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CHAPTER 32 Creation of Money Two Definitions of the Money Supply, January 2005 M1 = $1361 billion Currency Outside banks $710 billion Other checkable.

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Presentation on theme: "CHAPTER 32 Creation of Money Two Definitions of the Money Supply, January 2005 M1 = $1361 billion Currency Outside banks $710 billion Other checkable."— Presentation transcript:

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2 CHAPTER 32 Creation of Money

3 Two Definitions of the Money Supply, January 2005 M1 = $1361 billion Currency Outside banks $710 billion Other checkable deposits $321 billions Checking deposits In commercial Banks $330 billion M2 = $6443 billion Money market mutual funds $704 billion M1 $1361 billion Savings deposits $4378 billion

4 The Banking System Bank Regulation  Deposit insurance (FDIC)  Moral hazard Problem

5 The Banking System Bank Regulation  Bank Supervision  Reserve Requirements

6 The Origins of the Money Supply How Bankers Keep Books  Banks keep balance sheets  Assets = liabilities + net worth  Assets include:  Liabilities include:

7 The Money Multiplier Banking system is not just a guard of the money supply This multiplying effect is the work of the infamous money multiplier. Each time a bank receives a deposit from a customer, it is required by the reserve requirement ratio set by the Fed (a.k.a. required by law) to keep in its reserves a fraction of the deposit The rest of the deposit can be lent out to potential borrowers. Called “fractional reserve system”

8 Fractional Reserve Banking The Goldsmiths Principle  Stored gold  Receipts used as money  Made loans Characteristics  Banks create money

9 Fractional Reserve System Balance sheet  Assets = Liabilities + Net Worth  Both sides balance Necessary transactions 

10 Reserve Requirements 9

11 AssetsLiabilities and Net Worth Lets create a bank… in the town of Vossdonium Transaction #1 Vault cash: cash held by the bank Sold stocks to acquire operating funds Balance Sheet 1: Vossome Bank CashStock Shares

12 AssetsLiabilities and Net Worth Transaction 2 Acquiring property and equipment Balance Sheet : Vossome Bank Cash Stock Shares Property

13 AssetsLiabilities and Net Worth Transaction 3 Commercial bank functions  Accepting deposits  Making loans Balance Sheet 3: Vossome Bank CashCheckable Deposits Property Stock Shares

14 Transaction 4 Depositing reserves in a Federal Reserve bank  Required reserves  Reserve ratio Reserve ratio = Fed establishes and varies rr within limits set by Congress rr helps Fed control lending abilities of commercial banks

15 AssetsLiabilities and Net Worth Transaction 4 Assume the bank deposits all cash on reserve at the Fed Balance Sheet 4: Vossome Bank CashCheckable Deposits PropertyStock Shares Reserves

16 Reserve Requirements Excess reserves Required reserves Example:

17 AssetsLiabilities and Net Worth Transaction 5a Granting a loan Balance Sheet 6: Vossome Bank Checkable Deposits Property Stock Shares Reserves Loans

18 AssetsLiabilities and Net Worth Transaction 6a Using the loan  $50,000 loan cashed Balance Sheet 6b: Vossome Bank Checkable Deposits Property Stock Shares Required Reserves Excess Reserves Banks can lend money in their vault that is above the minimum required reserve ratio. Loans

19 AssetsLiabilities and Net Worth Transaction 6b Bank buys government securities from dealer  Deposits payment into checking Balance Sheet 7: Vossome Bank Checkable Deposits Property Stock Shares Reserves Securities New money is created

20 The Banking System Multiple-deposit expansion Assumptions: A $100 bill is found and deposited Multiple deposits can be created

21 Bank (1) Acquired Reserves and Deposits (2) Required Reserves (3) Excess Reserves (1)-(2) (4) Amount Bank Can Lend; New Money Created = (3) Bank A $100 $20 $80 $80 Bank B $80 $16 $64 $64 Bank C $64 $12.80 $51.20 $51.20 Bank D $51.20 $10.24 $40.96 $40.96 The process will continue… The Banking System

22 21

23 The Monetary Multiplier Monetary multiplier = 1 required reserve ratio New Reserves $100 $20 Required Reserves $80 Excess Reserves $100 Initial Deposit $400 Bank System Lending Money Created Graphic Example = 1 R

24 The Monetary Multiplier Maximum amount of new money created by single dollar of excess reserves Higher R, lower m Reversibility  Making loans creates money  Loan repayment destroys money

25 Another Illustration of Money Creation Assume 20% legal reserve requirement Suppose Nina deposits $1,000 in her checking account at Citibank. T-account of Citibank: ______Assets________________Liabilities____________ Reserves Demand deposits Loans

26 Kevin borrows $800 from Citibank, and buys a computer at BestBuy BestBuy deposits Kevin’s check at Fleet Bank. Fleet Bank’s T-account: _____Assets________________Liabilities_____________ Required Reserves Demand Deposits Loans (Excess)

27 Vivian borrows $640 from Fleet Bank and buys a new outfit from Macy’s. Macy’s deposits Vivian’s check at Bank of New York. T-account of Bank of New York: ______Assets____________________Liabilities_______ Required Reserves Demand deposits Loans (Excess)

28 Total Demand Deposits After Lending and Re-lending by banks Banks Demand Deposits Citibank $1,000 Fleet 800 Bank of New York 640  + other banks + additional deposits ___________ = $ 5,000 Total

29 Banks and Money Creation The Process in Reverse: Multiple Contractions of the Money Supply  Banks reduce their loan commitments  Contraction in the money supply utilizes the same formula as for money expansion.

30 The Need for Monetary Policy Left uncontrolled, banks would: Changes in the money supply would exacerbate the business cycle One reason for monetary policy:  Prevent this behavior on the part of banks.


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