Uses of Money
- Medium of exchange – trade
- Unit of account – establishes worth
- Store of money – money holding value over a period of time
- Fiat money – it is money because the government says so (like the dollar is worth a dollar because the government says so)
- Commodity money – examples are gold and silver coins (Commodity money is a good (no physical money is exchanged))
- Representative money – example is IOU (I owe you) backed by something tangible
- Durability – money is durable (physically)
- Portability – easy to carry
- Divisibility – you can make change in many different ways
- Uniformity – all has the same value and looks the same
- Scarcity – $2 dollar bill…
- Acceptability – money is accepted everywhere (very useful and acceptable)
- M1 money (use 75% of the time) – (M stands for money…) consists of currency in circulation, checkable deposits (demand deposits) , and travelers checks
- M2 money (use 25% of the time)– consists of M1 money +savings accounts + money market accounts + deposits held by banks outside the US
- a process by banks of holding a small portion of their deposits in reserve in loaning out the excess.
- Banks keep cash on hand (required reserves) to meet depositors’ needs.
- Banks must keep reserve deposits in their vaults or at the federal reserve bank
- Total Reserves
- Total funds held by a bank
- TR (total reserves ) = RR (required reserves ) = ER ( excess reserves)
- Excess reserve – those that are beyond required
- Banks can legally lend only to the extent of their excess reserves
- Reserve Ratio = RR / TR ( how much the bank can actually lend out)
- Banks can create money by lending more than their reserves
- The amount, set by the fed, is the Required Reserve Ratio
- Required reserves don’t prevent bank panics because banks must keep their required reserves (FDIC insures your money)
- Reserve requirement gives the FED control over how much money banks can create
- Typically the Required Reserve Ratio = 10%
- Control the nation’s money supply through monetary policy
- Issue paper currency
- Serve as a clearing house for checks
- Regulates banking activities
- Serves as a bank for banks (they issue out loans)
- It is a statement of assets and claims summarizing the financial position of a firm or a bank at some point in time
- It must BALANCE
- Assets (is what you own) = Liabilities (is what you own) + Net Worth
- Net Worth - is the claim of the owners against the firm’s assets
How Banks Work (T chart)
- Assets :
- Reserves:
- Required Reserves (rr) - % required by Fed. to keep on hand to meet demand
- Excess Reserves (er) - % reserves over and above the amount needed to satisfy the minimum reserve ratio set by Fed.
- Loans to firms, consumers, and other banks (earn interest)
- Loans to government = treasury security
- Bank Property – (if bank fails, you could liquidate the building/property)
- Liabilities :
- Timed Deposits (CD’s)
- Demand Deposits ($ put into bank)
- Loans from: Federal Reserve and other banks
- Shareholders Equity – (to set up a bank, you must invest your own money in it to have a stake in the banks success or failure)
- The reserve ratio is 5%. You deposit $1000 into a bank. How much is the bank required to add to its reserves?
- .05 X 1000 = $50 in reserve ratio
- How much money can the bank now loan out?
- 1000 (deposited) – 50 (reserve ratio) = $950 loaned out to next borrower
- 100 Percent Reserve Banking
- Now suppose households deposit the $1000 at “Firstbank.”
- Firstbank’s balance sheet :
- Deposits $1000 goes under liabilities (the claim of non-owners)
- Reserves $1000 goes under assets (don’t forget each side has to balance)
- 100% Reserve Banking has no impact on size of money supply
- Fractional-Reserve Banking
- Suppose banks hold 20% of deposits in reserve, making loans with the rest.
- Firstbank will make $800 in loans
- Firstbank’s balance sheet :
- Under assets reserves $200 and loans $800
- The money supply now equals $1800: the depositor still has $1000 in demand deposits, but now the borrower holds $800 in currency
- Thus, in a fractional-reserve banking system, banks create money
- The % of demand deposits that must be stored as vault cash or kept on reserve as Federal funds in the bank’s account with the Federal Reserve.
