The two-tier banking analysis framework applies equally to the United States (upper layer: the Fed; lower layer: N commercial banks; bottom layer: households). Dollar internationalization causes gaps in the balance sheet, but in practice they are not severe. By decomposing 2020 data through balance-sheet change tables (end-of-period minus beginning-of-period): direct finance does not create M2; in 2020 M2 growth surged from its usual ~5% to 25%, driven by the Fed’s unlimited-QE “four-step liquidity injection” (buying Treasuries + MBS) — in essence a deficit monetization in which the fiscal authority “bridges” through banks to the central bank, i.e., MMT (Modern Monetary Theory) in practice. How this ends if continued: no historical precedent, no answer.
The Framework As It Stands
This section is organized from compiled research notes: the original framework’s structure, terminology, and key formulations are preserved, including editorial bridges and external factual annotations; charts are drawn by the compiler following the structure of the original text.
Core agenda and hidden threads
The framework’s main-line judgment: the two-tier banking analysis framework applies equally to the United States (upper layer: the Fed / lower layer: N commercial banks / bottom layer: households). Dollar internationalization introduces off-balance-sheet gaps, but “not severely so.” Apply the framework used to analyze China directly to the US, using a balance-sheet change table (end-of-period minus beginning-of-period) to decompose 2020 and see clearly “why M2 growth surged from its usual ~5% to 25%.”
Two hidden threads:
- Hidden Thread A — Direct finance does not create M2: Direct finance is essentially a transfer of existing M2 (money from investors moves to enterprises), not an increase in M2. Therefore the 25% figure in 2020 must have an extraordinary force creating money.
- Hidden Thread B — Deficit monetization / MMT is this cycle’s substance: The fiscal authority uses “bank bridging” to ultimately sell government bonds to the central bank = the central bank directly lending money to the fiscal authority. This is called MMT in practice; how it ends is unknown and without historical precedent.
Ten propositions:
- The two-tier banking analysis framework applies equally to the US (upper layer: central bank / lower layer: N commercial banks / bottom layer: households); dollar internationalization causes off-balance-sheet gaps, but not severe ones.
- Direct finance does not create M2 (it is essentially a transfer of existing M2); therefore the surge to 25% in 2020 (versus the usual ~5%, crisis-period ~10%) must have an extraordinary money-creation force behind it.
- Decompose the 2020 Fed balance sheet using the change table: asset side Treasuries +0.62 trillion ≈ total increment = unlimited QE.
- Liability side: funds deposited by banks at the Fed (= base money) +$1.49 trillion; as the Fed buys Treasuries/MBS, government and bank deposits at the Fed increase correspondingly.
- Commercial banking sector total assets +0.35 trillion; mortgages securitized into MBS bought by the Fed → “deposits at the Fed” line items surge.
- The four-step liquidity injection: ① banks lend, creating deposits; ② banks buy Treasuries (government deposits increase); ③ fiscal spending; ④ (most critical) the Fed’s unlimited QE buys approximately $3 trillion+ from banks.
- Deficit monetization: countries legally prohibit the fiscal authority from borrowing directly from the central bank; the workaround = fiscal → bank → central bank “bridge,” functionally equivalent to the central bank lending money directly to the fiscal authority.
- MMT: the 2020 operation = Modern Monetary Theory in practice (continually injecting money via fiscal deficits); still contested academically; how it ends if continued is unknown, without historical precedent.
- The framework applies to all major mainstream economies using the two-tier banking system; each country differs only in the specific mechanics.
- Core conceptual correction: banks do not “take deposited money and lend it out” (in reality loans create deposits); practitioners must sort out this foundational concept.
Reasoning chain (full-chain US 2020 QE):
flowchart TD B1["Two-Tier Banking Framework Applies to the US\n(Dollar Internationalization Gaps, but Not Severe)"] --> B2["Direct Finance Does Not Create M2 (Stock Transfer)\n→2020 M2 Surged to 25% (Normally ~5%) — Extraordinary Money Creation Required"] B2 --> B3["Balance-Sheet Change Table (End Minus Start) — Decomposing 2020"] B3 --> B4["Fed Asset Side: Treasuries +2.36T · MBS +0.62T = Unlimited QE\nLiability Side: Banks' Deposits at Fed (Base Money) +1.49T"] B3 --> B5["Commercial Banks: Total Assets +2.84T but Corporate Loans Only +0.35T\nMortgages Securitized into MBS Bought by the Fed"] B4 --> B6["Four-Step Liquidity Injection: Lending → Buy Treasuries → Fiscal Spending → Unlimited QE Buys ~3T+"] B5 --> B6 B6 --> B7["Deficit Monetization: Fiscal → Bank → Fed Bridge = Fed Lending Directly to Fiscal"] B7 --> B8["= MMT in Practice; No Answer If Continued · No Historical Precedent\nFramework Applies to All Two-Tier Banking Economies"] B8 --> B9["Foundation: Loans Create Deposits, Not the Other Way Around"]
Key data anchors (2020 values cited in the course, not current data):
- US M2 growth rate comparison: normally ~5%, financial crisis ~10%, 2020 pandemic surge to 25%.
