H O W A N E C O N O M Y G R O W S A N D W H Y I T C R A S H E S
36
achievement tend to repay loans at higher rates.
As a result,
these types of business plans tend to attract willing lenders.
Much like Darwin’s idea that natural selection produces
hardier species, this lending
discipline tends to produce
healthier companies and a stronger economy.
But this does not occur when fi nancial performance
becomes secondary. Loans
made to individuals or
enterprises that do not succeed in creating a needed
innovation or expanding productive
capacity tend to weaken
the overall economy by wasting the supply of savings.
But as we will see later in the book,
the creation of a
constantly expanding money supply, and the government’s
seemingly limitless
ability to take on debt, have hidden the
fact that real credit is limited by a fi nite supply of savings.
People now assume that all that
is needed for a functioning
credit market is willing borrowers. But like any other resource,
savings must be accumulated before it can be lent out.