
The examples and perspective in this article may not represent a worldwide view of the subject.(June 2021) |
Full-reserve banking (also known as 100% reserve banking, or sovereign money system) is a system of banking where banks do not lend demand deposits and instead only lend from time deposits. It differs from fractional-reserve banking, in which banks may lend funds on deposit, while fully reserved banks would be required to keep the full amount of each customer's demand deposits in cash, available for immediate withdrawal.
Monetary reforms that included full-reserve banking have been proposed in the past, notably in 1935 by a group of economists, including Irving Fisher, under the so-called "Chicago plan" as a response to the Great Depression.
Currently, no country in the world requires full-reserve banking across primary credit institutions, although Iceland's legislature considered it in 2015 after the 2008–2011 Icelandic financial crisis. In a 2018 Swiss ballot initiative, 75% of voters voted against the Sovereign Money Initiative which had full reserve banking as a prominent component of its proposed reform of the Swiss monetary system.
Concepts
Full-reserve banking requires banks to maintain 100% reserves against demand deposits. This is a significant change from fractional-reserve banking, where only a small percentage of deposits must be on reserve.
Basic Principles
Full-reserve banking effectively splits banks into two distinct functions, described by Benes and Kumhof (2012) as the "separation of the monetary and credit functions of the banking system."
- Custody and Transaction Services: Banks hold deposited currency as 100%-reserve deposits, transferable to third parties.
- Investment Intermediation: Banks would become true intermediaries, transferring from savers to borrowers. Jackson and Dyson (2012) argue this separates transaction accounts and investment accounts.
Money Creation
McLeay et al. note that in the current system, "Whenever a bank makes a loan, it simultaneously creates a matching deposit in the borrower's bank account, thereby creating new money." In contrast, Sigurjonsson explains that full-reserve banking, "transfers the power to create money from commercial banks" to the central bank.
This has several implications:
- Money Supply: Dyson et al. argue that banks would no longer be money creators and so generate less financial instability.
- Credit Creation: Kay argues for managing maturity mismatch through markets not within financial institutions.
Account Types
Full-reserve banking proposes two distinct types of accounts, analyzed by Pennacchi (2012).
- Transaction Accounts
- 100% backed by reserves
- Available for immediate withdrawal
- May charge service fees
- Cannot be lent
- Legally separated from other bank activities
- Investment Accounts
- Fixed terms for withdrawal
- Can be used for lending
- May offer different risk-return profiles
- Risk explicitly borne by depositor
- Returns based on investment performance
History
In the 1840s, British Currency School theorists argued for 100% reserves.
In the early 20th century, classical economics was widely accepted. In the 1930s, Keynesianism gained prominence as policymakers sought solutions for the Great Depression.
Economists proposed various strategies to address financial stability, including the Chicago Plan's full-reserve banking. Irving Fisher's "The Debt-Deflation Theory of Great Depressions" (1933) analyzed how debt cycles contributed to economic instability. Fisher proposed in his 1935 "100% Money" disconnecting money and credit.
Albert G. Hart detailed in 1935 how to maintain economic stability during the transition to 100% reserves. William R. Allen recounted in 1993 how Fisher's proposals influenced banking reform discussions. Full-reserve banking did not become law.
Maurice Allais presented a 100% reserve proposal in a 1948 book.Milton Friedman advocated for 100% reserves in 1960 with A Program for Monetary Stability.
James Tobin proposed a deposit currency system in 1985 with aspects of 100% reserves.Laurence Kotlikoff called for 100% reserve banking in his 2010 book Jimmy Stewart Is Dead.
In the 2014 Money Creation and Society debate in the UK Parliament, Zac Goldsmith called for a monetary commission on full reserve banking.
Views
In favor
Economist Milton Friedman at one time advocated a 100% reserve requirement for checking accounts, and economist Laurence Kotlikoff has also called for an end to fractional-reserve banking.Austrian School economist Murray Rothbard has written that reserves of less than 100% constitute fraud on the part of banks and should be illegal, and that full-reserve banking would eliminate the risk of bank runs.Jesús Huerta de Soto, another economist of the Austrian school, has also strongly argued in favor of full-reserve banking and the outlawing of fractional reserve banking.
The financial crisis of 2007–2008 led to renewed interest in full reserve banking and sovereign money issued by a central bank. Monetary reformers point out that fractional reserve banking leads to unpayable debt, growing economic inequality, inevitable bankruptcy, and an imperative for perpetual and unsustainable economic growth.Martin Wolf, chief economist at the Financial Times, endorsed full reserve banking, saying "it would bring huge advantages".
