acquires other debt obligations as well, but government
bonds comprise most of its inventory.) There is no
money to back up this check. These fiat dollars are cre-
ated on the spot for that purpose. By calling those bonds
"reserves," the Fed then uses them as the base for creating 9 additional dollars for every dollar created for the bonds themselves. The money created for the bonds is
spent by the government, whereas the money created on
top of those bonds is the source of all the bank loans
made to the nation's businesses and individuals. The
result of this process is the same as creating money on a printing press, but the illusion is based on an accounting trick rather than a printing trick. The bottom line is that Congress and the banking cartel have entered into a
partnership in which the cartel has the privilege of
collecting interest on money which it creates out of nothing, a perpetual override on every American dollar that
exists in the world. Congress, on the other hand, has
access to unlimited funding without having to tell the
voters their taxes are being raised through the process of inflation. If you understand this paragraph, you understand the Federal Reserve System.
MONEY
Now for a more detailed view. There are three general ways in which the Federal Reserve creates fiat money out of debt. One is by making loans to the member banks through what is called the
other certificates of debt through what is called
THE DISCOUNT WINDOW
The Discount Window is merely bankers' language for the
It is common for them to experience temporary negative balances caused by unusual customer demand for cash or unusually large clusters of checks all clearing through other banks at the same time.
Sometimes they make bad loans and, when these former "assets"
are removed from their books, their "reserves" are also decreased and may, in fact, become negative. Finally, there is the profit motive.
When banks borrow from the Federal Reserve at one interest rate and lend it out at a higher rate, there is an obvious advantage. But that is merely the beginning. When a bank borrows a dollar from the Fed, it becomes a one-dollar
Let's take a look at the math. Assume the bank receives $1 million from the Fed at a rate of 8%. The total annual cost, therefore, is $80,000 (.08 X $1,000,000). The bank treats the loan as a cash deposit, which means it becomes the basis for manufacturing an additional $9 million to be lent to its customers. If we assume that it lends that money at 11% interest, its gross return would be $990,000 (.11 X
$9,000,000). Subtract from this the bank's cost of $80,000 plus an appropriate share of its overhead, and we have a net return of about $900,000. In other words, the bank borrows a million and can almost 1. This 10% figure (ten-to-one ratio) is based on averages. The Federal Reserve requires a minimum reserve of 10% on deposits over $46.8 million but only 3% on deposits up to that amount. Deposits in Eurodollars and nonpersonal time deposits require no reserves at all. Reserves consist of vault cash and deposits at the Federal Reserve. See
THE MANDRAKE MECHANISM 213
double it in one year.1 That's
THE OPEN MARKET OPERATION
The most important method used by the Federal Reserve for the creation of fiat money is the purchase and sale of securities on the open market. But, before jumping into this, a word of warning.
Don't expect what follows to make any sense. Just be prepared to know that this is how they do it.