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Econ: What are Reserve Requirements, Excess Reserves, and Multiple Expansion of Deposits? 18 Views


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00:00

And finance Allah shmoop What our reserve requirements excess reserves

00:06

and the multiple expansion of deposits in the US The

00:12

Fed a k a The Federal Reserve a k a

00:14

The central bank keeps a watchful eye on reserve banks

00:18

who keep a watchful eye on commercial banks So yes

00:21

there's a whole hierarchy If the Fed is like a

00:24

royal family well then reserve banks or dukes and duchesses

00:27

and the commercial banks are aristocrats The Fed requires banks

00:31

to meet reserve requirements also known as the cash reserve

00:36

ratio which is the amount of money banks have to

00:38

keep on hand Handy Dandy Ready for quick withdrawal Why

00:41

is this a rule Well part of what spawned the

00:44

Fed into existence in the first place was a siri's

00:47

of runs on banks from banking panics A run on

00:50

the bank is when everyone rushes to their bank and

00:53

demands all of their deposits back Now the thing is

00:57

one of the boys banks make money is by lending

00:59

out your money to other people Yep your money Your

01:02

deposit for banks to make the most money possible Well

01:05

they would lend out as much money as they could

01:08

which in theory would be all of it But then

01:09

that leaves you the deposit or without cash when you

01:13

need it The Fed wanted runs on banks to be

01:15

a thing of the past which they pretty much are

01:17

now so they made these reserve requirements The money that

01:20

banks are allowed to loan out are called the excess

01:23

reserve For instance a bank may be required to have

01:26

say ten percent of its total money on hand which

01:29

would mean the remaining ninety per cent of the money

01:31

is excess reserves which banks can lend out to turn

01:34

a profit Now here's where the magic happens Multiple expansion

01:38

of deposit Well multiple expansion of deposits is the theory

01:42

that each deposit into a bank creates additional money made

01:45

from excess reserve deposit as they are well continuously lent

01:50

out by banks and then re deposited in other banks

01:53

There's a literal multiplier effect that ripples outward into the

01:56

economy called the Deposit Expansion Multi a buyer which estimates

02:01

the maximum amount of money that the Fed could expect

02:03

in deposit injection into the economic system that you know

02:08

they were kind of creating and managing Well this is

02:10

how the Fed the controller of the money supply decides

02:13

how much new money toe pump into the economy and

02:16

the maximum effect they could possibly expect from that injection

02:20

of money into the system For instance let's say your

02:23

bank has a ten percent reserve requirement leaving ninety percent

02:26

in excess reserves Well when that money is lent out

02:29

whether to a consumer or a business it's deposited into

02:32

another bank eventually So let's say you deposited two thousand

02:37

dollars check into your bank account in your bank says

02:39

would be and it lends out ninety percent of it

02:41

which is eighteen hundred box right that other two hundred

02:43

dollars they were going to keep on hand for reserve

02:46

requirements Okay so let's say that eighteen hundred dollars is

02:48

linked to a climber Chris who's keen on climbing Mount

02:52

Everest climber Chris deposits that eighteen hundred dollars into his

02:55

bank account Clymer Chris's bank says would be just like

02:59

your bank and they do the same thing that bank

03:01

lens Ninety percent of the eighteen hundred dollars which is

03:04

sixteen hundred twenty bucks The remaining ten percent that hundred

03:07

eighty is kept at Climber Chris's Bank to meet reserve

03:10

requirements Well Climate Chris Bank then lends out six hundred

03:13

twenty dollars to teacher Tina who's running short on school

03:16

supplies and gas Teacher Tina What's that Sixteen twenty into

03:20

her bank account And you can guess what teacher Tina's

03:23

bank account does Yep same is your bank and same

03:25

as Climber Chris's bank and teacher Tina's bank lends out

03:28

ninety percent of the money she deposit which is a

03:30

fourteen hundred forty eight dollars to Dan the Man and

03:33

so on Under this system and initial deposit actually grows

03:36

providing more value than the initial amount deposited Its multiplied

03:41

each time money is loaned out and then re deposited

03:43

only ninety percent That deposit gets turned into a new

03:45

loan Well we could keep taking ninety percent of the

