There is nothing wrong with fractional reserve banking. The problem is when you have fractional resrve banking + central bank (or similar regulations). Then you get all the problems. But fractional reserve banking alone is not a problem, and its even positive because it helps the allocation of capital and stabilicies the swings due to changes in the demand for money.
I recommend this blog as an starting point to learn why free banking (fractional reserve WITHOUT a central bank) is positive:
http://www.freebanking.org/ Also, this article by George Selgin:
http://www.independent.org/publications/tir/article.asp?a=774This is how the banking system (all the way up to the Federal Reserve) works today, and by doing so, it effectively increases the money supply - if a bank has X amount of deposits, they keep X/10 amount in their vaults, and loan out the other 90%. Both the depositor and the loan recipient think they have the money - so there is (a perception at least) that there is more money than before. (This is called fractional-reserve banking, and it is (or has been) the basis of credit-fueled economic growth, increasingly so through the hundreds of years since its invention by the Medicis...)
Anyway, as the loaned amounts are re-deposited at other banks, the cycle repeats itself, and as a result, the effective money supply can increase many-fold above and beyond the supply of "base" physical (or in this case, virtual) currency. This higher-order money supply would then include not only actual Bitcoins, but Bitcoin-denominated demand-deposit accounts and loan accounts at banks -
No. It depends on the system. Under a free banking system (fractional reserve WITHOUT a central bank) the banks tend to only accept gold (or in this case bitcoins) as base money, they dont accept notes of other banks.
Accepting notes of other banks as base money only happens when there are regulations, like we have now, that protect the banks (FDIC, central banking) and allow them to overexpand the supply of money, creating debt and inflation.
Obviously, such a system would be vulnerable to a "run on the bank", and institutions like FDIC could insure individual banks against such eventualities... while failing to prevent systemic risks (such as the near-collapse of the banking system that happened in 2008).
Actually, history shows that free banking system (fractional reserve without a central bank) are remarkably stable and wihtout too many bank runs. The banks know that there is no one to protect them and are forced to behave because of fear of going bankrupt. Fear and greed always balancing each other. If you take the fear away with a central bank, fdic, and other regulations then banks start to misbehave and you have things like the 2008 collapse you mentioned.
But, I see no reason why this same entire edifice of fractional-reserve banking, with all its inherent risks, could not or would not be rebuilt on a foundation of Bitcoins, assuming they became popular.
So in other words, this community will have put in all this huge effort to build up a new "inflation-proof" currency, only to find that it still ends up being prone to inflation as a result of central bank/government manipulation anyway, as the banking system (with its shady accounting practices) multiplies the effective money supply way out of proportion to the underlying asset... (At least by up to about a factor of F, if the reserve requirement is 1/F.)
Fractional reserve alone is not inflationary. Once banks reach the zone of equilibrium they mantain the reserve ratio in a range, thus the money supply remains stable, only reacting to changes to the demand for money (this is a positive effect of fractional reserve).