Title: Bank Reserves and the Money Supply
1Bank Reserves and the Money Supply
2Introduction
- Examine the relationship between bank reserves
and the money supply - Money supply (M1) is composed mostly of demand
deposits in commercial banks and other financial
institutions - Bank reserves play a crucial role in creating
demand deposits - By regulating bank reserves, Federal reserve gets
leverage to control amount of demand deposits and
thereby nations money supply
3Check Clearing and Collection
- Many checks and electronic transfers are
cleared by local banks exchanging them through
local clearinghouse associations. - Clearinghouses net out the value of checks and
transfers drawn on or received by each depository
institution in the association.
4The Feds Role in Check Clearing
- The Fed clears a check
- by subtracting the amount of the check from the
reserve account balance of the bank on which the
check was written and - by adding the amount to the reserve account
balance of the bank that presents the check to
the Fed for clearing. - Reserve balances are transferred from one bank to
another when checks are cleared between them.
They do not disappear from the banking system. - Float
- Inter-District Settlement Fund
5Example Barbara is on vacation in Atlanta.
While shopping at Saks Fifth Avenue, she buys a
coat for 500
- She writes a check for the purchase amount on her
bank in Minneapolis, Norwest Bank. - Saks receives the check in its processing area.
- It deposits the check at its bank, Wachovia Bank,
that evening - along with many others. - The bank first encodes the dollar amount in
magnetic ink on the bottom right-hand side of the
check, then batches this check with many others
it has received that were written on banks
outside the Atlanta area.
6- It transports the checks to the Atlanta Federal
Reserve Bank. - The Atlanta Fed sorts this check and other
unsorted checks it has received, according to the
checks destination (the drawee bank-Norwest
Bank). - The Atlanta Fed settles accounts, crediting
Wachovia Banks reserve account according to a
prearranged availability schedule. - After settlement, checks drawn on banks in the
9th District are grouped and sent to the
Minneapolis Fed. - The Minneapolis Fed returns Barbaras check to
Norwest and debits Norwests reserve account
(called presentment). - Norwest then debits Barbaras checking account.
7Sequence of events when a check, drawn on
Norwest, is deposited in Wachovia
- Demand deposits in Wachovia increase with a
corresponding increase in assets - Check in process of collection
- When the check clears through the Fed check
clearing system, - The Fed increases Wachovias deposits in Fed by
the amount of the check - There is a corresponding decrease in the deposits
of Norwest which is made by the Fed - Demand deposits in Norwest decrease when the
check clears - The Federal Reserve neither gains or loses
deposits, only transfers ownership from one bank
to another
8Summary
- When a bank receives a check drawn on another
bank, it gains reserves equal to the amount of
the check - The bank on which the check was drawn loses
reserves of the same amount
9Check Clearing and Collection
- The above sequence of events occur whether the
banks are members of the Federal Reserve system
or not - In this case the banks are in different Federal
Reserve regions, the two regional banks have a
clearing account which permits the transfer of
reserves between regions
10Money Supply
- Monetary Base Currency Reserves
- M1 Currency Travelers Checks Demand
Deposits - M2 M1 Savings Deposits Small Time Deposits
MDA MMMF
11Required Reserves and Depository Institution
Balance Sheets
- Required reserve ratios
- Fractions of transactions deposit balances that
the Federal Reserve mandates that depository
institutions maintain either as deposits with
Federal Reserve banks or as vault cash. - Required reserves
- Legally mandated reserve holdings at depository
institutions, which are proportional to the
dollar amounts of transactions accounts.
12Depository Institution Balance Sheets
- Excess reserves
- Depository institutions cash balances at Federal
Reserve banks or in the institutions vaults that
exceed the amount that they must hold to meet
legal requirements. - Total reserves
- The total balances that depository institutions
hold on deposit with Federal Reserve banks or as
vault cash.
13Bank Liquidity
- Why does a bank need liquidity?
- Deposits are convertible on demand into cash.
- Accommodate customers when they come for loans.
- Required reserves
- Not really there to provide liquidity.
- Excess reserves
- Provide liquidity
- Expensive
- Federal funds market banks short of required
reserves can borrow from those that have excess
reserves. - Discount Window banks short of required
reserves can borrow from the Fed at its discount
window.
14Required Reserves
- Federal funds market banks short of required
reserves can borrow from those that have excess
reserves. - Discount Window banks short of required
reserves can borrow from the Fed at its discount
window.