03:48

deposits The maximum amount thanks can loan out from that

03:51

deposit until the amount loaned out deposited gets just any

03:55

words No more counting anymore So you still have that

03:58

two thousand dollars in your bank account that belongs to

04:00

you Meanwhile climate Chris has eighteen hundred and you can

04:03

spend a teacher Tina has sixteen twenty that she can

04:06

spend and it all came from your initial deposit Thank

04:09

you very much Well how Khun to Grand that was

04:11

in your bank account multiply into additional value that other

04:15

people can use in the economy But we told you

04:18

that multiple expansions of deposits was magic It literally expands

04:22

the money supply Will remember that deposit expansion multiplier we

04:25

mentioned earlier It's how the Fed can measure the maximum

04:28

amount of money and initial injection of a deposit like

04:31

your two grand can be expected to create Will the

04:34

deposit expansion multipliers just calculated as one divided by the

04:38

reserve requirements sonar case That's one By the by point

04:42

one or ten we can use the deposit expansion multiplier

04:45

to see how much money you're too grand Deposit expanded

04:47

the money supply under this setting to figure out how

04:49

much a deposit expanding the money supply We just multiply

04:52

the expansion multiplier by the initial excess reserves On our

04:55

scenario the reserve requirements ten percent which gives a deposit

04:58

expansion multiplier of ten Then we take that excess reserves

05:01

from the initial deposit You know that ninety percent chunk

05:03

of money that was created into the first loan for

05:06

climate Chris by your bank and I was eighteen hundred

05:08

bucks right So you're going to multiply that eighteen hundred

05:10

by ten So ninety percent ofyour deposit was loaned out

05:13

on deposit to Climate Chris and I sounded out blown

05:16

out positive Tina and I pretended I was loaned out

05:18

and positive Dan the Man and so on So if

05:20

we assume the bank's loaned out ninety percent of stage

05:22

while then it means the money supply was expanded by

05:25

eighteen thousand dollars That means assuming a reserve requirement of

05:29

ten percent for all commercial banks while your initial deposit

05:32

of two grand expanded the money supply nine times to

05:36

be eighteen thousand dollars in the economy Yes you Khun

05:39

tell everyone you're welcome Okay So besides feeling likea money

05:43

expansion superhero why do we care about multiple expansion of

05:47

deposits Well the Fed is in charge of keeping the

05:50

economy healthy One major way of doing that is by

05:52

maintaining the money supply you can think about That is

05:55

a doctor and the economy is a patient with the

05:58

money Supply is well the blood pressure A low blood

06:00

pressure like a low money supply means multiple expansion of

06:04

deposit is low which means there's less money flowing through

06:07

the economy which results in less spending and slower economic

06:10

growth Yeah no likey Blood pressure that's too high like

06:14

a high money supply isn't good either though we've seen

06:16

it before in history where a government just starts printing

06:19

more and more money without the corresponding economic growth and

06:22

what happens well hyperinflation prices of everything skyrocket and money

06:27

becomes almost useless People lose trust in the system And

06:30

oh that's so not good for the economy So that

06:33

two dollar milk and now it's one hundred dollars a

06:35

carton a month later Six thousand Some places have faced

06:39

hyperinflation of like three thousand percent a year or more

06:42

Well the feds jobs to keep the economy's money supply

06:44

like blood pressure stable which means it needs to be

06:47

not too high not too low Well when the Fed

06:50

raises interest rates it essentially lowers the demand for loans

06:54

It lowers the amount of access reserve loaned out and

06:56

that whole process slows the growth of the money supply

06:59

from slower expansions of deposits When the Fed lowers interest

07:03

rates it's trying to increase demand for loans encouraging the

07:06

multiple expansion of deposits to grow the money supply well

07:09

Besides interest rates the Fed can tinker with things like

07:12

stimulus packages and other strategies to expand or contract the

07:16

money supply They do all kinds of things They're sort

07:19

of crazy All right so now you know money does

07:21

not grow on trees but well it does grow out

07:23

of your bank account So let's go deposits him though

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