Perpetual Money Growth To Pay Interest
Summary of Model #1

The grower can accomplish the feat of borrowing money and repaying with interest because the payment of interest does not come from the expansion of the quantity of money. It comes, instead, from the increase in the product in which he deals i.e. corn seed.

Has this little economic system benefited from these transactions?

The quantity of money has not increased (or decreased) at all.

The amount of corn seed, however, has increased by 1,200 bushels.

Transactions Summary
Grower Dealer Bank Total
Dollars  $ 325  $ (500)  $ 175  $ 0  
Corn Seed 900 BU 300 BU 0 BU 1200 BU
         
Balance Summary
Grower Dealer Bank Total
Money
Beginning Balances  $ 0  $ 2,250  $ 1,250  $ 3,500
Ending Balances  $ 325  $ 1,750  $ 1,425  $ 3,500
Change  $ 325  $ (500)  $ 175  $ 0
 Corn Seed 
Beginning Balances 0 BU 1200 BU 0 BU 1200 BU
Ending Balances 900 BU 1500 BU 0 BU 2400 BU
Change 900 BU 300 BU 0 BU 1200 BU

It might help to summarize the results of these transactions by actor:

Grower Dealer* Bank System Total

Gained $325 plus

900 BU of corn seed.

Gained by the market value of 300 BU of seed less $500** Gained $175 interest income. Whole system gained by 1200 BU of corn seed.

*At a market price of $1.88 to $2.00 the dealer's accounting profit could amount to $64 to $100.
     ($1.88 X 300Bu) - $500 = $64  or  ($2.00 X 300Bu) - $500 = $100.

**Corn sold for $1,000 less corn bought for $1,500.

The payment of interest in any monetary transactions has to do with the amount or value of the goods for which the money is traded, not the amount of money paid.

Note: By saying that the whole system gained by 1200 bushels of corn, I do not imply that the system as a whole has any ownership in those additional bushels. The owners may consume or exchange that corn on their own volition. In this scenario every actor has gained by a combination of the shift in resources and money. The only quantifiable measure of the gain to this economy consists of the 1200 bushels of corn.

Let's look at the details...
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