Article published in "Voice
of the Unions", February, 2004
Wake-up Call
It’s time to wake up - the unions are being
deceived.
The deception starts when credit-money, bearing interest,
is borrowed from a bank. Or rather, the bank claims the credit-money
is borrowed. Except that it is not borrowed. Borrowing implies
that the borrower has agreed to repay something owned by the
lender. But how can the credit-money be truly owned by the
bank when it has created the money out of nothing merely by
making (at tiny administrative cost) entries in electronic
ledgers? For that is what happens nowadays.
And what is the situation if, to that electronically created
credit-money, interest is added - as also happens nowadays?
The interest is in addition to the tiny administrative cost.
Interest continues, moreover, eternally compounding, until
the original sum is repaid. It can soon build to an astronomical
sum. So, since the borrowed credit-money is not cash, but
created electronically; and since it is not depositors’
money, interest can now be seen in its true light - as an
arbitrary, continuing and unnecessary tax on the borrower
which far exceeds the cost of the original creation and any
cost of administration.
The addition of interest, as well as the electronic creation
of the credit-money, is allowed by law. However, lending something
created out of nothing and then (in addition to a tiny administration
cost) adding interest is a very long way from true borrowing
and calling it borrowing is akin to fraud.
When government today wants to finance a road, sewage works,
bridge, fire station, or light railway, it goes to the banking
system to ask for the creation of, say, £1,000,000.
Yet the need to pay the interest over time easily doubles
the cost to £2,000,000 or more. Moreover, to pay that
doubled cost, each person in the UK now pays £8/9 each
week (in interest on the National Debt)!
Which is outrageous! The unions are told there is no money
for public capital investment. Yet that money could easily
be created by the state via its central bank as interest-free
loans. The original loan would be repayable (as borrowed money
always is) but there would be no need to pay interest on top.
Administration charges would be minimal because, at present,
the cost of collecting money to repay the loan is virtually
all borne by the borrower. Thus state-issued interest-free
loans could be issued and repaid for little more than the
original sum. The result would be a capital expenditure half
or less the present cost.
Moreover, such expenditure cannot be inflationary. Existing
bank credit-money is created out of nothing and is repaid
and cancelled, and in exactly the same way the state-issued
loans would be repaid (but without interest) and cancelled.
And when the loans are repaid and cancelled, the capital project
remains behind but the money that created it has gone!
Now consider green investment. Today there are green technologies
that can provide clean, renewable energy. However, they are
not commercially viable because they have to be financed by
bank money bearing interest. Yet if the money were to be interest-free
loans these technologies could become viable.
Ah! say the know-alls - such money squeezes out the private
sector. It does not. A public capital project can, if wished,
be built by the private sector, and managed by the private
sector (although the finance for it would be publicly created
as a loan, repayable without interest). A project can even
be owned by the private sector (although that would only be
acceptable if workers and unionists become the owners of the
capital). Nor do interest-free loans require that the total
spend be increased. If the total spend is the same as at present,
you can get twice the amount of building for the same amount
of money. Nothing wrong in that, is there?
Here is a possible short Motion for the House of Commons:
- Public Capital Projects Financed by Publicly Created
Interest-free Loans: "This House, wishing to
halve the cost of public capital projects, proposes the use
of publicly-created, interest-free loans."
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Rodney Shakespeare invites readers
to visit www.globaljusticemovement.net
to discover some of the immense possibilities of interest-free
money. He thinks all unionists and workers should own productive
capital - it is unwise to rely on insecure, poorly paid jobs.
Rodney is a MA and qualified barrister, works as a tutor and
co-wrote the textbook on "Binary Economics - the
new paradigm (capital ownership for everybody)".
With Canon Peter Challen, his latest book is "Seven
Steps to Justice".
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