A Paper Presented by Tarek El Diwany Under The Title
A Paper Presented by Tarek El Diwany Under The Title
A Paper Presented by Tarek El Diwany Under The Title
Utilisation profit present value ($) Utilisation profit present value ($) Utilisation profit present value ($) ($) per annum for period ($) per annum for period ($) per annum for period 100 100 87.0 75.6 150 150 130.4 113.4 200 200 173.9 151.2
1 2
Here, C is seen to forecast the highest present value for the utilisation of the resource and is therefore willing to borrow the highest sum in bank financing. Hence, 'C-type' bidders tend to acquire resources in preference to A and B-type bidders. (Note that C depletes the resource entirely after year 10). Any interest rate in excess of15% increases the commercial bidding advantage in favour of C, whilst lower interest rates destroy this advantage in favour of B. In most 'real world' examples that are constructed, the higher the interest rate, the more the commercial advantage in favour of aggressive utilisation. The future outcome(desertification, pollution etc.) is irrelevant to the bidder since the contribution of cash-flows at distant dates does not impact substantially upon the present value calculation. Hence, C does not worry about the loss of the entire resource after year 10 under his utilisation plan (yields after this date are forecast at 0). Since money itself is created as part of an interest bearing loan under fractional reserve banking, the shadow of interest is cast across all real world processes that involve the use of money. Resource depleting utilisation and other 'short-termist' investment patterns are but one form in which this shadow appears. Another is in the pricing of commercial transactions. An example of this that is particularly relevant to Islamic banking is the emergence of a forward price at a premium to the current (or 'spot' price) for many commodities. Imagine that the spot price of commodity X for cash payment is $1000 per ton and the annual interest rate is10%. To store one ton of the commodity, a charge of $10 per annum in advance is incurred. A commodity dealer is now asked by a client to supply one ton of commodity X in one year's time with payment being made in one year's time. In order to supply one ton of the commodity at year 1, the dealer must buy it today and store it for one year. In order to buy the ton of commodity X today,the dealer must borrow $1010 at 10% interest (sufficient to pay the purchase price and the advance storage costs) and repay $1111 at time one year. The minimum price at which the dealer can agree to sell the commodity to his client for delivery in one year is therefore $1111. This is the one year arbitrage free forward price for commodity X. Any lower a price would incur a loss for the dealer. Any greater a price and the dealer will lock in a profit on the transaction. By way of comparison, were the annual rate of interest to be 0% in this example, the one year arbitrage free forward price would be $1010 per ton.Notice that the rate of interest is a crucial determinant of the arbitrage free forward price. Islamic banks conduct what is essentially the above transaction under the murabahah contract. Such a bank might buy commodity X at $1000 per ton and thereafter deliver it for payment by the client of $1111 in one year's time. Where interest based dealers borrow money from the money market to finance a forward transaction, the Islamic banks finance the operation by drawing on their depositors' funds at a 'profit sharing' rate. In this case, the difference between the spot price and the forward price is $111. The Islamic bank might keep $10 of this difference, pay$10 to the storage agent, and return the remaining balance of $91 to the depositors. Nonetheless, it is demonstrably the case that were interest rates to be zero, market forward prices would be very close to spot prices in many cases, and therefore the profits to be had from this kind of commodity murabahah would be minimal, if anything. In other words, the commercial success of murabahah substantially depends upon the continued existence of the interest based financial system. Model 2 Leverage Financial leverage, or gearing,arises in the adoption of a financing pattern that comprises both debt and equity. Commonly the debt component will form the most substantial part of the overall financing amount. Hence a business venture may be financed using $100 of equity and $900 of debt at 10% interest per annum. Or in another form, a speculator may purchase $1000of a given commodity in the market paying a
The next model demonstrates the application of leverage to a competitive equilibrium. Here, three competing businessmen, A, B and C, each have equal amounts of capital at their disposal and these amounts are fully invested within their businesses. The total revenues earned by the three businesses combined are $3,000 per annum, which are shared equally among A, B and C. All three businessmen experience a rate of return on assets of 20% per annum. C now approaches a banker and negotiates aloan at 10% interest in sufficient amount to purchase the businesses of A and Bat book value. Note that the possibility of achieving economies of scale need not impact C's business logic. It is sufficient that a lender of funds should be prepared to lend to C at a sufficiently low rate of interest. Neither is it disadvantageous to C that the return on assets drops from 20% to 13.3%. C's motivation is to maximise his return on equity which rises from 20% to 40% per annum as a result of the leveraging operation. The following tables demonstrate:
