kenberg, on 2011-July-16, 08:10, said:
If your employer gives you 30000 bucks in banknotes then it means that the government (or is it the FED? Here in UK the two are the same more or less) owed your employer 30000 bucks before and now the government owes you 30000. This is because a bank note is a debt certificate issued by the FED. If they transfer 30000 to your bank account then it could mean that your employer's bank used to be owed 30000 by the fed which balances the bank's 30000 debt to your employer, but now it is your bank who is owed 30000 by the FED (and it turn it owes 30000 to you). In practice the two banks will not usually involve the FED in such transactions but adjust their mutual credit sheet, and of course the banks 30000 debt to you (or your employer) is not entirely backed by FED credits but can be invested in assets that give a higher yield.
The government (or the FED or whoever is in charge of the US monetary policies, dunno how it works by you) can control money production by requiring banks to back a certain percentage of their debts by FED credits (in the form of banknotes or otherwise). Say banks are required to back 20% of their debts by FED credits. That would mean that the total amount of "money" (i.e. balances of bank accounts) would be limited to 5 times the FED debt to the banks. This would limit the amount of money people and companies could easily spend (since not all vendors will accept payment by other means than transfer from bank accounts, or cash) and thereby limit the circulation of money. Limiting the money supply in that way could lead to less inflation than would otherwise have happened (prices dropping when money are in short supply) or it could lead to recession (companies getting less business because potential buyers don't have money to pay with). Monetarists and keynesians disagree about which of the two effects is more pronounced (keynesians believe it will largely affect the inflation) but they agree that both will happen to some extent.