In our imaginations, Gringotts is the quintessential bank. It is well constructed, has vaulted hallways and is full of gold. When you want to explain to a young reader with little experience of financial affairs roughly what a bank is (as Rowling did), you would say it is a safe place to put your money, accessible when required. As Hagrid quipped, ‘yeh'd be mad ter try an' rob it’.
But does Gringotts fulfil the roles of a financial institution as we
would understand it today? That is to say; does it serve the wizarding community
by efficiently allocating their capital, earning income (i.e. via interest) in
the process? Do wizards even need a conventional financial institution, or are
they happy with a very large vault to hold their gold coins?
Financial Institutions - a recap (I'll keep it brief!)
Financial institutions allocate capital by transferring money from
lenders (i.e. the bank’s depositors), who have less immediate need for it, to
borrowers, who have more immediate need for it. The ‘techy’ term for this is
credit creation and it is most commonly achieved via the loan system,
residential mortgages being the best-known example here. Borrowers pay a higher
rate of interest, lenders receive a lower rate, and the bank takes a cut.
Credit creation should boost economic growth by allowing value-enhancing
projects to occur more quickly than they otherwise would have done (imagine how
long it would take you to save for a house before you could buy it outright!),
and it is a signal of confidence in the economy. Along with such things as an
independent legal system and an exchangeable currency, credit creation is
considered a cornerstone of modern economics.
Do the Weasleys need a mortgage?
If wizards could use magic to make anything, then presumably they would
not need money. They could ‘magic’ all their required items and so scarcity
would not exist. The absence of scarcity would also render unnecessary the
study of economics (err…yay?)** as the study of choice optimization in a world
of limited resources.
In the Potterverse, scarcity still exists. Rowling tells us it is so
via Gamp’s law, which essentially says that you can’t make something out of
nothing. So we can assume that magic, like technology, acts as an enhancer to
underlying economic fundamentals. It can accelerate and polish, but it cannot
add or remove.
Wizards, therefore, must work for a living (cue niche jobs such as
quidditch players and curse breakers). It also follows that their wants and
needs are not satisfied by their current incomes because if they were, the
Weasley children would not need to buy second-hand school books. So there is
demand for credit in the Potterverse, which probably means that the Burrow (the
Weasleys’ house) has a 95% Loan-to-Value mortgage. Such high ‘leverage’ would
be problematic for the Weasleys if they couldn’t cover their interest and capital
installments, the consequences of which we are all familiar with given recent
economic history.
Yes they do...and that's where Gringotts steps in
Clearly Gringotts makes an income, how else
can is Goblin owners pay their staff and feed those massive dragons?
They would probably earn some income from
vault fees, and from the actual process of minting coins (called Seigniorage,
basically 'taking a cut off the top'). However, in an economy where Gringotts
is a state-sanctioned monopoly over a critical industry, it seems likely that
the Goblins would engage in credit creation if there were demand for it. The
rewards would be too lucrative to miss!
Indeed Rowling gives us one example of
money-lending in the Potterverse, where Ludo Bagman (the Tri-Wizard cup organiser)
borrows money from the Goblins at an usurious rate for gambling activities, in
what looks to be the first wizarding payday loan. Nonetheless wizards don’t seem
to be overly fond of banking; otherwise they would presumably manage Gringotts
themselves.
What's with all the gold coins?
But how can the Goblins lend money when the
stock of money seems fixed? A key requirement for credit creation is
flexibility in the money supply. That is to say, if Gringotts has 100 Galleons
deposited by savers, they cannot loan out all 100 (thereby maximizing their
income from interest) whilst keeping 10 galleons in reserve for savers' instant
access.***
In the real world, the money supply problem
was historically solved by banks issuing their own notes, backed by the gold or
other assets they had in their vaults. The process was eventually transferred
to central banks to prevent over-issuance of notes (thus leading to inflation).
Scottish banknotes are a hangover of this old practice, although today they are
bound by the Bank of England’s monetary policies.
It seems likely then that Gringotts follows
a similar process. They must either make coins when they need them to lend, or
they must issue notes backed by the Galleons in their vaults. But as we said,
Rowling tells us that you can't make something from nothing, and mining gold
must be time-consuming even for magical beings like Goblins.
Credit creation, on the other hand, needs
to be immediately responsive to consumer demand. So when the Weasley children
need new school books, they don’t have time for the Goblins to mint some new
coins. A better banking solution would be for the Goblins to loan them some
pre-existing Galleons from say, Harry's vault, and replace those with a note
that says 'Gringotts owes the bearer of
this note (currently Harry) X amount of Galleons'.
And if Harry were willing to take that note
instead of Galleons buy a new Firebolt broomstick, and it was then used by the
Quidditch shop to pay their suppliers and so on, then the note has been
accepted as a medium of exchange. In other words, it is money too!
Exchanging confidence for notes...now
what’s the spell for that? Creditum
facere?
PS -
I am aware that there are a lot of technical arguments around credit
creation, its inflationary effects and whose responsibility it ultimately is etc
(Central Bank vs commercial banks), which I didn't have a chance to address
here so please excuse any omissions.
** Response of
Economics undergraduates when polled on this issue.
***Contact
me if you would like an explanation of how this process, called Fractional
Reserve Banking, works using zero technical terms!
This is part two of a poponomics series on 'Potternomics'- the economics of Harry Potter. Check out the first part here.