A Before C undertakes leverage Annual revenue Annual total costs Annual profit Equity 500 300 200 1000 500 300 200 1000 500 300 200 1000 B C
Leverage underlies the commercial logic behind many corporate take-overs in the world today. The frequency of leveraged take-overs would be greatly reduced were it not that the banking system is able to create the huge sums of money required for them through loans at interest. Historically, the emergence of banking has largely been attributed to the commercial requirements of the Industrial Revolution. It may be at least as true that the emergence of the Industrial Revolution was largely attributable to the money creating activities of the newly developing banking system. Leverage is a key factor here. The dark Satanic mills that once bore the ire of Victorian writers, have today been replaced by the vast warehouses and monocultured housing estates of the large conglomerate. The village butcher, baker and grocer have disappeared from the high street to reappear as employees of a few dominant retailers who have leveraged the value in their brand name. Thus does the individual move from empowered small businessman to disinterested employee, from member of a world rich in variety to a world of sameness. We may see PC World, Dixons and Currys competing in the high street for our business, but in reality they all belong to the same holding company.Because all sides in the leveraging process (bank, businessman and take-over target) see benefits from its operation, leverage has become a common feature of the interest based economy. If left unbridled, it will have a far-reaching social impact upon society. Model 3 Debt Most standard texts on the subject of modern banking provide a description of the creation of deposits by the banking system, the so-called deposit multiplier. In the following example, there are three Banks, A, B and C. Each operates a 20% reserve ratio,meaning that for each 100 received in deposits 80 are lent to the bank's borrowers. Initially there are 100 of modern state money (notes and coins) in circulation, none of which is deposited with the commercial banks. If the holder(s) of this state money deposit all the notes and coins with Bank A, that bank's balance sheet will read :
ASSETS cash LIABILITIES deposits 100 100
To meet its reserverequirement, Bank A retains 20 of the deposited sum in cash and lends theremaining 80. Having done so, Bank A's balance sheet appears thus :
ASSETS cash loan LIABILITIES deposits 100 20 80
The borrower of the64 in turn spends this amount and the individual receiving it deposits it withhis bank, Bank C. Bank C's balancesheet now reads:
ASSETS cash LIABILITIES deposits 64 64
In this example, the amount of deposits outstanding in banks A, B and C is now 244. This is also the total money supply in this simple economy since it represents the amount of money that is available to fund immediate expenditure by cheque. 100 of the money supply is composed of state money with the remaining 144 comprising bank money. The process finds its limit (assuming the full expenditure of all borrowed amounts and the maintenance of minimum reserve ratios by all banks receiving subsequent redeposits) when the total amount of deposits in the banking system reaches 500. This amount is given by the quantity of state money initially deposited, multiplied by the inverse of the reserve ratio (100 * 1 / 0.2 = 500). Before the intermediation of the banks in the financial system, the money supply stood at100, which was entirely comprised of state money. The banks have reasoned that a substantial amount of depositors' funds will not be withdrawn on one day, an assumption that from time to time throughout banking history has proven disastrously wrong. This system is especially unstable in times of economic and political turbulence if large numbers of depositors wish to withdraw state money at short notice. (The printing of more than 20 billion of state money in the form of paper notes prior to the Millennium in the United Kingdom is an example of the preparations that a central bank undertakes in order to ensure the availability of reserves to depositors at commercial banks.) The interpretation given to multiple deposit expansion is a benign one in most conventional treatments of the subject. Here, it is seen as a sophisticated form of fraud in which commercial banks manufacture money for lending at interest. Though the money manufacture process cannot be easily identified upon examination of an individual bank balance sheet, the truth is quite apparent when one examines the banking system as a whole. The following statistics illustrate. Money Supply and Bank Lending (Amounts: 1997)
UK bn state money (M0 proxy) a Wide money aggregate (M4 proxy) b bank lending to public sector bank lending to private sector 31.45 835.86 42.57 973.37 Japan Yn trn 62.09 578.90 406.40 578.79 Malaysia RM bn 82.89 291.80 16.37 445.95
Wide money aggregate (M4 proxy) b bank lending to public sector bank lending to private sector
a
and b : statistics for money supply are supplied by the country source: IMF International Financial Statistics Yearbook 1998 Editor's note: the previously published tables for Money Supply and Bank Lending contained disaggregated data for 1992 and showed M1 in place of M0 for Japan and Malaysia. Consistent aggregated data for 1997 is now shown above.
