bank of North Dakota. Lively debate followed.

The SIB is a division of Scottish Enterprise (SE), a government economic development body. SE encourages economic development, enterprise, innovation and investment in business, which is achieved by the SIB through the Scottish Loan Fund. As noted in a September 2011 government report titled "Government Economic Strategy":

"[S]ecuring affordable finance remains a considerable challenge... Evidence shows that while many large companies have significant cash holdings or can access capital markets directly, for most Small and Medium-sized companies bank lending remains the key source of finance. Unblocking this is key to helping the recovery gain traction."

The limitation of a public loan fund is that the money can be lent only to one borrower at a time.  Invested as capital in a bank, on the other hand, public funds can be leveraged into nearly ten times that sum in loans. Liquidity to cover the loans is provided by deposits, which remain in the bank available to the depositors. Any shortage in liquidity can be covered by borrowing at low interest from other banks or the money market.  As observed by Kurt von Mettenheim, et al., in a 2008 report titled "Government Banking: New Perspectives on Sustainable Development and Social Inclusion from Europe and South America" (at page 196): "[I]n terms of public policy, government banks can do more for less: Almost ten times more if one compares cash used as capital reserves by banks to other policies that require budgetary outflows."

Leishman stated that the SIB now has investment funds of 23.2 million pounds from the Scottish government. Rounding this to 25 million pounds, a public depository bank could have sufficient capital to back 250 million pounds in loans.  For deposits to cover the loans, the Scottish Government has 125 million pounds on deposit with private banks, currently earning little or no interest. Adding just 14 percent of the General Fund cash and cash equivalent reserves held by Scotland's local governments would provide another 125 million pounds, reaching the needed 250 million pounds, with six times that sum in local government revenues to spare.

The Model of the Bank of North Dakota

My assignment was to show what the government could do with its own bank, following the model of the Bank of North Dakota (BND).  on the Saturday following the RSA event, The Scotsman published an article by Alf Young that summarized the issues and possibilities so well that I'm taking the liberty of abstracting from it here.

North Dakota is currently the only U.S. state to own its own depository bank. The BND was founded in 1919 by Norwegian and other immigrants, determined, through their Non-Partisan League, to stop rapacious Wall Street money men foreclosing on their farms.

All state revenues must be deposited with the BND by law. The bank pays no bonuses, fees or commissions; does no advertising; and maintains no branches beyond the main office in Bismarck. The bank offers cheap credit lines to state and local government agencies. There are low-interest loans for designated project finance. The BND underwrites municipal bonds, funds disaster relief and supports student loans. It partners with local commercial banks to increase lending across the state and pays competitive interest rates on state deposits. For the past ten years, it has been paying a dividend to the state, with a quite small population of about 680,000, of some $30 million (18.7 million pounds) a year.

Young writes:

"Intriguingly, North Dakota has not suffered the way much of the rest of the U.S. -- indeed much of the western industrialized world -- has, from the banking crash and credit crunch of 2008; the subsequent economic slump; and the sovereign debt crisis that has afflicted so many. With an economy based on farming and oil, it has one of the lowest unemployment rates in the U.S., a rising population and a state budget surplus that is expected to hit $1.6 billion by next July. By then North Dakota's legacy fund is forecast to have swollen to around $1.2 billion.

With that kind of resilience, it's little wonder that twenty American states, some of them close to bankruptcy, are at various stages of legislating to form their own state-owned banks on the North Dakota model. There's a long-standing tradition of such institutions elsewhere too. Australia had a publicly-owned bank offering credit for infrastructure as early as 1912. New Zealand had one operating in the housing field in the 1930s. Up until 1974, the federal government in Canada borrowed from the Bank of Canada, effectively interest-free.

... From our western perspective, we tend to forget that, globally, around 40 per cent of banks are already publicly owned, many of them concentrated in the BRIC economies, Brazil, Russia, India and China."

Banking is not just a market good or service.  It is a vital part of societal infrastructure, which properly belongs in the public sector. By taking banking back, local governments could regain control of that very large slice (up to 40 percent) of every public budget that currently goes to interest charged to finance investment programs through the private sector.

Recent academic studies by von Mettenheim et al., and Andrianova et al. show that countries with high degrees of government ownership of banking have grown much faster in the last decade than countries where banking is historically concentrated in the private sector.  Government banks are also less corrupt and, surprisingly, have been more profitable in recent years than private banks.

Young concluded his article:

"As we left Thursday's seminar, I asked another member of the audience, someone with more than thirty years' experience as a corporate financier, whether the concept of a publicly-owned bank has any chance of getting off the ground here. 'I've no doubt it will happen,' came the surprise response. 'When I look at the way our collective addiction to debt has ballooned in my lifetime, I'd even say it's inevitable.'"

The Scots are full of surprises, and independence is in their blood. Recall the heroic battles of William Wallace and Robert the Bruce memorialized by Hollywood in the Academy Award-winning movie Braveheart.  Perhaps the Scots will blaze a trail for economic sovereignty in the EU, just as the North Dakotans did in the U.S.  A publicly-owned bank could help Scotland take control of its own economic destiny, by avoiding unnecessary debt to a private banking system that has become a burden to the economy rather than a pillar in its support.

1 comment:

KP said...

In my experience Govt institutions are not trailblazers to better finance, in fact they almost invariably lead to a decline in returns that always needs topping up by the taxpayer. The Bank of NZ comes instantly to mind, handed over to the incoming National Govt by the Labour Govt and instantly needing an injection of a billion dollars before being sold to the Australians. Air NZ would be another classic example.

The problem we have is that private banks were not allowed to go broke, leading to a prolonged depression that will be with us until Govts have printed enough money to expunge the debt. A lifetime of misery for the next generation.