Martin Wolf, Chief Economics Commentator at the Financial Times, argues that many people have a fundamentally flawed and oversimplified conception of what it is that banks do. Laurence Kotlikoff and Edward Leamer agree, in a paper entitled "A Banking System We Can Trust", arguing that the current financial system did not produce the benefits that have been attributed to it. Rather than simply borrowing money from savers to make loans towards investment and production, and holding "money" as a stable liability, banks in reality create credit increasingly for the purpose of acquiring existing assets. Rather than financing real productivity and investment, and generating fair asset prices, Wall Street has come to resemble a casino, in which trade volume of securities skyrockets without having positive impacts on the investment rate or economic growth. The credits and debt banks create play a role in determining how delicate the economy is in the face of crisis. For example, Wall Street caused the housing bubble by financing millions of mortgages that were outside budget constraints, which in turn decreased output by 10 percent.
Money supply problems
In The Mystery of Banking, Murray Rothbard argues that legalized fractional-reserve banking gave banks "carte blanche" to create money out of thin air. Economists that formulated the Chicago Plan following the Great Depression argue that allowing banks to have fractional reserves puts too much power in the hands of banks by allowing them to determine the amount of money in circulation by changing the amount of loans they give out.
Fractional-reserve banking fraud issues
Deposit bankers become loan bankers when they issue fake warehouse receipts that are not backed by the assets actually held, thus constituting fraud.:97 Rothbard likens this practice to counterfeiting, with the loan banker extracting resources from the public. However, Bryan Caplan argues that fractional-reserve banking does not constitute fraud, as by Rothbard's own admission an advertised product must simply meet the "common definition" of that product believed by consumers. Caplan contends that it is part of the common definition of a modern bank to make loans against demand deposits, thus not constituting fraud.
Balance sheet fundamentals
Furthermore, Rothbard argues that fractional reserve banking is fundamentally unsound because of the timescale of a bank's balance sheet. While a typical firm should have its assets be due prior to the payment date of its liabilities, so that the liabilities can be paid, the fractional reserve deposit bank has its demand deposit liabilities due at any point the depositor chooses, and its assets, being the loans it has made with someone else's deposits, due at some later date.
Against
New fees
Some economists have noted that under full-reserve banking, because banks would not earn revenue from lending against demand deposits, depositors would have to pay fees for the services associated with checking accounts. This, it is felt, would probably be rejected by the public. However, in economies where central banks enact zero and negative interest rate policies, some writers have noted depositors are already paying to put their savings in fractional reserve banks.
Shadow banking and unregulated institutions
In their influential paper on financial crises, economists Douglas W. Diamond and Philip H. Dybvig warned that under full-reserve banking, since banks would only be permitted to lend out funds where depositors agreed to time-lock their deposits, need for extra credit would drive some borrowers to use unregulated institutions. Unregulated institutions (such as high-yield debt issuers) would take over the economically necessary role of financial intermediation and maturity transformation, therefore destabilizing the financial system and leading to more frequent financial crises.
Writing in response to various writers' support for full reserve banking, Paul Krugman stated that the idea was "certainly worth talking about", but worries that it would drive financial activity outside the banking system, into the less regulated shadow banking system.
Misses the problem
Krugman argues that the 2008 financial crisis was not largely a result of depositors attempting to withdraw deposits from commercial banks, but a large-scale run on shadow banking. As financial markets seemed to have recovered more quickly than the 'real economy', Krugman sees the recession more as a result of excess leverage and household balance-sheet issues. Neither of these issues would be addressed by a full-reserve regulation on commercial banks, he claims.
See also
- Austrian business cycle theory
- Chicago plan / The Chicago Plan Revisited
- Committee on Monetary and Economic Reform (Canada)
- Fiat money
- Fractional-reserve banking
- Monetary reform
- List of monetary reformers
- Money creation
- Narrow banking
- Positive Money
- Reserve requirement
- Hard currency
- Seigniorage
- Swiss sovereign money referendum, 2018
- Broad money
References
- A banking revolution Jeremy Warner, UK Telegraph
- Weisenthal, Joe. "BAN ALL THE BANKS: Here's The Wild Idea That People Are Starting To Take Seriously". Business Insider. Retrieved 2020-11-30.
