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Published byClifford Cross Modified over 9 years ago
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1 Money Creation ©2006 South-Western College Publishing
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2 In the Middle Ages, what was used for money? Gold was the money of choice in most European nations
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3 Who were the founders of our modern-day banking? Goldsmiths, people who would keep other people’s gold safe for a service charge
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4 What was the first currency? People would use the receipts they received from goldsmiths as paper money
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5 How did the early goldsmiths act as the first banks? Some goldsmiths made loans and received interest for more gold than the actual gold held in their vaults
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6 What is fractional reserve banking? A system in which banks keep only a percentage of their deposits on reserve as vault cash and deposits at the Fed
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7 What are required reserves? The minimum balance that the Fed requires a bank to hold in vault cash or on deposit with the Fed
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8 What is a required reserve ratio? The percentage of deposits that the Fed requires a bank to hold in vault cash or on deposit with the Fed
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Money Creation When a bank makes a loan from its reserves, the money supply increases.
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10 What are the three steps in the creation of money? Accepting a new deposit Making a loan Clearing the loan check
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11 Accepting a new deposit, what conclusion? Transferring currency to a bank and moving deposits from one bank to another do not affect the money supply (M1)
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12 Making a loan, what conclusion? When a bank makes a loan, it creates deposits, and the money supply increases by the amount of the loan because the money supply includes checkable deposits
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13 Clearing the loan check, what conclusion? Now the money can be used for new purchases
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14 What is the money multiplier? The maximum change in the money supply due to an initial change in the excess reserves banks hold
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15 What is the money multiplier equal to? 1 / required reserve ratio
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The Money Multiplier How much money is eventually created in this economy? Original deposit= $ 100.00 First National lending= $ 90.00 [=0.9 x $100.00] Second National lending= $ 81.00 [=0.9 x $90.00] Third National lending= $ 72.90 [=0.9 x $81.00] Total money supply= $1,000
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17 Can the multiplier be smaller than indicated? Yes, because of cash leakages and the chance that banks will not use all of their excess reserves to make loans
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18 What would the Fed with inflation? Decrease the money supply What would the Fed do with unemployment? Increase the money supply
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19 What is monetary policy? The Fed’s use of - open market operations in discount rate in required reserve ratio
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20 What are open market operations? The buying and selling of government securities by the Federal Reserve System
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Open-Market Operations The Fed conducts open-market operations when it buys government bonds from or sells government bonds to the public: u When the Fed buys government bonds, the money supply increases. u The money supply decreases when the Fed sells government bonds.
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22 What is the discount rate? The interest rate the Fed charges on loans of reserves to banks
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Changing the Discount Rate The discount rate is the interest rate the Fed charges banks for loans. u Increasing the discount rate decreases the money supply. u Decreasing the discount rate increases the money supply.
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24 What would the Fed do if we have inflation? A higher discount rate discourages banks from borrowing reserves and making loans
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25 What would the Fed do if we have unemployment? A lower discount rate encourages banks to borrow reserves and make more loans
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26 What is the federal funds market? A private market in which banks lend reserves to each other for less than 24 hours
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27 What is the federal funds rate? The interest rate banks charge for overnight loans to other banks
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28 What would the Fed do if we had inflation? A higher federal funds rate discourages banks from borrowing reserves and making loans
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29 What would the Fed do if we had unemployment? A lower federal funds rate encourages banks to borrow reserves and make more loans
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30 What is a required reserve requirement? The Fed determines how much a financial institution must keep in reserve as a percentage of its total assets
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31 What is the required reserve ratio? That percentage the Fed stipulates that financial institutions must keep in reserve to meet its reserve requirement
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Changing the Discount Rate The reserve requirement is the amount (%) of a bank’s total reserves that may not be loaned out. u Increasing the reserve requirement decreases the money supply. u Decreasing the reserve requirement increases the money supply.
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33 If the reserve ratio is one tenth, what is the multiplier? 1 1/10 = 10
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34 What would the fed do if we had inflation? Increase the reserve ratio What would the fed do if we had unemployment? Decrease the reserve ratio
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35 Is changing the reserve ratio a popular monetary tool? No, changing the reserve ratio is considered a heavy- handed approach and is thus infrequently used
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36 What are the shortcomings of monetary policy? Money multiplier inaccuracy Nonbanks Which money definition should the Fed control? Lag effects
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