Debt-Based Monetary System
The reality of modern money as debt created by commercial banks through lending, and the conspiracy theories about how this system perpetuates inequality and elite control.
INVESTIGATION OVERVIEW
In modern economies, approximately 97% of money exists as bank deposits created through commercial bank lending (not printed by central banks). When a bank makes a loan, it creates new money as a deposit in the borrower's account. This system, known as endogenous money creation, means money is simultaneously created as debt. Conspiracy theories argue this system is a deliberate design to trap populations in perpetual debt and concentrate wealth. Critics of the system advocate for sovereign money creation (Chicago Plan, Modern Monetary Theory). While the debt-based system has real consequences for inequality and financial stability, the claim that it is a conscious conspiracy is disputed.
KEY CLAIMS
Banks create money out of nothing through the lending process
The debt-based money system ensures perpetual debt for the working class
The system was deliberately designed by bankers to concentrate power
Interest payments on money created out of nothing represent a hidden tax
The system causes unavoidable economic cycles of boom and bust
SUPPORTING EVIDENCE
The Bank of England published a 2014 paper confirming banks create money through lending
The vast majority of money (97%) is digital bank deposits, not physical currency
Private debt to GDP ratios have increased dramatically since the end of the gold standard in 1971
Economic cycles of boom and bust are intrinsic to the fractional reserve system
Academic economists including Richard Werner and Michael Kumhof have documented the money creation process
COUNTER ARGUMENTS
The money creation process is not a secret; it's how modern banking was designed to function
Bank lending is regulated and requires capital reserves, limiting arbitrary money creation
The alternative (government-created money) carries risks of hyperinflation and political manipulation
Debt-based systems have existed in various forms for thousands of years
Interest payments fund essential functions including savings accounts and pensions
TIMELINE
Federal Reserve established
Bretton Woods system established
U.S. ends dollar-gold convertibility (Nixon Shock)
Bank of England publishes 'Money Creation in the Modern Economy'
KEY FIGURES
Richard A. Werner
Economist who documented bank money creation
Irving Fisher
Economist who proposed the Chicago Plan for sovereign money
Ellen Brown
Author who advocates for public banking
ORGANIZATIONS
Bank of England
Central Bank
Federal Reserve
Central Bank
Positive Money
Advocacy
SOURCES
RELATED ENTITIES
PEOPLE
Richard A. Werner
Irving Fisher
Ellen Brown
ORGANIZATIONS
Bank of England
Federal Reserve
Positive Money
EVENTS
Federal Reserve established
1913
Bretton Woods system established
1944
U.S. ends dollar-gold convertibility (Nixon Shock)
1971
Bank of England publishes 'Money Creation in the Modern Economy'
2014