- Sigurjónsson, Frosti (2015-03-01). "Montary Reform - A Better Monetary System For Iceland" (PDF).
- "Iceland's daring raid on fractional reserve banks". Financial Times. 2015-04-09.
- "Iceland looks at ending boom and bust with radical money plan". The Daily Telegraph. 2015-03-31.
- Switzerland's 'Vollgeld' banking overhaul: how reform would work
- Atkins, Ralph (10 June 2018). "Swiss voters reject 'sovereign money' initiative". Financial Times. Archived from the original on 2022-12-10. Retrieved 2020-11-30.
- swissinfo.ch/sb (26 July 2018). "Vote survey shows no generation gap but misunderstandings". SWI swissinfo.ch. Retrieved 2020-11-30.
- Phillips, Ronnie J.; Minsky, Hyman P. (2016-09-16). The Chicago Plan and New Deal Banking Reform. Routledge. p. 46. ISBN 978-1-315-28663-1.
- Goodwin, Neva; Harris, Jonathan M.; Rajkarnikar, Pratistha Joshi; Roach, Brian; Thornton, Tim B. (2024-09-25). Essentials of Economics in Context. Taylor & Francis. ISBN 978-1-040-11400-1.
- Benes, Mr Jaromir; Kumhof, Mr Michael (2012-08-01). The Chicago Plan Revisited. International Monetary Fund. p. 4. ISBN 978-1-4755-0552-8.
- Tobin, James (1985). "Financial Innovation and Deregulation in Perspective" (PDF). Bank of Japan Monetary and Economic Studies 3: 25.
- Jackson, A.; Dyson, B. (2012). "Modernising Money: Why Our Monetary System is Broken and How it Can be Fixed". Modernising Money. p. 265. Retrieved 2025-01-28.
- Michael, McLeay; Amar, Radia; Ryland, Thomas (14 March 2014). "Money Creation in the Modern Economy". Bank of England Quarterly Bulletin, Q1: 14. SSRN 2416234.
- Sigurjonsson, Frosti (March 2015). "Monetary Reform: A Better Monetary System for Iceland" (PDF). p. 83.
- Dyson, Ben; Hodgson, Graham; van Lerven, Frank. Sovereign Money: An Introduction (PDF). Positive Money. p. 13.
- Kay, John. "Should we have "narrow banking"?" (PDF). London School of Economics: 222.
- Pennacchi, George (2012-10-01). "Narrow Banking". Annual Review of Financial Economics. 4 (4): 141–159. doi:10.1146/annurev-financial-110311-101758. ISSN 1941-1367.
- Gürkaynak, Refet S.; Wright, Jonathan H. (2023-05-09). Research Handbook of Financial Markets. Edward Elgar Publishing. ISBN 978-1-80037-532-1.
- Ricks, Morgan (2016). The Money Problem: Rethinking Financial Regulation. University of Chicago Press. doi:10.7208/chicago/9780226330464.001.0001. ISBN 978-0-226-52812-0.
- Lainà, Patrizio (2015). Money creation under full-reserve banking: A stock-flow consistent model (Report). Working Paper. p11
- Mises, Ludwig Von (1990). Money, Method, and the Market Process. Ludwig von Mises Institute. ISBN 978-1-61016-387-3.
- Wapshott, Nicholas (11 October 2011). Keynes Hayek: The Clash that Defined Modern Economics. W. W. Norton & Company. ISBN 978-0-393-08311-8.
- Phillips, Ronnie J. (1994-12-15). The Chicago Plan & New Deal Banking Reform. M.E. Sharpe. p. 3. ISBN 978-0-7656-3267-8.
- Fisher, Irving (1933). "The Debt-Deflation Theory of Great Depressions". Econometrica. 1 (4): 337–357. doi:10.2307/1907327. ISSN 0012-9682. JSTOR 1907327.
- Dimand, Robert W. (2019-03-29). Irving Fisher. Springer. p. 177. ISBN 978-3-030-05177-8.
- H., R. G. (1936). "Review of 100 Per Cent. Money". Journal of the Royal Statistical Society. 99 (2): 388–390. doi:10.2307/2980591. ISSN 0952-8385. JSTOR 2980591.
- Lagoarde-Segot, Thomas (2023-04-13). Ecological Money and Finance: Exploring Sustainable Monetary and Financial Systems. Springer Nature. ISBN 978-3-031-14232-1.
