Can
It Happen Here?
By Thomas Sowell
The decision of the government in Cyprus to simply take money out
of people's bank accounts there sent shock waves around the world. People far
removed from that small island nation had to wonder: "Can this happen
here?"
The economic repercussions of having people feel that their money
is not safe in banks can be catastrophic. Banks are not just warehouses where
money can be stored. They are crucial institutions for gathering individually
modest amounts of money from millions of people and transferring that money to
strangers whom those people would not directly entrust it to.
Multi-billion dollar corporations, whose economies of scale can
bring down the prices of goods and services -- thereby raising our standard of
living -- are seldom financed by a few billionaires.
Far more often they are financed by millions of people, who have
neither the specific knowledge nor the economic expertise to risk their savings
by investing directly in those enterprises. Banks are crucial intermediaries,
which provide the financial expertise without which these transfers of money
are too risky.
There are poor nations with rich natural resources, which are not
developed because they lack either the sophisticated financial institutions
necessary to make these key transfers of money or because their legal or political
systems are too unreliable for people to put their money into these financial
intermediaries.
Whether in Cyprus or in other countries, politicians tend to think
in short run terms, if only because elections are held in the short run.
Therefore, there is always a temptation to do reckless and short-sighted things
to get over some current problem, even if that creates far worse problems in
the long run.
Seizing money that people put in the bank would be a classic
example of such short-sighted policies.
After thousands of American banks failed during the Great
Depression of the 1930s, there were people who would never put their money in a
bank again, even after the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation was created,
to have the federal government guarantee individual bank accounts when the bank
itself failed.
For years after the Great Depression, stories appeared in the
press from time to time about some older person who died and was found to have
substantial sums of money stored under a mattress or in some other hiding
place, because they never trusted banks again.
After going back and forth, the government of Cyprus ultimately
decided, under international pressure, to go ahead with its plan to raid
people's bank accounts. But could similar policies be imposed in other
countries, including the United States?
One of the big differences between the United States and Cyprus is
that the U.S. government can simply print more money to get out of a financial
crisis. But Cyprus cannot print more euros, which are controlled by
international institutions.
Does that mean that Americans' money is safe in banks? Yes and no.
The U.S. government is very unlikely to just seize money wholesale
from people's bank accounts, as is being done in Cyprus. But does that mean
that your life savings are safe?
No. There are more sophisticated ways for governments to take what
you have put aside for yourself and use it for whatever the politicians feel
like using it for. If they do it slowly but steadily, they can take a big chunk
of what you have sacrificed for years to save, before you are even aware, much
less alarmed.
That is in fact already happening. When officials of the Federal
Reserve System speak in vague and lofty terms about "quantitative
easing," what they are talking about is creating more money out of thin
air, as the Federal Reserve is authorized to do -- and has been doing in recent
years, to the tune of tens of billions of dollars a month.
When the federal government spends far beyond the tax revenues it
has, it gets the extra money by selling bonds. The Federal Reserve has become
the biggest buyer of these bonds, since it costs them nothing to create more
money.
This new money buys just as much as the money you sacrificed to
save for years. More money in circulation, without a corresponding increase in
output, means rising prices. Although the numbers in your bank book may remain
the same, part of the purchasing power of your money is transferred to the
government. Is that really different from what Cyprus has done?
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