Taxpayers will be banks’ deposit insurance scheme backstop
The bank deposit insurance scheme just announced by government is no more then a licence for banks to create even more money out of thin air than they already do and be less responsible about who they lend it to, knowing the taxpayer will bail them out if they get it wrong.
Taxpayers and bank customers will end up
footing the bill for the new scheme as banks will pass on
additional costs in their lending rates and taxpayers will
be the final backstop for any bad bank decisions.
Banks already have the right to take money out of depositors’ accounts to bail themselves out should they get into financial trouble.
Why should banks which
are, in the main, overseas owned corporate businesses, get
bailed out for bad decisions when no such largess applies to
other major New Zealand businesses like Fonterra, Fisher &
Paykel Healthcare, or A2 milk.
The big four Australian
based banks pulled six billion dollars in profit out of the
pockets of New Zealanders last year and those profits
continue to increase every year.
Those profits should
be funding the banks’ own retail deposit scheme.
Additionally there should be a re-instatement of a reserve to assets ratio where banks are required to hold a substantial value of reserves with the central bank.
The Bank of England, the German Central Bank,
and our own Reserve Bank, confirm that our money supply is
created by banks out of thin air when they lend to
customers.
The Reserve Bank (the country's central
bank) should take over some of that money supply creation
and use those funds for government and local body projects,
to reduce the exposure of the commercial banks.
Those
three measures would mean a taxpayer funded retail deposit
scheme was not necessary.
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