Sekerke / Hanke | Making Money Work | Buch | 978-1-394-25726-3 | www.sack.de

Buch, Englisch, 368 Seiten, Format (B × H): 185 mm x 257 mm, Gewicht: 728 g

Sekerke / Hanke

Making Money Work

How to Rewrite the Rules of Our Financial System
1. Auflage 2025
ISBN: 978-1-394-25726-3
Verlag: Wiley

How to Rewrite the Rules of Our Financial System

Buch, Englisch, 368 Seiten, Format (B × H): 185 mm x 257 mm, Gewicht: 728 g

ISBN: 978-1-394-25726-3
Verlag: Wiley


The Global Financial Crisis broke the monetary system. Here's how to fix it.

In Making Money Work: How to Rewrite the Rules of Our Financial System, Matt Sekerke and Steve H. Hanke deliver a rigorous and fascinating exploration of the monetary economy. You'll find a detailed and clear roadmap of how and why fiat money is created and destroyed, its connections to the broader economy, and the objective mechanisms that underwrite and maintain its value.

In their exploration, Sekerke and Hanke solve many problems and puzzles and shed light on several important questions:

- Why economists misunderstand the structure and function of the monetary system
- The central role of the commercial banking system in fiat money regimes, and why commercial banks are not like other financial intermediaries
- The economic and regulatory constraints on bank money creation
- The interplay between banking and capital markets in funding investment projects
- How the “banks” that dominate the international financial landscape distort the lines between banking and capital markets business
- Why banking regulation and fiscal policy determine and constrain monetary policy to an equal or greater extent than central bank actions

Sekerke and Hanke trace important post-crisis policy developments and sketch the broad strokes of a new operating model that would restore the performance of the monetary system and make better use of aggregate savings:

- Making neutrality the explicit goal of monetary policy, properly understood
- Increasing the supply of bankable projects and keeping them on bank balance sheets
- Breaking the financial system's fatal attraction to land and real estate
- Reducing regulatory distortions in lending markets
- Reforming universal banking institutions and stimulating competition
- Transitioning to a quantity-based monetary policy framework

An engaging and incisive guide to the global systems of money and banking, Making Money Work is destined to become a sought-after classic for bankers, finance professionals, policymakers, regulators, academics, and laypeople with an interest in money and banking.

