Hidden Seigniorage in the USA: How the “Missing” Trillions Can Solve America’s Government Financing Problem
April 1, 2026 — While politicians debate spending cuts, tax hikes, and endless debt-ceiling drama, the real solution to U.S. federal financing has been hiding in plain sight for over a century: the hidden seigniorage generated by private banks.
Most people still believe that “money is created by the government.” In reality, 97% of the U.S. money supply is created ex nihilo by commercial banks every time they issue a loan. That money, once repaid, does not disappear — it becomes “free capital” that circulates invisibly outside official M2 statistics, fueling the shadow banking system, private credit, hedge funds, offshore vehicles, and Eurodollars.
This is exactly the same structural gap we documented in Europe last month (see “BCE: Perché le statistiche monetarie di M2 nascondono il vero signoraggio occulto”). The mechanism is identical on both sides of the Atlantic. The only difference is the scale.
The Real Numbers (April 2026)
- Official M2: $22.67 trillion (Fed H.6, February 2026)
- Bank deposits created ex nihilo: ≈ $18.8–20 trillion (M2 minus physical currency)
- Shadow banking / NBFI assets: $45–55 trillion (FSB estimates)
- Multiplier effect of “free capital” / banking reflux: 2.5–3× official M2
In other words, the visible M2 statistic understates the true monetary creation capacity by a factor of 2.5 to 3. The “missing” money is the hidden seigniorage that currently flows almost entirely to private banks and financial intermediaries.
What Happens If We Make It Explicit?
The Sovereign Monetary Freedom Act (and the parallel European Quantitative Balancing framework) does one simple but revolutionary thing: it reclassifies bank-created deposits not as private bank liabilities toward customers, but as seigniorage liabilities toward the U.S. Treasury.
- The Treasury captures 97% of the seigniorage on every new dollar created.
- Banks retain a transparent 3% brassage fee for their role as intermediaries.
One-time stock effect (during the 24–36 month transition): ≈ $18.4 trillion of existing deposits converted → direct benefit to the Treasury. This alone covers the Biblical Jubilee (debt cancellation ≤ $250k per household, full principal on mortgages/student loans, 70–100% on corporate debt), pension protections, and transition compensation for compliant banks.
Ongoing annual flow: Current M2 growth of 4–5% generates $900 billion – $1.1 trillion of new money every year. 97% captured by the Treasury = $873 billion – $1.067 trillion of pure seigniorage revenue annually, just from the banking channel.
Compare that to the projected federal outlays for FY2026: $7.4 trillion. The Treasury can issue sovereign currency directly for productive investments (infrastructure, R&D, education, healthcare — tied to real GDP growth per Richard Werner’s Quantity Theory of Credit) and still have more than enough to fund everything without any federal taxes.
Proof from Real Bank Numbers
Take JPMorgan Chase (2025 results, published January 2026):
- Net income: $57 billion
- Total deposits: $2.559 trillion → Profit margin on deposits = 2.23%
The 3% brassage fee proposed in the reform is higher than what JPMorgan actually earns net today. Banks do not lose money — they simply lose the ability to hide the seigniorage.
Why M2 Is a Deliberate Blind Spot
Exactly as in Europe, the official monetary statistics (M2) stop at the point where the banking reflux begins. When a loan is repaid, the deposit is extinguished on the bank’s balance sheet — but the purchasing power does not disappear. It migrates into the unregulated layers (private credit, derivatives, offshore, NBFI) and continues to generate new credit. This is the perpetual motion machine of hidden seigniorage that currently benefits private shareholders instead of the sovereign.
The reform does not “print money out of thin air.” It simply makes explicit what is already happening — and redirects the benefit from Wall Street to the American people.
The Bigger Picture
This is not a left-wing or right-wing idea. It is a constitutional one. Article I, Section 8 of the U.S. Constitution gives Congress (and therefore the Treasury) the exclusive power “To coin Money [and] regulate the Value thereof.” The Federal Reserve Act of 1913 created a hybrid system that quietly outsourced that power to private banks.
By recapturing the hidden seigniorage, the United States can:
- Eliminate federal taxation progressively over three years
- Deliver a one-time Biblical Jubilee without chaos
- Fund productive investments that grow real GDP
- Create a Nash equilibrium in which banks, citizens, and the Treasury all have aligned incentives to defend the system
The same logic we have been developing for Europe applies here on a larger scale. The only difference is that America has the constitutional foundation to do it faster and more cleanly.
The question is no longer technical. It is political.
Do we continue to let private banks collect the hidden seigniorage that finances the government anyway — while citizens pay taxes and interest on a perpetual debt? Or do we make the mechanism transparent, sovereign, and productive?
The hidden trillions are already there. It’s time to stop pretending they don’t exist.
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