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7-17-09, 10:15 am
I would categorize the financial sector as unproductive. In one sense this seems pretty obvious since they do not physically produce anything. But, apologists for the banks might say, this Smithian distinction is misleading. For the real criterion of whether the banks are productive or not is to be found in their balance sheets. It was, they would say, an archaic Calvinist prejudice on Adam Smith's part to tie productiveness to physical production. This criticism of Smith is made both by conservatives like Rothbard and by some marxist writers. The latter argue that the crucial question is not whether the banks produce anything physical, but whether they produce surplus value. Do they produce surplus value? Well they undoubtedly show a profit most years, so if one is content to look only at the form of things, then they would appear to be productive. But if we look in more detail at the national accounts we find the picture is not so simple. The banks do a variety of things, some of which can be portrayed as simple services, sold as a commodity, others are harder to portray in this way. In their accounts they show an entry for income from the provision of services. An example of this would be charging for clearing checks or for making payments into other accounts. However, what one sees when one looks at the UK banking sector is that such charges for banking services are insufficient even to meet the wage bills of the banks. For the general public, this is the main use of banks, but it is not their main source of revenue. That comes instead from profits on financial contracts. The first and oldest source of such profits is the charging of interest on their own capital which they lend out, and, the money of their depositors that they lend out. Over time the banks and other financial institutions have come to make a part of their revenue by trading in financial contracts of ever greater complexity and abstraction. Can any of this be regarded as productive? Whether they are productive or not, how are we to explain the much greater prominence in economic life of the financial sector? Unproductiveness of modern lending Suppose we have a public company, let us call it Redmond Autos, which is initially 100 percent owned by shareholders. The revenue from the cars it produces will then be split three ways: some to its suppliers, some to its employees, and the residual value to the shareholders. If this is now bought by a private equity company Rising Phoenix Holdings who finance their purchase with bank loans leaving the firm with large debts. A large fraction of what previously went as dividends to shareholders is now transferred to the banks as interest. It is clear that no additional value is created by such a change, and that in consequence the interest payments are just another contractual form that can be assumed by profit revenue. Suppose instead that a company is expanding and finances its expansion by credit from the bank. Here, arguably, the bank is playing an indirect productive role. It does not produce anything itself, but by channeling idle deposits to industrial investors, it allows the latter to expand production. A net growth in deposits by members of the public corresponds to income that has been earned but not spent, if the bank channels these to productive investors it allows that portion of the national income to be materialized in new capital equipment. But productive lending is now a relatively small fraction of what the great financial centers like London and New York do. Look at Figure 1, you see that the non-financial corporations are net lenders, not net borrowers from the banks. The net lending and borrowing in the system must balance so the banking system actually works mainly to channel profit from industry, and from overseas companies into the two sectors that are net borrowers: the state and private households. Some of the expenditure by the state will be on productive publicly owned assets – new highways, schools etc, but the larger part will go on current costs or unproductive items like new fighters and submarines. The money lent to the personal sector, will again partly finance new fixed assets: new houses, but again a large part will go on consumer credit.
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