15Deposit Expansion The Single Bank
- How much a bank safely can loan depends on the
amount its excess reserves. - When a bank lends, the borrower receives a
checking account (demand deposit) - Both sides of balance rise, increase in demand
deposits (liability) and increase in loans
(asset) - Since demand deposits are part of the money
supply, when banks create demand deposits through
lending, there is an increase in the money supply
16Deposit Expansion The Single Bank
- A bank can safely lend up to the amount of its
excess reserves - When proceeds of the loan are withdrawn and the
reserves are reduced by the amount of the check,
all the excess reserves will be used up. - If the bank tries to lend more, there will be
insufficient reserves as soon as the borrower
withdraws the proceeds from the loan. - An individual bank can create money (demand
deposits) only if it has excess reserves. - As soon as it creates this money, it loses it to
another bank when the money is spent
17Deposit Expansion The Banking System
- Although the initial bank lost its excess
reserves, another bank gained these excess
reserves which permits them to expand their
lending and increase the money supply - However, ability of the next bank to extend loans
is reduced by 10 since some of gain in reserves
must be held on deposit with Fed. - Process will continue with each successive bank
being able to lend only 90 of gained excess
reserves and 10 placed on deposit with Fed
18How the Banking System Creates Money
- The banking system will have demand deposits that
are a multiple of the initial injection of excess
reserves into the system. - The Fed will have additional required reserves on
deposit equal to the initial injection of excess
reserves into the system - The final state is reached not by shrinking
reserves, as in the case of a single bank, but by
expanding deposits
19Deposit Expansion The Banking System
- When one bank loses reserves, another bank gains
the excess and lends out 90 - As banks lend more and more, demand deposit
liabilities grow, thereby reducing excess
reserves - Whereas a single bank can lend the amount of
excess reserves, the banking system can create
demand deposits up to a multiple of original
change in reserves - The process of deposit expansion can continue
until all excess reserves become required
reserves because of growth of demand deposits
20Demand Deposit Expansion Multiplier
- The demand deposit expansion simple multiplier is
always the reciprocal of the reserve requirement
ratio
Where is the simple
multiplier
21The Money Multiplier
- This money multiplier formula calculates the
maximum possible expansion of M1 because it
assumes - everyone deposits their new loans into a checking
account at a bank. - banks hold no excess reserves.
- If either of these assumptions are violated, the
amount of money actually created in the economy
will be smaller than the formula predicts. - The money creation process works exactly the same
in reverse. For example, if someone withdraws
money from a bank, a bank will be short of its
required reserves and must reduce loans. M1 will
decrease by 900,000 in the example above.
22Deposit Contraction
- If a bank starts with deficient reserves,
potential change in demand deposits is negative
rather than positive - Money is destroyed as bank loans are repaid or
securities sold - The potential multiple contraction in demand
deposits (money supply) follows the same
principles as expansion of demand deposits
23Depository Institution Reserves, the Monetary
Base, and Money
- The monetary base (MB)
- The amount of currency, C, plus the total
quantity of reserves (TR) in the banking system,
or money produced directly by the government,
24Multiple Expansion Process
- The stages of expansion occur neither
simultaneously nor in the sequence described
above. - Some banks use their reserves incompletely or
only after a considerable time lag, while others
expand assets on the basis of expected reserve
growth. - The process is continuous and may never reach its
theoretical limits. - What happens to the quantity of money will vary,
depending upon the reactions of the banks and the
public.
25A number of slippages may occur
- What amount of reserves will be drained into the
publics currency holdings? - To what extent will the increase in the reserve
base remain unused as excess reserves? - How much will be absorbed by time deposits or
other liabilities not defined as money but
against which banks must also hold reserves?
26AppendixThe Complete Money Supply Process
- Actual change in demand deposits will reach the
maximum amount indicated by the simple multiplier
if banks lend all excess reserves. - Any leakages of cash out of the multiple
expansion cycle will result in a smaller
expansion of the money supply - Federal Reserve can control additional excess
reserves but leakages are outside their control
and may adversely affect their attempt to expand
the money supply
27Shifts between Currency and Checking Deposits
- Monetary base (B)total reserves held by banks
plus currency held by nonbanking public - When the Federal Reserve injects reserves, it is
really adding to the monetary base - Public may elect to hold some of the excess
reserves as cash instead of demand deposits - Draining of currency into the hands of the public
depletes banks excess reserves
28Shifts between Currency and Checking Deposits
- Cash held by the nonbanking public becomes part
of the money supply, but it reduces the banking
systems ability to expand demand deposits - Due to the uncertainty of the publics reaction
to additional reserves and desire to hold cash,
the Fed has more control over the monetary base
than total reserves
29Shifts between Time Deposits and Check Accounts
- The public may desire to hold time deposits
rather than demand deposits - Since the required reserves for time deposits is
smaller than for demand deposits, placing of
funds in time deposits will increase the banking
systems ability to expand credit.
30Shifts between Time Deposits and Checking Accounts
- Since time deposits are not part of M1, movement
of funds into time deposits will reduce the
expansion of the money supply (M1) - The reserve multiplier consequences for broader
money supply definitions are more complicated
than for M1
31The Role of Interest Rates
- Banks not being able or willing to lend all their
excess reserves - Funds may remain idle in the bank
- Since banks will be more inclined to lend or
purchase securities at higher interest rates,
this raises the possibility that the money supply
(multiplier) is a function of interest rate levels
32Implications
- The Federal Reserves ability to control the
money supply is not precise - It must deal with leakages of money from the
demand deposit expansion cycle, factors that are
generally determined by public preferences
33The Money Multiplier During the Great Depression
- Between 1929 and 1933 bank holdings of excess
reserves rose from 25 million to over 2
billion. - The currency-to-deposits ratio increased from
approximately 17 percent to 33 percent.
34The Money Multiplier During the Great Depression
- Why do you think these changes occurred?
- If the money multiplier is equal to
- what happened to M1 during this time?
- How could the Fed have improved the situation?