- The Required Reserve Ratio determines the money multiplier (1/reserve ratio)
- Decreasing the reserve ratio increases the rate of money creation in the banking system and is expansionary
- Increasing the reserve ratio decreases the rate of money creation in the banking system and its contractionary
- Changing the required reserve ratio is the least used tool of monetary policy and is usually held constant at 10%
- The money multiplier shows us the impact of a change in demand deposits on loans and eventually the money supply
- The money multiplier indicates the total number of dollars created in the banking system by each $1 addition to the monetary base (bank reserves & currency in circulation)
- To calculate the money multiplier, divide 1 by the required reserve ratio.
- Money multiplier = 1/reserve ratio
- Ex. If the reserve ratio is 25%, then the multiplier = 4.
- Type 1: Calculate the initial change in excess reserves
- A.k.a. the amount a single bank can loan from the initial deposit
- Type 2: Calculate the change in loans in the banking system
- Type 3: Calculate the change in the money supply
- Sometimes type 2 and 3 will have the same result (i.e. no Fed involvement)
- Type 4: Calculate the change in demand deposits
- Given the required reserve ratio of 20%, assume the Federal Reserve purchases $100 million worth of US Treasury Securities on the open market from a primary security dealer. Determine the amount that a single bank can lend from this Federal Reserve purchase of bonds.
- The amount of new demand deposits – required reserve =The initial change in excess reserves
- $ 100 million (20% * 100 million)
- $100 million - $20 million = $80 million in ER
- Determine the maximum change in loans in the banking system from this Federal Reserve purchases of bonds
- $80 million * (1/20%)
- $80 million * 5 = $400 million max in new loans
- Determine the maximum change in the money supply from this Federal Reserve purchase of bonds.
- The maximum change in loans + $ amount of Federal reserve action
- $400 million + $100 million = $500 million max change in the money supply
- Determine the maximum change in demand deposits from this Federal Reserve purchase of bonds
- The maximum change in loans + $ amount of initial deposit
- $400 million + $100 million = $500 million max change in demand deposits
- Fiscal Policy:
- Congress
- Tax or Spend
- Monetary Policy:
- Fed
- OMO (Open Markey Operations): Buy or Sell bonds/securities
- Required Reserves: The amount of money the bank is required to keep on hand
- Discount Rate: the interest rate charged by the Fed for overnight loans to commercial banks. Does not change the money supply directly
- Federal Funds Rate: the interest rate charged by one commercial bank for overnight loans to another commercial bank. FOMC sets a federal fund rate and then uses open market operations to guide the effective rate to the target rate
Loanable Funds Market
- The market where savers and borrowers exchange funds (QLF) at the real rate of interest (r%)
- The demand for loanable funds or borrowing comes from households, firms, government and the foreign sector. The demand for loanable funds is in fact the supply of bonds.
- The supply of loanable funds or savings comes from households, firms, government and the foreign sector. The supply of loanable funds is also the demand for bonds.
- Remember that a demand for loanable funds = borrowing (i.e. supplying bonds)
- More borrowing = more demand for loanable funds (shift right)
- Less borrowing = less demand for loanable funds (shift left)
- Examples
- Government deficit spending = more borrowing = more demand for loanable funds: DLF shift right, r% increase
- Less investment demand = less borrowing = less demand for loanable funds: DLF shift left, r% decrease
- Remember that supply of loanable funds = saving(i.e. demand for bonds)
- More saving = more supply of loanable funds (shift right)
- Less saving = less supply of loanable funds (shift left)
- Examples
- Government budget surplus = more saving = more supply for loanable funds: SLF sight right, r% decrease
- Decrease in consumers’ MPS = less saving = less supply of loanable funds: SLF shift left, r% increase

Hi Natasha! Just wanted to comment on how organized you have kept this blog. It makes things so much easier to read! I would like to add to what you wrote about loanable funds. When the interest is higher people have a disincentive to borrow. When demand slopes down, supply slopes upward.
ReplyDelete