- Hart, Albert G. (1935-02-01). "The "Chicago Plan" of Banking Reform: I A Proposal for Making Monetary Management Effective in the United States". The Review of Economic Studies. 2 (2): 104–116. doi:10.2307/2967557. ISSN 0034-6527. JSTOR 2967557.
- Phillips, Ronnie J. (1994-12-15). The Chicago Plan & New Deal Banking Reform. M.E. Sharpe. p. 147. ISBN 978-0-7656-3267-8.
- Allen, William R. (Oct 1993). "Irving Fisher and the 100 Percent Reserve Proposal". The Journal of Law and Economics. 36 (2): 703–717. doi:10.1086/467295. ISSN 0022-2186.
- Phillips, Ronnie J.; Minsky, Hyman P. (16 September 2016). The Chicago Plan and New Deal Banking Reform. Routledge. p. 164. ISBN 978-1-315-28663-1.
- Forder, James (2019-07-05). Milton Friedman. Springer. ISBN 978-1-137-38784-4.
- Soto, Jesús Huerta de (2006). Money, Bank Credit, and Economic Cycles. Ludwig von Mises Institute. ISBN 978-1-61016-388-0.
- Ahiakpor, James C. W. (22 March 2021). Macroeconomic Analysis in the Classical Tradition: The Impediments Of Keynes’s Influence. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-000-36041-7.
- "Money Creation and Society - Hansard - UK Parliament". hansard.parliament.uk. 27 February 2025.
- Solow, Robert M. (March 28, 2002), "On the Lender of Last Resort", Financial crises, contagion, and the lender of last resort, Oxford University Press, p. 203, ISBN 978-0-19-924721-9
- Kotlikoff, Laurence J.; Leamer, Edward (April 23, 2009). "A Banking System We Can Trust" (PDF). Forbes. Archived from the original (PDF) on June 4, 2011. Retrieved September 14, 2010 – via Boston University.
- Rothbard, Murray N. (2008), The Mystery of Banking (PDF), Ludwig von Mises Institute, ISBN 978-1-933550-28-2, retrieved September 14, 2010
- The Case for a 100% Gold Dollar, Murray Rothbard
- Jesús Huerta de Soto (2012). Money, Bank Credit, and Economic Cycles (3rd ed.). Ludwig von Mises Institute. ISBN 978-1-61016-388-0. Retrieved 4 August 2013.
- Jackson, Andrew; Dyson, Ben (2012). Modernizing Money. Why our Monetary System is Broken and how it can be Fixed. Positive Money. ISBN 978-0-9574448-0-5.
- Weisenthal, Joe. "BAN ALL THE BANKS: Here's The Wild Idea That People Are Starting To Take Seriously". Business Insider.
- "Martin Wolf: Banking, credit and money". CORE. 2013-11-11. Retrieved 2020-03-11.
- Rothbard, Murray N. (2008). The mystery of banking (2nd ed.). Auburn, Ala.: Ludwig von Mises Institute. ISBN 978-1-933550-28-2. OCLC 275097518.
- "100% Reserve Banking — The History". House of Debt. 2014-04-26. Retrieved 2020-03-17.
- Caplan, Bryan (2011-05-12). "The Morality of Fractional Reserve Banking". Econlib.
{{cite web}}
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(help)[unreliable source?] - Rothbard, Murray N. (2008). The mystery of banking (2nd ed.). Auburn, Ala.: Ludwig von Mises Institute. ISBN 978-1-933550-28-2. OCLC 275097518.
- White, Lawrence H. (Winter 2003). "Accounting for Fractional-Reserve Banknotes and Deposits—or, What's Twenty Quid to the Bloody Midland Bank?" (PDF). The Independent Review. 7 (3): 423–41. ISSN 1086-1653. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2015-04-29. Retrieved 2012-11-30.
- Allen, William (October 1993). "Irving Fisher and the 100 Percent Reserve Proposal". Journal of Law and Economics. 36 (2): 703–17. doi:10.1086/467295. JSTOR 725805. S2CID 153974326.
- Texan Gold Depository
- Diamond, Douglas W.; Philip H. Dybvig (Jan 1986), "Banking Theory, Deposit Insurance, and Bank Regulation", The Journal of Business, 59 (1): 55–68, doi:10.1086/296314, JSTOR 2352687,
In conclusion, 100% reserve banking is a dangerous proposal that would do substantial damage to the economy by reducing the overall amount of liquidity. Furthermore, the proposal is likely to be ineffective in increasing stability since it will be impossible to control the institutions that will enter in the vacuum left when banks can no longer create liquidity. Fortunately, the political realities make it unlikely that this radical and imprudent proposal will be adopted.