Four important general features characterise the fractional reserve system as described above. Firstly, with every unit of bank money created there is a corresponding amount of debt. Repayment of this debt likewise destroys an equal amount of bank money. Hence, attempts to repay aggregate debt can cause a monetary contraction that in turn leads to an economic recession. Secondly,since debt grows at interest and balance sheets must balance, bank money supply must increase in line with the rate of interest. The 500 of bank money on deposit with the banking system at 10% for one year must necessarily increase to 550 after one year. Hence, ceteris paribus, the higher the rate of interest, the higher the rate of growth of bank money supply. The tendency towards money supply growth in an interest based economy must be contrasted with that occurring under a true profit sharing system. Here, if 500 is invested in economic activity, then whatever the outcome of the investment process (profit or loss) there will still be 500 of money supply at the end of the investment period. In other words, money supply growth need not accompany the process of financial intermediation in a monetary system where investment transactions are profit-sharing by nature and fractional reserve banking is prohibited. Thirdly, there may be insufficient money in existence to repay the debts created by the banking system. This fact places an unprecedented degree of power within the ambit of the bankers, since, again generally speaking, they are collectively able to foreclose on debtors unless new money is forthcoming. Hence the emergence of the fourth point. In order for new money to be forthcoming,the bankers or the state must manufacture it. Since the bulk of this new money is manufactured in the process of lending, both public and private debt must increase in the long run. These points made, I wish to conclude by introducing my latest thinking on the matter of money creation, for contemplation and comment. If it is true that the banking system does not create sufficient (bank) money to repay both the principal and the interest on the loans that it makes, it is also true that new money must continually be created by either the state or the banking system in order for existing debts plus interest to be repaid. Hence I propose that if the amount of newly created bank and state money together substantially exceeds the interest due on previously created bank money, then a period of monetary boom may in due course develop.Conversely, if the amount of new money created by the state and the banking system is substantially less than that required to pay the interest sum on existing debt, then a period of widespread debtor default (in other words recession) must ensue. This implies that recession may occur even where money supply growth continues. Researchers may therefore be advised to look for a decrease in the rate of increase of money supply, and relate this to the prevailing average rate of interest, when examining monetary causes of economic recession in the interest based economy (for more on this point see here). In all of the above I have used the terms 'general', 'approximate' and 'substantial' quite liberally. I hope that this reflects not superficiality in the treatment of the subject, but rather the essential level at which the theories of the Western financial establishment and its business schools are to be criticised. Events attributable to real factors (productivity changes for example) and more detailed monetary factors(for instance the term structure of interest rates) can of course be incorporated into any model that attempts to reflect the above ideas quantitatively.
Notes:
1. A History of Money, John F. Chown, Routledge, 1994, 1st. Ed., p.189 2. The Global Trap, Martin & Schumann, Zed Books, 1997, 1st. Ed., p. 23,quoting UNDP Human Development Report (New York, July 1996) 3. The General Theory of Employment Interest and Money, J. M. Keynes, The Macmillan Press Ltd., 1973 Ed., p.128 - 129 4. A History of Money, John F. Chown, Routledge, 1994, 1st. Ed., p.46 49