Full Reserve Banking and Home Mortgages
December 19, 2007 by A.B. Dada
Filed under Full Reserve Banking
One question I hear often about full reserve banking is how a bank would supply capital (money) for a person borrowing a mortgage, or a loan towards buying a house. Since the bank can only loan out money that is deposited, and untouched, by others, some people see a problem in depositing money that is tied up for 30 years. Hopefully this article explains how such a system would work, and why it would be better than the current fractional reserve banking and central banking system.
Read the rest of this article at the full reserve banking site.
Related posts:
- Full Reserve Banking: What is a reserve?
- Credit Cards and Full Reserve Banking
- My Full Reserve Bank: Prosper.com
- How to fix the Federal Reserve, fiat money, and fractional reserve banking
- Negative Interest Rate
- Government market control without the Federal Reserve
- The Crash of the Banking Cartel
- Bailing out the Banks: Print Money versus De-hoarding
- Home mortgages: sneak in the data
- My fears about buying a home

