If I’m understanding you right, it’s a catch-22 and often the biggest reason small businesses globally suffer from traditional banking system - you have to have lots of funds to loan lots of funds, or show a high level of confidence in repayment. So yea, the credit journey doesn’t start out of nothing
Discussion
I think it’s even more insidious than that because the money (which is everybody else’s credit) is created out of nothing. loans come before deposits. so what banks are doing is writing themselves themselves claims on real assets that it is somebody else’s responsibility to pay off.
the whole “but access to credit is important to start and grow businesses” line is complete and utter bullshit because, as you say, you need assets to be claimed against to get the loans. If you don’t have them already, you get extra pwned because you stand to lose more than you put up if you can’t pay back the loan. so you take on inordinate risk, *in an environment of dramatic capital misallocation and some or other level of price inflation* and the bank gets nearly all the benefits.
none of this would be true with equity finance. literally none of it: no collateral, no undercollateralized loan exposure, no systemic capital misallocation, no mismatched risk, no circulation credit, no inflation, and arguably no “bank” as such: just an investment intermediary that has to manage its risks with no possibility of a bailout rather than literally assigning itself other people’s wealth.
Is this the new Allen tagline of 2023? “Where do banks get the assets from ?” Lol
You’re right - banks practice their fractional-reserve system - ideally low risk, and if high risk there’s new investment banks, credit unions (post Lehman brothers fiasco). We have credit guaranteed schemes by gov’t here up to 70% , but systemic privilege by race.
Equity financing is high risk, high returns. 10x returns or more, but 80% - 90% failure rate. Also lots of systemic issues globally