It is not even money or capital that creates value. From what I hear the real value, which means more than 99% of the real capital flowing around is constituted of debt.
Debt generates value. Every time a debt is created, value is created. Without debts every bank would go bankrupt, thus the economy with it.
Oh, its even worse then that. The economic mess we are in is really just the tip of the iceberg and it could get a whole lot worse if we don't come to a screeching halt right now and start figuring out a new way of doing things.
To do a bit of explaining, to make it clear exactly why things are much worse then they look on the surface right now, to understand all of this mess, you need to understand one term, its called a derivative. A derivative is any financial instrument which is derived from the inherent value of something else that's tangible. In other words, an ear of corn has value, a barrel of oil has value. If you have a house and a mortgage, that's fine. When you start doing mortgage backed securities, packaging and bundling, that's a derivative.
There are right now, derivatives with a notional value worth over
700 trillion dollars. In other words, if everyone cashed out at once, you would need to have 700 trillion in cash, and of course there isn't that much money.
So you had all of these hedges and derivatives and puts and calls, and in all this, all anyone cared about was making the minimum monthly payment on their credit card bill. In other words, to service the 700 trillion dollars in notional value derivatives, they had to pay a certain amount of cash every month, and God forbid they should all come due. What happened with all of these bailouts, which are now around 12.2 trillion in the US if you
add them all up, is the government chasing a 700 trillion dollar derivatives bubble down the drain.
There are only three things only anybody needs to know about the way money works around the world today.
One.
Fiat currency. What is money? Its not a resource, its a piece of paper. Its only a symbol, it doesn't equate to anything in the real world, it's fiat, it has no more real value then monopoly money. It's created out of thin air because somebody turned on a printing press. Before 1933 in the US, we had the gold standard. You could go into a bank and get your paper money exchanged for gold coins. In the UK, There was time when the pound sterling actually meant a pound of sterling silver. With rare metal backed currencies, there was only so much gold or silver out of the ground, it was tangible, you couldn't print gold,
it was something real. You cannot print more money than there is energy to back it up. It's that simple.
Two.
Fractional Reserve Banking. If I were a banker, and you were to bring me in a 10 dollar deposit, I could make 90 dollars worth of loans off of just those 10 dollars in my drawer. It's all calculated on the premise that not everybody is going to come in and want all their cash all at once. That's called a
run on the bank, and its what happened at the crash of the 1930s. So, the financial masterminds of this system have calculated the odds, and said "ok, well, under normal conditions, the odds of this happening are very low." So when I lend now a total of 100 dollars based on that 10 dollar deposit, that's money that I create out of thin air. That means that, in order to pay off the loans whoever gets that money has to make more money still to feed it at the bottom to pay the bank, so that the bank can create still more money.
Three.
Compound interest. In simplest terms, compound interest is money added into the principle of a loan for the servicing of the loan, giving the lender money for the opportunity cost of lending money out. So the borrower has to make more money to feed money back to the lender so they can lend out more money to make still more money. You know, in both the Bible and the Qu'ran, there are passages forbidding the taking of interest on loans. Of course, the religious right pays no attention to the passage in Leviticus saying
not to collect interest while they zero in with a laser guided focus on another
passage from the same section of the bible because it justifies their homophobia. Anyway, after all collapse of the credit card bubble and the housing bubble, I think I can pretty safely say that most of us know how compound interest works. The higher the interest rate on your credit card, for those people who had 20-25% cards, that means they're creating that much more money, if they don't pay cash every month.
What I have just described, is a pyramid scheme. We live in an infinite growth paradigm, which requires growth forever. It's not that Bernie Madoff was a pyramid scheme, or Stanford was a pyramid scheme, the entire economy is a pyramid scheme. The whole global economy cannot be sustained, it requires infinite growth.
The human species cannot grow forever. We do not have the resources on Earth for it and our space programs are underfunded and decades behind where they'd need to be to make the difference by going to space. We live on a finite planet with finite resources, and we're using an economic model that requires us to grow forever or the whole system collapses. The entire world is in debt to itself, there is no real money left, its all debt. If all the debts came due every country on earth would be bankrupt tomorrow. Its a very complex problem.
Iceland dealt with it the right way. They reformed their government, threw their bankers in jail,
forgave their loans, and are now further into their economic recovery then anyone else. We in the US haven't forgiven the loans, haven't pursued criminal charges against any of the banks, and no one is even talking about the possibility of changing the fundamental issues with the system that led to the crisis, and is leading us towards a bigger crisis. We cannot pay off our loans, there is more debt then there is money and so the loans will never be paid. We cannot make the money we need to pay of the loans because that requires the creation of more debt in order to do. The system is broken in a very fundamental way. We're dealing with a long term structural crisis in the way we arrange our economic and financial systems. It wasn't as big of a deal when we had cheaply and easily accessed frontiers and new resources were constantly being found to tap. But we're beginning to run up against the hard limits of what our planet can provide. We don't even need to pollute the world to screw ourselves at this point. All we have to do is run out of oil or some other vital resource.
So you have finite energy and you have a financial paradigm which demands infinite growth and we're rapidly approaching the point of human history where the infinite growth paradigm collides with something that is more powerful than money is.