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Weitere Infos & Material


Foreword xvii

Introduction xix

Part One: How Money Works: Institutions of the Monetary Economy 1

Chapter 1: Rethinking Monetary Economics 3

Macroeconomics Without Money 4

Broad Money and the Banking System 5

From Interest-rate Policy to Quantity-based Policy 7

Neutral Monetary Policy 9

Productive Capital Markets 9

Chapter 2: Fiat Money Systems 13

Specifying Money So That Money Matters 14

Money Is Essentially an Abstract Measure of Value 14

Money Consists in a Claim or Credit 16

The State, or an Authority, Is an Essential Basis for Money 18

Money Is Not Neutral in the Economic Process 19

Fiat Monetary Standards 21

Metallic Standards 21

Standards After Metallic Standards 23

Foreign Exchange and the Quest for an International Monetary Standard 25

Revisiting the Foundations of Monetary Economics 27

Chapter 3: The Institutional Structure of the Monetary Economy 35

The Government Sector 36

The Fiscal Authority 36

The Monetary Authority 38

The Consolidated Government 39

The Commercial Banking System 41

Deposit Creation by Individual Banks 43

Fallacious Accounts of Bank Funding and Deposit Creation 45

Financial Intermediaries 48

Asset Managers 49

Money Market Funds 50

Asset-backed Securities 51

Consolidated Financial Intermediation Sector 53

The Nonbank Public: Nonfinancial Firms and Households 54

Nonfinancial Business 54

Households 56

The Rest of the World 57

The Money Supply and Its Connections to the Nonbank Public 58

The System of Claims as a Foundation for Monetary Theory 60

Chapter 4: Financial Intermediation in the Capital Markets 67

Savings and Investment: The Standard Macroeconomic Story 68

Savings and Investment: The Microeconomic Foundations 70

The NPV Criterion 71

Information Asymmetry 72

Equity Rationing 74

Revising the Growth Model 75

Financial Intermediation and Project Stratification 75

Chapter 5: Credit Creation by the Commercial Banking System 81

Savings and Investment: Expanding the Standard Story 82

The Set of Bankable Projects 85

Maturity Transformation and Bank Risk Management 88

Credit Risk Management 89

Interest Rate Risk Management 91

Liquidity Risk Management 93

Economic Growth with Credit and Capital Markets 96

Chapter 6: Universal Banks and the Banking–Capital Markets Boundary 103

Complementarities and Competition in Banking and Capital Markets Business 106

Risk Transformation in Securitization Markets 108

Risk Transfer Contracts 111

Bank Lending to Nonbank Financial Institutions 114

Risk Management in Universal Banks 116

Part Two: A Broader View of Monetary Policy 121

Chapter 7: Analytical Frameworks and Basic Monetary Facts 129

The Equation of Exchange and the Demand for Money 130

The Cambridge Equation 132

The Equation of Exchange in Economic Theory 132

Divisia Broad Money 135

Constructing Divisia Indices 136

Comparing Divisia and Simple Sum Aggregates 138

Sources of Divisia Money 141

Divisia Money by Sectors and Strata 144

Evolution of Bank Balance Sheets from 1945 to 2023 149

Broad Trends 150

Finer Details 153

Bank Lending Versus Capital Market Finance 156

Three Big Questions 163

Chapter 8: The Regulation of Universal Banks 173

Bank Capital Regulation 176

Defining Bank Capital 177

Capital Adequacy Before the Basel Era 179

Capital Adequacy After the First Basel Accord 180

The 1996 Market Risk Amendment 182

The Monetary Policy Impact of the Basel I Era 183

The Problem of the Trading Book 184

Regulatory Capital Under Basel III 187

Bank Liquidity Regulation 189

The Liquidity Coverage Ratio 190

The Net Stable Funding Ratio 194

Summing Up 195

Chapter 9: Monetary Aspects of the Government Budget 203

Stable Government Debt Dynamics and the Monetary Standard 205

Stability Conditions 205

Deposit Insurance 208

Fiscal Influences on Aggregate Conditions 209

Central Bank Transactions in Government Obligations 210

Government-sponsored Enterprises and Financial Agencies 211

Monetary Consequences of GSE Guarantees 213

The Federal Home Loan Bank System 214

Crowding-out in Capital Markets 216

The Disaggregated Budget Arithmetic 217

Some Examples of Sector-level Fiscal Influence 219

Sectoral Impact of the Fiscal Impulse from Quantitative Easing 220

Appendix 9.A Propagation of a Fiscal Impulse 223

Chapter 10: Central Bank Policy 231

Central Bank Policy Implementation Before and After the GFC 233

Quantitative Easing and Its Consequences 234

Reestablishing Control Over Short-term Interest Rates 237

The Path to Normalization and the COVID Interventions 238

Structural Changes in the Reserve Market 242

Interest Rate Policy Transmission and Asset Prices 245

An Unintended Period of Steady Broad Money Growth 247

Prospects for Future Interest Rate Policy 251

Part Three: Rewriting the Rules of Our Financial System 259

Chapter 11: Defining Neutral Monetary Policy 261

Neutral Monetary Policy 262

Defining Neutrality 264

Why Neutrality? 266

Efficient Use of Global Savings 267

Formation of Investable Projects 268

Formation of Bankable Projects 269

Chapter 12: Universal Banks in the Monetary System 271

Competition in Commercial Banking 273

Competition in Capital Markets 276

Competition Within Universal Banks 277

Competition Versus Financial Stability 278

Governance 279

Regulation 281

Chapter 13: The Base of Investable and Bankable Projects 285

Of Savings Gluts and Safe Assets 286

Shifts in the Balance of Domestic Saving 287

Safe Assets as a Sink for the Saving Glut 288

Après le deluge 289

The Pathological Character of Land and Real Estate 290

Investable Projects Involving Land 290

The Bankability of Investable Projects Involving Land 292

Exposure of the Banking System to Land Values 294

Is Technology Making Fewer Projects Bankable? 296

How to Expand the Base 297

Chapter 14: Rewriting the Rules 303

Toward a New Central Bank Operating Model 304

Errors of the Old Monetarism 305

Targeting Divisia Money 306

Reserve Management 309

Standing Facilities 309

Monitoring the Distributional Impact of Broad Money Growth 311

Fixing Bank Regulation 311

Splitting the Banking Book and the Trading Book 312

Neutral Credit Risk Weights 314

Liquidity Risk Management 318

Underwriting, Pricing, and Innovation 318

Using Savings More Efficiently 320

Reducing Government’s Footprint in the Capital Markets 320

Unwinding the Federal Reserve Balance Sheet 322

Unfinished Business 324

Appendix 14.A Neutral Credit Risk Weights 326

About the Authors 331

Index 333


MATT SEKERKE is a Managing Director at SEDA Experts, Senior Macro Advisor at Hiddenite Capital Partners, a Fellow at the Institute for Applied Economics, Global Health, and the Study of Business Enterprise at the Johns Hopkins University, and a Visiting Fellow in the Department of Finance at Durham University Business School. He is the author of Bayesian Risk Management (Wiley Finance, 2015).

STEVE H. HANKE is a Professor of Applied Economics and Founder and Co-Director of the Institute for Applied Economics, Global Health, and the Study of Business Enterprise at the Johns Hopkins University. Hanke has served as an advisor to governments and heads of state in Europe, South America, and Asia. Currently, he serves as Chairman of the Supervisory Board of AMG Critical Materials in Amsterdam. He is the co-author of Capital, Interest, and Waiting (Palgrave Macmillan, 2024) with Leland B. Yeager.



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