John Law's Real Bills Doctrine says that banks can create fiat money backed by his assets
Originally, if a bank have one ounce of gold, then they are able to issue fiat money of corresponding value. The fiat money have the same purchase power as one ounce of gold, since they can redeem the gold at bank anytime
However, John Law went one step further, saying that if the bank have one acre of land, then they can issue fiat money of corresponding value, since they are backed by the value of that land
Adam Smith pointed out, this increased money supply will cause large inflation and will not help economy. However, his view is too academical, since the money creator will not be so foolish to use their new money to buy goods for daily consumption to trigger inflation, they will use those money to buy assets
Consider such a scenario:
The bank would start with a small amount of asset, say one acre land. They issue the money worth of one acre land, then bank can use those money to buy one more acre land. After they get the new land, they could issue money worth one acre land again, and use those money to buy another acre land...
After a while they have bought so much land and now the price of the land has increased, they can issue more money based on higher worth of their lands. They could keep doing this until they bought up most of the land in the country
And since the land price is not showing up in inflation statistics, they can keep buying like this for many years
To make it more aggressive, now they purchase not only land, but also debt, which is in fact future products and services. And purchasing debt is even better than purchasing land, since a high level of debt will put a downward pressure on consumption, so inflation will not be a problem no matter how much land they purchase
What does this mean?
If the money creation is based on the backing of assets, then money creator can acquire almost all assets if he just scale up his operation, without doing any meaningful work or giving anything valuable in return
On the contrary, gold or bitcoin is totally different, you can not issue money based on backing of anything, you must put real valuable resource to get it, this created an equal ground for value creation
Indeed. That's the trick of ANY form of fiat money. Seigniorage. It goes somewhere. It is even the case with bitcoin. It isn't the case any more with gold (except for a few gold mines).
Seigniorage is the fundamental problem of any issuing of money, other than a genuine asset which has a large "usage" value: the one issuing it, gets buying power in return for nothing. That is then taken on the back of those acquiring the new money.
The one who can issue money, can of course buy up the whole economy in the end. Whether this is by "backed" money, or "thin air" money doesn't really matter. The only advantage of "backed" money is that there will always be some finite supply of it, if the backing asset is a collectible, such as land or gold.
The one issuing money can use his seigniorage to make assets rise and fall and go against speculation and investment at will. If the central bank buys up gold with newly printed money, it increases the gold price and makes in fact the seigniorage go partly to those already holding gold. Later, they can dump that gold (they don't mind losing money as they can print it). If the central bank buys X or Y asset, they make rich those holding those X or Y assets before.
In this way, central banking (and some phone calls) is the perfect way to make "the friends of the state" hugely rich on the back of the people producing value. Central banking is the ultimate state theft of value and production.
The only "fair" forms of seigniorage are:
- the seigniorage that has been historically diluted (gold has had its seigniorage already millennia ago)
- the seigniorage that is in one or other way equally distributed (everybody can print his own amount of money)
- the seigniorage that is randomly distributed (like in bitcoin with very high volatility, long inflation period, and so on).