Following on from my post about fixing the Greek debt crisis, here are the numbers for Italy.
Italian national debt currently stands at around €1,937 billion, that's €32,107 per citizen.
To generate that sum using fractional reserve banking, a bank would need to have 8.6967% of that sum, namely €168.5 billion.
So,
suppose we set up a bank with a special "Italian National Debt
Cancellation" account. People could pay money into the account, and when
the sum of €168.5 billion is reached, the account is frozen, the bank
creates €1,937 billion out of thin air, lends the money to the Italian
government, and the entire national debt is paid off. The loan would
have very favorable terms under which the government would have to pay
the money back after 1000 years with 0.000% interest.
On average, each citizen would have to pay €2,792 into the account to activate the mechanism.
In 2011, Italian taxpayers paid €76 billion
in interest charges to the banking sector. It follows that the €168.5
billion needed to finance the scheme would be paid off in well under three
years.
No comments:
Post a Comment