Re: Anatomy of a credit crunch induced bankruptcy - Eric Janszen
The original credit money created by the loan and spent by the borrower is of course not returned to the bank upon default; it remains in the economy.
However, when a bank takes a write-off against a defaulted loan, the amount of money in the banking system as a whole will decline. The bank's "bank balance" will go down, just as the borrower's bank balance would have gone down had they paid off the loan. In effect, the loan is paid off, it's just that the source of funds is the bank's profits rather than the borrower. There is no free lunch for the banks in that respect (at least in theory); money is still removed from the economy.
Even if the bank can sell the loan's collateral, the proceeds they receive will still retire the loan -- the money received from the buyer will basically pay off the loan and destroy the associated money.
Originally posted by grapejelly
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However, when a bank takes a write-off against a defaulted loan, the amount of money in the banking system as a whole will decline. The bank's "bank balance" will go down, just as the borrower's bank balance would have gone down had they paid off the loan. In effect, the loan is paid off, it's just that the source of funds is the bank's profits rather than the borrower. There is no free lunch for the banks in that respect (at least in theory); money is still removed from the economy.
Even if the bank can sell the loan's collateral, the proceeds they receive will still retire the loan -- the money received from the buyer will basically pay off the loan and destroy the associated money.
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