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The Hubris of Hybrids
Authors:Philipp Bagus  David Howden  Amadeus Gabriel
Affiliation:1.Department of Applied Economics I and History and Economic Institutions (and Moral Philosophy),Universidad Rey Juan Carlos,Madrid,Spain;2.Department of Business and Economics,St. Louis University – Madrid Campus,Madrid,Spain;3.Department of Finance and Economics,Groupe Sup de Co La Rochelle,La Rochelle Cedex 1,France
Abstract:In the pages of this journal, a fruitful debate has evolved on the ethical legitimacy of fractional-reserve banking. In this article, we respond to the new arguments raised by Evans (J Bus Ethics, 2014) as we clarify our (Bagus et al. in J Bus Ethics 128:197–206, 2015a) position on the unethical and illegitimate nature of fractional-reserve banking. Fractional-reserve banking is not a recent financial innovation (unlike, e.g., money market mutual funds) but represents a long-standing legal aberration. The co-mingling of two mutually exclusive financial contracts, deposit and loan, confounds the contracting parties’ purposes, intents, rights, and obligations. As a result, it creates unsolvable legal difficulties and ethical dilemmas. While these problems are most evident in the case of a bank run, they also arise when trying to answer the simple question of “who owns a deposit?”
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