- 2020 Fed change table: asset side Treasuries +0.62 trillion (combined ≈ 1.26 trillion, bank deposits (base money) **+0.8 trillion.
- 2020 commercial bank change table: total assets +0.35 trillion, “deposits at the Fed” +$1.48 trillion (caused by mortgages securitized into MBS bought by the Fed).
- Four-step injection volumes: the fourth step — Fed unlimited QE bought Treasuries 0.62 trillion, other securities 3 trillion+.
⚠️ The figures above are empirical case values cited in the course (course estimate); for current-period or other-country judgments, one must obtain and label data from official sources such as the Fed’s H.4.1 balance-sheet release.
Application method (decomposing a country’s monetary injection using the two-tier banking framework, US 2020 QE template):
- First confirm structural applicability: Does the target country have an upper-layer central bank + lower-layer N commercial banks + bottom-layer households structure? The off-balance-sheet gaps from dollar internationalization are not severe; the same framework applies.
- Pull the change table: Subtract the beginning-of-period balance sheet from the end-of-period (central bank table + banking sector aggregate table), observe each line item’s “increment” over the year; assets and liabilities must still balance.
- Read the central bank side: What did the asset side buy (Treasuries/MBS → QE scale)? Where did the liability side grow (banks’ deposits at the central bank = base money)?
- Read the banking side: Total assets vs. corporate loan increment; did mortgages/Treasuries pass through securitization or get sold “pass-through” to the central bank (causing “deposits at the central bank” to surge)?
- Chain the four steps: lending creates deposits → banks buy Treasuries → fiscal spending → the Fed’s unlimited QE buys away ~$3 trillion+.
- Characterize the nature: Is this deficit monetization (fiscal → bank → central bank bridge = central bank lending directly to the fiscal authority)? Is this MMT in practice? Carry an honest caveat of “no historical precedent, no answer on how it ends.”
- Correct the common misconception: Always ground the analysis in the “loans create deposits” foundation from The Two-Tier Banking System: T-Accounts and Loans Create Deposits; never say “banks take deposits and lend them out.”
Compiler’s Perspective
Coordinates: Category = Monetary System & Circulation / axis_h = Shu / axis_v = Its Place in the Whole
Bridging layer
A person relying solely on the aggregate narrative “the Fed printed money” will skip the most critical step: direct finance does not create M2. Equity issuance and corporate bonds are positional shifts of existing M2, not net additions. To explain why M2 growth, normally ~5%, could jump to 25% in 2020, one must decompose the balance-sheet change table to see the source of the “extraordinary money-creation force” — the answer lies in the fourth step of the four-step injection: the Fed’s unlimited QE bought 0.62 trillion in MBS from banks, approximately 1.49 trillion), then amplified into broad money through the loan-creates-deposits mechanism.
The substance of deficit monetization is a “bridge” that circumvents legal prohibitions: national laws prohibit the fiscal authority from borrowing directly from the central bank, but the fiscal → bank → central bank path is functionally equivalent. Describing this path as “the printing press spinning faster” is a descriptive simplification; the actual mechanical differences determine the risk-release pathway: the bank layer is a real intermediate node, and mortgage securitization, the MBS market, and bank balance sheets are all components of the transmission chain — any abnormality in any link alters the landing point of monetary policy.
The framework’s exclusive claim: “no historical precedent, no answer” for MMT in practice is not a term of modesty — it is the most important piece of information. The 2020 figures (M2 25%, Treasuries +$2.36 trillion) tell us the scale; “no historical precedent” tells us there is no successful exit experience to draw on — these two pieces of information together constitute an honest judgment of the true risk of deficit monetization. Quoting either one alone is extracting half a conclusion.
Total Social Financing and Broad Money M2: Accounting Definitions and Divergence provides the accounting foundation for the M2 definition; The Zero-Rate QE Era: The Global Spread of the Monetary Experiment is the broader macro backdrop for this round of global diffusion; this article is the operational decomposition layer using the balance-sheet change table as empirical evidence.
See Also
- The Two-Tier Banking System: T-Accounts and Loans Create Deposits
- Total Social Financing and Broad Money M2: Accounting Definitions and Divergence
- The Zero-Rate QE Era: The Global Spread of the Monetary Experiment
- Central Bank Policy Tools and Monetary Policy Transmission
Sources
- Compiled research notes z-0193 · collected 2026-07
- External course (identity-stripped for collection), lectures 12-2 (primary) and 11-16 (mechanism foundation, see z-0192)