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Cut Wall Street Out! How States Can Finance Their Own Economic Recovery

by: Ellen Hodgson Brown J.D., t r u t h o u t | Feature

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(Photo Illustration: Troy Page / t r u t h o u t; Adapted From: AComment, ribarnica and austrini / flickr)

Pouring money into the private banking system has only fixed the economy for bankers and the wealthy; it has not done much to address either the fundamental problem of unemployment or the debt trap so many Americans find themselves in.

President Obama's $787 billion stimulus plan has so far failed to halt the growth of unemployment: 2.7 million jobs have been lost since the stimulus plan began. California has lost 336,400 jobs. Arizona has lost 77,300. Michigan has lost 137,300. A total of 49 states and the District of Columbia have all reported net job losses.

In this dark firmament, however, one bright star shines. The sole state to actually gain jobs is an unlikely candidate for the distinction: North Dakota. North Dakota is also one of only two states expected to meet their budgets in 2010. (The other is Montana.) North Dakota is a sparsely populated state of less than 700,000 people, largely located in cold and isolated farming communities. Yet, since 2000, the state's GNP has grown 56 percent, personal income has grown 43 percent and wages have grown 34 percent. The state not only has no funding problems, but this year it has a budget surplus of $1.3 billion, the largest it has ever had.

Why is North Dakota doing so well, when other states are suffering the ravages of a deepening credit crisis? Its secret may be that it has its own credit machine. North Dakota is the only state in the Union to own its own bank. The Bank of North Dakota (BND) was established by the state legislature in 1919, specifically to free farmers and small businessmen from the clutches of out-of-state bankers and railroad men. The bank's stated mission is to deliver sound financial services that promote agriculture, commerce and industry in North Dakota.

The Advantages of Owning Your Own Bank

So, how does owning a bank solve the state's funding problems? Isn't the state still limited to the money it has? The answer is no. Chartered banks are allowed to do something nobody else can do: They can create credit on their books simply with accounting entries, using the magic of "fractional reserve" lending. As the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas explains on its web site:

"Banks actually create money when they lend it. Here's how it works: Most of a bank's loans are made to its own customers and are deposited in their checking accounts. Because the loan becomes a new deposit, just like a paycheck does, the bank ... holds a small percentage of that new amount in reserve and again lends the remainder to someone else, repeating the money-creation process many times."

How many times? President Obama puts this "multiplier effect" at eight to ten. In a speech on April 14, he said:

"[A]lthough there are a lot of Americans who understandably think that government money would be better spent going directly to families and businesses instead of banks - 'where's our bailout?,' they ask - the truth is that a dollar of capital in a bank can actually result in eight or ten dollars of loans to families and businesses, a multiplier effect that can ultimately lead to a faster pace of economic growth."

It can, but it hasn't recently, because private banks are limited by bank capital requirements and by their for-profit business models. And that is where a state-owned bank has enormous advantages: States own huge amounts of capital, and they can think farther ahead that their quarterly profit statements, allowing them to take long-term risks. Their asset bases are not marred by oversized salaries and bonuses; they have no shareholders expecting a sizable cut, and they have not marred their books with bad derivatives bets, unmarketable collateralized debt obligations and mark-to-market accounting problems.

The Bank of North Dakota (BND) is set up as a dba: "the State of North Dakota doing business as the Bank of North Dakota." Technically, that makes the capital of the state the capital of the bank. Projecting the possibilities of this arrangement to California, the State of California owns about $200 billion in real estate, has $62 billion in various investments and has $128 billion in projected 2009 revenues. Leveraged by a factor of eight, that capital base could support nearly $4 trillion in loans.

To get a bank charter, specific investments would probably need to be earmarked by the state as startup capital; but the startup capital required for a typical California bank is only about $20 million. This is small potatoes for the world's eighth largest economy, and the money would not actually be "spent." It would just become bank equity, transmuting from one form of investment into another - and a lucrative investment at that. In the case of the BND, the bank's return on equity is about 25 percent. It pays a hefty dividend to the state, which is expected to exceed $60 million this year. In the last decade, the BND has turned back a third of a billion dollars to the state's general fund, offsetting taxes. California could do substantially better than that. California pays $5 billion annually just in interest on its debt. If it had its own bank, the bank could refinance its debt and return that $5 billion to the state's coffers; and it would make substantially more on money lent out.

Besides capital, a bank needs "reserves," which it gets from deposits. For the BND, this too is no problem, since it has a captive deposit base. By law, the state and all its agencies must deposit their funds in the bank, which pays a competitive interest rate to the state treasurer. The bank also accepts deposits from other entities. These copious deposits can then be plowed back into the state in the form of loans.