- Diamond, Douglas; Philip Dybvig (Winter 2000). "Bank Runs, Deposit Insurance, and Liquidity" (PDF). Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis Quarterly Review. 24 (1): 14–23. Retrieved 29 August 2012.
- Krugman, Paul (April 26, 2014). "Is A Banking Ban The Answer?". New York Times. Retrieved September 18, 2015.
- "Is A Banking Ban The Answer?". Paul Krugman Blog. 2014-04-26. Retrieved 2020-03-11.
External links
- The Chicago Plan Revisited, IMF Working Paper, Jaromir Benes and Michael Kumhof, August 2012
- In Defence of Fractional Monetary Reserves (Pascal Salin)
The examples and perspective in this article may not represent a worldwide view of the subject You may improve this article discuss the issue on the talk page or create a new article as appropriate June 2021 Learn how and when to remove this message Full reserve banking also known as 100 reserve banking or sovereign money system is a system of banking where banks do not lend demand deposits and instead only lend from time deposits It differs from fractional reserve banking in which banks may lend funds on deposit while fully reserved banks would be required to keep the full amount of each customer s demand deposits in cash available for immediate withdrawal Monetary reforms that included full reserve banking have been proposed in the past notably in 1935 by a group of economists including Irving Fisher under the so called Chicago plan as a response to the Great Depression Currently no country in the world requires full reserve banking across primary credit institutions although Iceland s legislature considered it in 2015 after the 2008 2011 Icelandic financial crisis In a 2018 Swiss ballot initiative 75 of voters voted against the Sovereign Money Initiative which had full reserve banking as a prominent component of its proposed reform of the Swiss monetary system ConceptsFull reserve banking requires banks to maintain 100 reserves against demand deposits This is a significant change from fractional reserve banking where only a small percentage of deposits must be on reserve Basic Principles Full reserve banking effectively splits banks into two distinct functions described by Benes and Kumhof 2012 as the separation of the monetary and credit functions of the banking system Custody and Transaction Services Banks hold deposited currency as 100 reserve deposits transferable to third parties Investment Intermediation Banks would become true intermediaries transferring from savers to borrowers Jackson and Dyson 2012 argue this separates transaction accounts and investment accounts Money Creation McLeay et al note that in the current system Whenever a bank makes a loan it simultaneously creates a matching deposit in the borrower s bank account thereby creating new money In contrast Sigurjonsson explains that full reserve banking transfers the power to create money from commercial banks to the central bank This has several implications Money Supply Dyson et al argue that banks would no longer be money creators and so generate less financial instability Credit Creation Kay argues for managing maturity mismatch through markets not within financial institutions Account Types Full reserve banking proposes two distinct types of accounts analyzed by Pennacchi 2012 Transaction Accounts 100 backed by reserves Available for immediate withdrawal May charge service fees Cannot be lent Legally separated from other bank activities Investment Accounts Fixed terms for withdrawal Can be used for lending May offer different risk return profiles Risk explicitly borne by depositor Returns based on investment performanceHistoryIn the 1840s British Currency School theorists argued for 100 reserves In the early 20th century classical economics was widely accepted In the 1930s Keynesianism gained prominence as policymakers sought solutions for the Great Depression Economists proposed various strategies to address financial stability including the Chicago Plan s full reserve banking Irving Fisher s The Debt Deflation Theory of Great Depressions 1933 analyzed how debt cycles contributed to economic instability Fisher proposed in his 1935 100 Money disconnecting money and credit Albert G Hart detailed in 1935 how to maintain economic stability during the transition to 100 reserves William R Allen recounted in 1993 how Fisher s proposals influenced banking reform discussions Full reserve banking did not become law Maurice Allais presented a 100 reserve proposal in a 1948 book Milton Friedman advocated for 100 reserves in 1960 with A Program for Monetary Stability James Tobin