In contrast to matter, money can be
created but cannot be destroyed!
By MUNGAI KIHANYA
The Sunday Nation
Nairobi,
09 August 2015
Everybody knows how to make money, don’t they? You do some work and get
paid for it, isn’t it? But where does the person paying you get it from?
Money is made through collusion between a commercial bank and its
customer. Suppose you have some property – may be a car or a piece of
land or whatever. You think is worth, say, Sh10 million so you go your
bank and ask them to hold it as security in exchange for a Sh5 million
loan. If the bank agrees, then the two of you have just colluded to
create Sh5 million and injected it into the economy!
This money is now written against your name on a piece of paper (a
statement) If you need some of it in cash, the bank will request for
them from the Central Bank of Kenya for the currency notes.
This money will remain in circulation and if you fail to pay back, the
bank will have look for some one else to buy your property. But what if
the bank can’t find anyone to pay Sh5 million for the property? Suppose
the best offer is Sh2 million. In that case, the bank makes a loss of
Sh3million.
This is why I am saying it is a collusion between banks and their
customers. You and your bank colluded and agreed that the property is
worth Sh10 million. On that basis, you were given Sh5 million to spend
on other things, but when you defaulted, there was nobody willing to pay
Sh5 million for the property.
This is how the KANU government “printed” money in the late 1980s and
almost brought down the entire financial system of the country.
Politically connected individuals were allocated public land. They then
presented it to (especially government-owned) banks and got loans that
were way above the market value of the land.
These borrowers then defaulted on the repayments and the banks were left
holding onto land that could not fetch a tenth of the outstanding loans.
Many small banks closed shop as a result. But by this time, the borrowed
money was already circulating in the economy but not representing its
fair market value in property.
Because of the “excess money” in circulation, the prices of many goods
shot up. The phrase “excess money” means that there is more money than
the fair market value of properties that it was issued against.
Since this excess money was in just a few hands, life became too
expensive for the majority and the Central Bank had to find a way of
removing it from circulation. That is, stop the people holding it from
buy things with it. So the Central Bank offered very attractive interest
rates on savings.
Ideally, the interest rate offered must be at least as high as the
inflation rate: It is the only way that the offer will make sense. This
kind of action is normally termed as “mopping up excess liquidity”.
Mopping does not annihilate the money, it only reserves it and releases
it gently back into the economy.
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