Public Banking on the Central Bank Model

The BND's populist organizers originally conceived of the bank as a credit union-like institution that would free farmers from predatory lenders, but conservative interests later took control and suppressed these commercial lending functions. The BND is now chiefly a "bankers' bank." It acts like a central bank, with functions similar to those of a branch of the Federal Reserve. It avoids rivalry with private banks by partnering with them. Most lending is originated by a local bank. The BND then comes in to participate in the loan, share risk and buy down the interest rate.

One of the BND's functions is to provide a secondary market for real estate loans, which it buys from local banks. Its residential loan portfolio is now $500 billion to $600 billion. This function has helped the state to avoid the credit crisis that afflicted Wall Street when the secondary market for loans collapsed in late 2007. Before that, investors routinely bought securitized loans (CDOs) from the banks, making room on the banks' books for more loans. But these "shadow lenders" disappeared when they realized that the derivatives called "credit default swaps" supposedly protecting their CDOs were a highly unreliable form of insurance. In North Dakota, this secondary real estate market is provided by the BND, which has invested conservatively, avoiding the speculative derivatives debacle.

Other services the BND provides include guarantees for entrepreneurial startups and student loans, the purchase of municipal bonds from public institutions and a well-funded disaster loan program. When the city of Fargo was struck by a massive flood recently, the disaster fund helped the city avoid the devastation suffered by New Orleans in similar circumstances; and when North Dakota failed to meet its state budget a few years ago, the BND met the shortfall. The BND has an account with the Federal Reserve Bank, but its deposits are not insured by the FDIC. Rather, they are guaranteed by the State of North Dakota itself - a prudent move today, when the FDIC is verging on bankruptcy.

The Commercial Banking Model: The Commonwealth Bank of Australia

The BND studiously avoids competition with private banks, but a publicly-owned bank could profitably engage in commercial lending. A successful model for that approach was the Commonwealth Bank of Australia, which served both central bank and commercial bank functions. For nearly a century, the publicly-owned Commonwealth Bank provided financing for housing, small business, and other enterprise, affording effective public competition that "kept the banks honest" and kept interest rates low. Commonwealth Bank put the needs of borrowers ahead of profits, ensuring that sound investment flows were maintained to farming and other essential areas; yet, the bank was always profitable, from 1911 until nearly the end of the century.

Indeed, it seems to have been too profitable, making it a takeover target. It was simply "too good not to be privatized." The bank was sold in the 1990s for a good deal of money, but it's proponents consider it's loss as a social and economic institution to be incalculable.

A State Bank of Florida?

Could the sort of commercial model tested by Commonwealth Bank work today in the United States? Economist Farid Khavari thinks so. A Democratic candidate for governor of Florida, he proposes a Bank of the State of Florida (BSF) that would make loans to Floridians at much lower interest rates than they are getting now, using the magic of fractional reserve lending. He explains:

"For $100 in deposits, a bank can create $900 in new money by making loans. So, the BSF can pay 6 percent for CDs, and make mortgage loans at 2 percent. For $6 per year in interest paid out, the BSF can earn $18 by lending $900 at 2 percent for mortgages."

The state would earn $15,000 per $100,000 of mortgage, at a cost of about $1,700, while the homeowner would save $88,000 in interest and pay for the home 15 years sooner. "Our bank will save people about seven years of their pay over the course of 30 years, just on interest costs," says Dr. Khavari. He also proposes 6 percent credit cards and 6 percent certificates of deposit.

The state could earn billions yearly on these loans, while saving hefty sums for consumers. It could also refinance its own debts and those of its municipal governments at very low interest rates. According to a German study, interest composes 30 percent to 50 percent of everything we buy. Slashing interest costs can make projects such as low-cost housing, alternative energy development, and infrastructure construction not only sustainable, but profitable for the state, while at the same time creating much-needed jobs.

    --------

    Ellen Brown developed her research skills as an attorney practicing civil litigation in Los Angeles. In "Web of Debt," her latest book, she turns those skills to an analysis of the Federal Reserve and "the money trust." She shows how this private cartel has usurped the power to create money from the people themselves, and how we the people can get it back. Her earlier books focused on the pharmaceutical cartel that gets its power from "the money trust." Her eleven books include "Forbidden Medicine, Nature's Pharmacy" (co-authored with Dr. Lynne Walker) and "The Key to Ultimate Health" (co-authored with Dr. Richard Hansen). Her web sites are www.webofdebt.com and www.ellenbrown.com.

  

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Undoubtedly by experience,

Undoubtedly by experience, the old desert guys realized charging ++% was a great way to gain in the short run, but in the long run actually DESTROYED he community->no usury laws.& the reason for this is very very simple.

