Interest rates match business activity to savings.

If I want to start some new business venture, I will compare what it costs me to borrow the money with what I expect to make from the venture. If I make more than the interest cost, I'll pursue the venture. Even if I already have the money, I could lend it out for roughly the same interest rate so I make (almost) the same comparison.

When interest rates go up, this tends to pull more money into savings (and thus away from consumption, freeing real resources). When interest rates go down, there's less reward for saving and consumption becomes relatively more attractive.

In a properly functioning free market, interest rates match non-consumption (savings) with business activity. "Money" in this process is a coordination mechanism for real resources. By delaying consumption (saving) I make real resources (concrete and steel, etc) available for business use.

When the central bank intervenes to suppress interest rates (perhaps by permitting fraudulent activity by commercial banks, perhaps by directly extending credit from the central bank), this increases the attractiveness of business activity (because the alternative is less attractive) and increases the attractiveness of consumption (because the alternative is less attractive). Thus real resources are withdrawn from business availability (and into consumption) just as demand increases. This is inflationary and disruptive.

Note that this happens even if the bank lending is only for productive business ventures. While lending for consumption is an important phenomenon, the shift towards consumption I am describing is the consequence of lower interest rates and lower incentive to save, not necessarily low cost for personal borrowing.

And if the question is "Where does the money supply come from under full-reserve banking?" the answer is the ground. We dig it up and stamp it into coins

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Discussion

Credit in a full-reserve system is created when individuals (banks, businesses, etc) extend credit at their own expense. The difference to the current fractional reserve system is that the bank can only lend out of funds they genuinely control (ie haven't promised to hold ready for withdrawal).

When I buy a certificate of deposit I lose the claim on my money. This is an extension of credit by me to the bank. It is not inflationary because I lose the funds. Fractional reserve credit creation is inflationary because I continue to claim the funds (and so does whoever borrowed them).

Credit ends with money payment, while money does not end.

So no, mining companies do not create credit.

Credit, currency and money are all different things. I don't doubt that digital currencies will be used in future. I very much doubt that such a thing as digital money is even logically possible.