proposed a deposit currency system in 1985 with aspects of 100 reserves Laurence Kotlikoff called for 100 reserve banking in his 2010 book Jimmy Stewart Is Dead In the 2014 Money Creation and Society debate in the UK Parliament Zac Goldsmith called for a monetary commission on full reserve banking ViewsIn favor Economist Milton Friedman at one time advocated a 100 reserve requirement for checking accounts and economist Laurence Kotlikoff has also called for an end to fractional reserve banking Austrian School economist Murray Rothbard has written that reserves of less than 100 constitute fraud on the part of banks and should be illegal and that full reserve banking would eliminate the risk of bank runs Jesus Huerta de Soto another economist of the Austrian school has also strongly argued in favor of full reserve banking and the outlawing of fractional reserve banking The financial crisis of 2007 2008 led to renewed interest in full reserve banking and sovereign money issued by a central bank Monetary reformers point out that fractional reserve banking leads to unpayable debt growing economic inequality inevitable bankruptcy and an imperative for perpetual and unsustainable economic growth Martin Wolf chief economist at the Financial Times endorsed full reserve banking saying it would bring huge advantages Martin Wolf Chief Economics Commentator at the Financial Times argues that many people have a fundamentally flawed and oversimplified conception of what it is that banks do Laurence Kotlikoff and Edward Leamer agree in a paper entitled A Banking System We Can Trust arguing that the current financial system did not produce the benefits that have been attributed to it Rather than simply borrowing money from savers to make loans towards investment and production and holding money as a stable liability banks in reality create credit increasingly for the purpose of acquiring existing assets Rather than financing real productivity and investment and generating fair asset prices Wall Street has come to resemble a casino in which trade volume of securities skyrockets without having positive impacts on the investment rate or economic growth The credits and debt banks create play a role in determining how delicate the economy is in the face of crisis For example Wall Street caused the housing bubble by financing millions of mortgages that were outside budget constraints which in turn decreased output by 10 percent Money supply problems In The Mystery of Banking Murray Rothbard argues that legalized fractional reserve banking gave banks carte blanche to create money out of thin air Economists that formulated the Chicago Plan following the Great Depression argue that allowing banks to have fractional reserves puts too much power in the hands of banks by allowing them to determine the amount of money in circulation by changing the amount of loans they give out Fractional reserve banking fraud issues Deposit bankers become loan bankers when they issue fake warehouse receipts that are not backed by the assets actually held thus constituting fraud 97 Rothbard likens this practice to counterfeiting with the loan banker extracting resources from the public However Bryan Caplan argues that fractional reserve banking does not constitute fraud as by Rothbard s own admission an advertised product must simply meet the common definition of that product believed by consumers Caplan contends that it is part of the common definition of a modern bank to make loans against demand deposits thus not constituting fraud Balance sheet fundamentals Furthermore Rothbard argues that fractional reserve banking is fundamentally unsound because of the timescale of a bank s balance sheet While a typical firm should have its assets be due prior to the payment date of its liabilities so that the liabilities can be paid the fractional reserve deposit bank has its demand deposit liabilities due at any point the depositor chooses and its assets being the loans it has made with someone else s deposits due at some later date Against New fees Some economists have noted that under full reserve banking because banks would not earn revenue from lending against demand deposits depositors would have to pay fees for the services associated with checking accounts This it is felt would probably be rejected by the public However in economies where central banks enact zero and negative interest rate policies some writers have noted depositors are already paying to put their savings in fractional reserve banks Shadow banking and unregulated institutions In their influential