North Dakota doesn't have a

North Dakota doesn't have a bank run by the international banksters? Well, people of North Dakota, expect an invasion soon by the US Federal gov't. The reason may very well be that you are housing Al-Qaeda(All-CIA-duh) or Taliban insurgents. Or perhaps they'll just make up some other reason. Because we can't have nobody making a decent life without the international banksters getting there obscene cut and put you all back in place. Shame on you, North Dakota. How dare you not support the obscenely rich lunatics that run this fragile world? How dare you?

OMG, it is not about little

OMG, it is not about little americans, it is about maintaining the full glory of the international $ gloobal currency--it is about amex, discover, mc, & visa cards the world over, this is how to maintain $upremacy as world currency for oil, trade, drugs, weapons & everything else: the $ as the currency of choice & necessity.

We are used to hear that the

We are used to hear that the State should not be active into the economy, because it is incompetent and is the "problem". There are more examples in the US of State run enterprises which function better than the corrupted Wall Street. I have no doubt that in the end this will be a solution, people will start pressuring to dismantle the gagsters approach to make money, which regularly plunge us into messy situation and jeopardize our future.

Lets have it....as of

Lets have it....as of yesterday!!! Our current private banking model is a parasitical fraud. We owe them nothing so far as allegiance is concerned, and considering that they actually never had 90% of the "money" they lent us, except for a sycophantish legal structure, we ACTUALLY owe them little or nothing more than the principle we borrowed. Off with the "too Big To Fail private banks!!!

The reason an economic

The reason an economic catastrophe is almost inevitable is because so few people are interested in the important truths that can save us. One such gem is Ellen H Brown's article above, on the urgency of adopting state public banking as a way out of the debt-servitude maze in which we are now trapped. Please follow the links to her website at http://webofdebt.wealthmoney.com and read as much as you can. Other than the immediate well-being of you and your family there is nothing else that compares in importance to the way money and wealth are being unjustly distributed today. Either we change to a more sustainable system or we perish as a civilization. Please find out what Ellen is talking about here.

Here is what I saw happened

Here is what I saw happened with banks: They handed out loans to jobless, credit-less, penniless, homeless people with explicit knowledge of their CEOs, board members and the politicos. The strategy: too big to fail so they would charge their bad loans to the taxpayers. Now the taxpayers understanding of the fiasco appears to be slowly turning into a giant fireball of anger that seems to get slowly out of control and is likely to consume the forest with one big conflagration. All the efforts so far are just garden hoses trying to stop a huge forest fire with strong winds... ANYONE HAS A REAL SOLUTION? NOT YET!!!

Fabulous idea, Ellen. I'm

Fabulous idea, Ellen. I'm guessing a lot of increasingly desperate people in positions of govt power are looking at your suggestion. This has to be the wave of the future? What's the alternative?

Interesting article.

Interesting article. However, I do believe that the relative economic success of North Dakota is rooted in the North Dakotan community, more so than in its state owned bank. A state owned bank can just as easily become a liability as an asset to its taxpayer owners. As in any business enterprise, prudent management is the key to success.

If it works in North Dakota,

If it works in North Dakota, why not all over the country? The underlying mechanism for the BND's success, and that of other state-owned banks seems to be the provision of stiff competition for the private-sector banks whose executives have abused their customers and led the march of our economy towards disaster. The same could be said for health insurance companies that helped put us in economic dire straits. These business behemoths have acted as monopolies that have hurt us all. Forcing them to compete with a viable public alternative, as is true with BND should work on the grand scale across the country. What's stopping us, except the lack of political will to do it?

Hi Ellen, What a nice

Hi Ellen, What a nice Halloween TREAT you have given us all! Here's what I just posted on Iowa Governor Chet Culver's contact web form (Maybe Schwarzenegger has a similar one?) : Carpe Diem, Governor Culver, seize the day! The economic crisis is your golden opportunity to become one of Iowa's greatest Governors. How? By restoring the MONEY POWER (as President Van Buren always wrote it) to We the People. Hopefully your web form will allow me to copy and paste the full text of Dr. Ellen Brown's most recent article that was posted on the Truthout Website today. [ http://www.truthout.org/1031091 ] Dr. Brown has agreed to meet with you via video conference, and please don't hesitate to call on me if I can help you to understand why we must end the PRIVATE banking of the FED and restore PUBLIC banking and money to the Rightful Sovereign - We the People - and what an enormous boon this will be to We the People of Iowa..

Remember that the BUsh

Remember that the BUsh stimulus payments went directly to the people, while the O'Bama payments went to the banks, and the citizens and companies have to borrow and pay interest to get any benefit.

QUICKLY NOW--- Let's save

QUICKLY NOW--- Let's save our Country from the Complete and Total Usurpation of OUR Government by Global Corporations under the CONservative foisted panacea-delusion of 'LESS GOVERNMENT' (of the people by the people for the people).. and their pathological hue and cry for Less and Less and Less Taxation and Regulation which actually means more '''Tax''' Revenue from US to Corporations through higher fees, less wages, less benefits, less infrastructure.., and Greater Global Corporate Monopoly Power and Greater Wealth Concentration among the Elite 1% who wish to rule us in the name of---> The Business of America is Business before ALL else Always and Forever Amen...

Like so much else, what

Like so much else, what stands between the people and solutions to their problems are the politicians (corporate bought and paid politicians). This solution would be an achievable solution except that it requires an imagination and integrity that will be hard for us to cobble together. Can we? If we are an army of citizens ready to march, yes. Are we such an army? Not yet. Can we become one? Only by turning off the corporate media, thinking for ourselves, organizing ourselves, and acting. And if we do that? We are likely to face the police power of the state, again acting on behalf of elite private interests and against the people. As Milton Friedman said, the social responsibility of business is profit. I.e., not social well-being, not clean environment, not quality education, not economic security. No, just profit. Will we the people take back power?

Thanks Ellen, greatly

Thanks Ellen, greatly appreciated, and have to include this ancient allegory. "There is an Eastern tale which speaks about a very rich magician who had a great many sheep. But at the same time this magician was very mean. He did not want to hire shepherds, nor did he want to erect a fence about the pasture where his sheep were grazing. The sheep consequently often wandered into the forest, fell into ravines, and so on, and above all they ran away, for they knew that the magician wanted their flesh and skins and this they did not like. "At last the magician found a remedy. He hypnotized his sheep and suggested to them first of all that they were immortal and that no harm was being done to them when they were skinned, that, on the contrary, it would be very good for them and even pleasant; secondly he suggested that the magician was a good master who loved his flock so much that he was ready to do anything in the world for them; and in the third place he suggested to them that if anything at all were going to happen to them it was not going to happen just then, at any rate not that day, and therefore they had no need to think about it. Further the magician suggested to his sheep that they were not sheep at all; to some of them he suggested that they were lions, to others that they were eagles, to others that they were men, and to others that they were magicians. "And after this all his cares and worries about the sheep came to an end. They never ran away again but quietly awaited the time when the magician would require their flesh and skins.

Ellen, The case studies

Ellen, The case studies with the state bank of ND, commonwealth bank in Aussie, and even better yet, economist Farid Khavari, Democratic candidate for governor of Florida's proposal for a Bank of the State of Florida (BSF). Farid Khavari has an excellent platform to compete against the incumbent Bush, and I hope he wins. I hope other candidates in the 2010 election pick up on Khavari's platform as their own. Khavari's platform is an educational platform to the people for alternative choices to the big banks that rule the Capitol today. I hope the people listen, learn, and take it to heart. Now, let's say Khavari's platform gains some traction and he wins the election and a state bank is set up. The other part of the educational platform is not just the bennies to be reaped from a chartered State Bank along the lines that he proposes, but we also have to educate the people of the benefits of boycotting the big banks, and transfering deposits new state bank charters and local community banks and credit unions. Americans who continue banking relationships at Citi, WFC, JPM and BAC are tantamount to supporting financial terrorism and the greatest transfer/exproriation of wealth in America today. Americans and lawmakers who continue to support these big banks are hollowing out the middle class that made America what it was. If Americans continue to support these big banks, America will soon look like Pottersville in Frank Capra's classic It's a Wonderful Life. What rings true in that epic movie Americans need to take to heart today. Americans must stop supporting the big banks and start supporting local banks and credit unions. There are untold blessings to be reaped from boycotting the big banks and supporting the local banks and credit unions. The opportunity cost of not doing so will be a disaster. We must counter the direction and media spin taken by our policymakers. Failing to do so, means we will reap untold curses, from which we can never forgive ourselves as a nation.