paper on financial crises economists Douglas W Diamond and Philip H Dybvig warned that under full reserve banking since banks would only be permitted to lend out funds where depositors agreed to time lock their deposits need for extra credit would drive some borrowers to use unregulated institutions Unregulated institutions such as high yield debt issuers would take over the economically necessary role of financial intermediation and maturity transformation therefore destabilizing the financial system and leading to more frequent financial crises Writing in response to various writers support for full reserve banking Paul Krugman stated that the idea was certainly worth talking about but worries that it would drive financial activity outside the banking system into the less regulated shadow banking system Misses the problem Krugman argues that the 2008 financial crisis was not largely a result of depositors attempting to withdraw deposits from commercial banks but a large scale run on shadow banking As financial markets seemed to have recovered more quickly than the real economy Krugman sees the recession more as a result of excess leverage and household balance sheet issues Neither of these issues would be addressed by a full reserve regulation on commercial banks he claims See alsoAustrian business cycle theory Chicago plan The Chicago Plan Revisited Committee on Monetary and Economic Reform Canada Fiat money Fractional reserve banking Monetary reform List of monetary reformers Money creation Narrow banking Positive Money Reserve requirement Hard currency Seigniorage Swiss sovereign money referendum 2018 Broad moneyReferencesA banking revolution Jeremy Warner UK Telegraph Weisenthal Joe BAN ALL THE BANKS Here s The Wild Idea That People Are Starting To Take Seriously Business Insider Retrieved 2020 11 30 Sigurjonsson Frosti 2015 03 01 Montary Reform A Better Monetary System For Iceland PDF Iceland s daring raid on fractional reserve banks Financial Times 2015 04 09 Iceland looks at ending boom and bust with radical money plan The Daily Telegraph 2015 03 31 Switzerland s Vollgeld banking overhaul how reform would work Atkins Ralph 10 June 2018 Swiss voters reject sovereign money initiative Financial Times Archived from the original on 2022 12 10 Retrieved 2020 11 30 swissinfo ch sb 26 July 2018 Vote survey shows no generation gap but misunderstandings SWI swissinfo ch Retrieved 2020 11 30 Phillips Ronnie J Minsky Hyman P 2016 09 16 The Chicago Plan and New Deal Banking Reform Routledge p 46 ISBN 978 1 315 28663 1 Goodwin Neva Harris Jonathan M Rajkarnikar Pratistha Joshi Roach Brian Thornton Tim B 2024 09 25 Essentials of Economics in Context Taylor amp Francis ISBN 978 1 040 11400 1 Benes Mr Jaromir Kumhof Mr Michael 2012 08 01 The Chicago Plan Revisited International Monetary Fund p 4 ISBN 978 1 4755 0552 8 Tobin James 1985 Financial Innovation and Deregulation in Perspective PDF Bank of Japan Monetary and Economic Studies 3 25 Jackson A Dyson B 2012 Modernising Money Why Our Monetary System is Broken and How it Can be Fixed Modernising Money p 265 Retrieved 2025 01 28 Michael McLeay Amar Radia Ryland Thomas 14 March 2014 Money Creation in the Modern Economy Bank of England Quarterly Bulletin Q1 14 SSRN 2416234 Sigurjonsson Frosti March 2015 Monetary Reform A Better Monetary System for Iceland PDF p 83 Dyson Ben Hodgson Graham van Lerven Frank Sovereign Money An Introduction PDF Positive Money p 13 Kay John Should we have narrow banking PDF London School of Economics 222 Pennacchi George 2012 10 01 Narrow Banking Annual Review of Financial Economics 4 4 141 159 doi 10 1146 annurev financial 110311 101758 ISSN 1941 1367 Gurkaynak Refet S Wright Jonathan H 2023 05 09 Research Handbook of Financial Markets Edward Elgar Publishing ISBN 978 1 80037 532 1 Ricks Morgan 2016 The Money Problem Rethinking Financial Regulation University of Chicago Press doi 10 7208 chicago 9780226330464 001 0001 ISBN 978 0 226 52812 0 Laina Patrizio 2015 Money creation under full reserve banking A stock flow consistent model Report Working Paper p11 Mises Ludwig Von 1990 Money Method and the Market Process Ludwig von Mises Institute ISBN 978 1 61016 387 3 Wapshott Nicholas 11 October 2011 Keynes Hayek The Clash that Defined Modern Economics W W Norton amp Company ISBN 978 0 393 08311 8 Phillips Ronnie J 1994 12 15 The Chicago Plan amp New Deal Banking Reform M E Sharpe p 3 ISBN 978 0 7656 3267 8 Fisher Irving 1933 The Debt Deflation Theory of Great Depressions Econometrica 1 4 337 357 doi 10 2307 1907327 ISSN 0012 9682 JSTOR 1907327 Dimand