Ellen, The case studies

Ellen, The case studies you investigated with the state bank of ND, commonwealth bank in Aussie, and even better yet, economist Farid Khavari, Democratic candidate for governor of Florida's proposal for a Bank of the State of Florida (BSF) are excellent. The benefits are crystal clear, particularly the Farid Khavari initiative. Farid Khavari has an excellent platform to compete against the incumbent Bush, and I hope he wins. I hope other candidates in the 2010 election pick up on Khavari's platform as their own. Khavari's platform is an educational platform to the people for alternative choices to the big banks that rule the Capitol today. I hope the people listen, learn, and take it to heart. Now, let's say Khavari's platform gains some traction and he wins the election and a state bank is set up. The other part of the educational platform is not just the bennies to be reaped from a chartered State Bank along the lines that he proposes, but we also have to educate the people of the benefits of boycotting the big banks, and transfering deposits new state bank charters and local community banks and credit unions. Americans who continue banking relationships at Citi, WFC, JPM and BAC are tantamount to supporting financial terrorism and the greatest transfer/exproriation of wealth in America today. Americans and lawmakers who continue to support these big banks are hollowing out the middle class that made America what it was. If Americans continue to support these big banks, America will soon look like Pottersville in Frank Capra's classic It's a Wonderful Life. What rings true in that epic movie Americans need to take to heart today. Americans must stop supporting the big banks and start supporting local banks and credit unions. There are untold blessings to be reaped from boycotting the big banks and supporting the local banks and credit unions. The opportunity cost of not doing so will be a disaster. We must counter the direction and media spin taken by our policymakers. Failing to do so, means we will reap untold curses, from which we can never forgive ourselves as a nation.

In 1970 in San Francisco in

In 1970 in San Francisco in the Haight Ashbury victorian homes were redlined by lenders due to their age and condition. A local S&L was started by the neighborhood and a market was created. Time to leave Wall Street to the global economy minus any tax payer bail-outs and restore Main Street with a micro-economy we can trust.

Too big to fail is too big.

Too big to fail is too big. We just had eight years of no antitrust enforcement; time to dust off the Sherman and Clayton Acts. And it seems to me that at least Goldman Sachs was pulling a Ralph Reed act in that they got to play both ends of the same deal and make money coming and going while keeping both ends in the dark about what the overall company was doing. Wall Street doesn't hire the best Ivy League lawyers for nuthin'.

I'm curious. Why does Ron

I'm curious. Why does Ron Paul work so hard for Auditing the Fed (which he says will be a many-years long fight to an unsatisfactory end) instead of spreading the word about state banks as an alternative?

I followed the "German

I followed the "German study" link in Ellen's article to discover a huge amount of information available on this subject. (http://www.mkeever.com/kent.html) Ellen is only touching the surface here to peak our interest and we would all do well to learn more on her subject of study. For instance look up: WΓΆrgl experiment. And this video is very interesting: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RAAFGcBra5A

I do believe twas Kennedy

I do believe twas Kennedy that already attempted something similar...

Fascinating. And why can't

Fascinating. And why can't poor countries pool their resources to set up a global bank to help countries in crisis? That way, they wouldn't need to turn to the International Monetary Fund or other lenders who hamper their development with "conditionalities". Why don't we all go set up community banks to provide similar services in our city? How does one set up their own bank anyway? If only more people knew the answers to these kinds of questions. Keep writing!

To answer Rex Carlson: Says

To answer Rex Carlson: Says he "I'm curious. Why does Ron Paul work so hard for Auditing the Fed (which he says will be a many-years long fight to an unsatisfactory end) instead of spreading the word about state banks as an alternative?" The problem is, these state banks, while having much needed local accountability, are just smaller versions of the Fed, and exploit all of the practices that devalue our money and take advantage of us. First of all, any bank in this country would still be using the money that the Federal Reserve issues, and thus this currency would still be constantly subject to inflation and other manipulation. In addition, Paul would not advocate for any new model of banking that involves fractional reserve lending (as all banks do ). This is the magic multiplier that creates money out of thin air. it sounds great for everyone, but this is exactly the practice that has built up the bubble that so recently collapsed. unstable fortunes were built on this money from nowhere. this is inherently inflationary and inherently recessionary. Controlling money and credit is a right of the people, and we are witnessing what can happen when that power is used for the profit of few. If anyone would like to know more about how the Fed, the government and bankers manipulates our money, i highly recommend the Lew Rockwell show podcasts.

In response to Abigail,

In response to Abigail, credit generated by a state-owned bank is not at all the same thing as money generated by private banks on the fractional reserve system. Private bankers continually syphon profits out of the system, making it essentially an unsustainable Ponzi scheme. Credit generated by a publicly-owned bank is closer to a community currency system: borrowers create money whenever they take out loans, "monetizing" their own promise to repay. The money is extinguished when they pay the loan off. The interest goes back to the community (the government of the people who trusted the borrower with their credit), reducing the need for taxes. The system is eminently sustainable, as was shown in Benjamin Franklin's colony of Pennsylvania, which set up the ideal model with its provincially-owned bank.