Robert W 2019 03 29 Irving Fisher Springer p 177 ISBN 978 3 030 05177 8 H R G 1936 Review of 100 Per Cent Money Journal of the Royal Statistical Society 99 2 388 390 doi 10 2307 2980591 ISSN 0952 8385 JSTOR 2980591 Lagoarde Segot Thomas 2023 04 13 Ecological Money and Finance Exploring Sustainable Monetary and Financial Systems Springer Nature ISBN 978 3 031 14232 1 Hart Albert G 1935 02 01 The Chicago Plan of Banking Reform I A Proposal for Making Monetary Management Effective in the United States The Review of Economic Studies 2 2 104 116 doi 10 2307 2967557 ISSN 0034 6527 JSTOR 2967557 Phillips Ronnie J 1994 12 15 The Chicago Plan amp New Deal Banking Reform M E Sharpe p 147 ISBN 978 0 7656 3267 8 Allen William R Oct 1993 Irving Fisher and the 100 Percent Reserve Proposal The Journal of Law and Economics 36 2 703 717 doi 10 1086 467295 ISSN 0022 2186 Phillips Ronnie J Minsky Hyman P 16 September 2016 The Chicago Plan and New Deal Banking Reform Routledge p 164 ISBN 978 1 315 28663 1 Forder James 2019 07 05 Milton Friedman Springer ISBN 978 1 137 38784 4 Soto Jesus Huerta de 2006 Money Bank Credit and Economic Cycles Ludwig von Mises Institute ISBN 978 1 61016 388 0 Ahiakpor James C W 22 March 2021 Macroeconomic Analysis in the Classical Tradition The Impediments Of Keynes s Influence Routledge ISBN 978 1 000 36041 7 Money Creation and Society Hansard UK Parliament hansard parliament uk 27 February 2025 Solow Robert M March 28 2002 On the Lender of Last Resort Financial crises contagion and the lender of last resort Oxford University Press p 203 ISBN 978 0 19 924721 9 Kotlikoff Laurence J Leamer Edward April 23 2009 A Banking System We Can Trust PDF Forbes Archived from the original PDF on June 4 2011 Retrieved September 14 2010 via Boston University Rothbard Murray N 2008 The Mystery of Banking PDF Ludwig von Mises Institute ISBN 978 1 933550 28 2 retrieved September 14 2010 The Case for a 100 Gold Dollar Murray Rothbard Jesus Huerta de Soto 2012 Money Bank Credit and Economic Cycles 3rd ed Ludwig von Mises Institute ISBN 978 1 61016 388 0 Retrieved 4 August 2013 Jackson Andrew Dyson Ben 2012 Modernizing Money Why our Monetary System is Broken and how it can be Fixed Positive Money ISBN 978 0 9574448 0 5 Weisenthal Joe BAN ALL THE BANKS Here s The Wild Idea That People Are Starting To Take Seriously Business Insider Martin Wolf Banking credit and money CORE 2013 11 11 Retrieved 2020 03 11 Rothbard Murray N 2008 The mystery of banking 2nd ed Auburn Ala Ludwig von Mises Institute ISBN 978 1 933550 28 2 OCLC 275097518 100 Reserve Banking The History House of Debt 2014 04 26 Retrieved 2020 03 17 Caplan Bryan 2011 05 12 The Morality of Fractional Reserve Banking Econlib a href wiki Template Cite web title Template Cite web cite web a Missing or empty url help unreliable source Rothbard Murray N 2008 The mystery of banking 2nd ed Auburn Ala Ludwig von Mises Institute ISBN 978 1 933550 28 2 OCLC 275097518 White Lawrence H Winter 2003 Accounting for Fractional Reserve Banknotes and Deposits or What s Twenty Quid to the Bloody Midland Bank PDF The Independent Review 7 3 423 41 ISSN 1086 1653 Archived from the original PDF on 2015 04 29 Retrieved 2012 11 30 Allen William October 1993 Irving Fisher and the 100 Percent Reserve Proposal Journal of Law and Economics 36 2 703 17 doi 10 1086 467295 JSTOR 725805 S2CID 153974326 Texan Gold Depository Diamond Douglas W Philip H Dybvig Jan 1986 Banking Theory Deposit Insurance and Bank Regulation The Journal of Business 59 1 55 68 doi 10 1086 296314 JSTOR 2352687 In conclusion 100 reserve banking is a dangerous proposal that would do substantial damage to the economy by reducing the overall amount of liquidity Furthermore the proposal is likely to be ineffective in increasing stability since it will be impossible to control the institutions that will enter in the vacuum left when banks can no longer create liquidity Fortunately the political realities make it unlikely that this radical and imprudent proposal will be adopted Diamond Douglas Philip Dybvig Winter 2000 Bank Runs Deposit Insurance and Liquidity PDF Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis Quarterly Review 24 1 14 23 Retrieved 29 August 2012 Krugman Paul April 26 2014 Is A Banking Ban The Answer New York Times Retrieved September 18 2015 Is A Banking Ban The Answer Paul Krugman Blog 2014 04 26 Retrieved 2020 03 11 External linksThe Chicago Plan Revisited IMF Working Paper Jaromir Benes and Michael Kumhof August 2012 In Defence of Fractional Monetary Reserves Pascal Salin Portals Business and economicsMoneyBanks