WEBVTT 00:00:00.267 --> 00:00:03.788 ♪ [music] ♪ 00:00:16.074 --> 00:00:18.386 [Alex] Now that we know how money is defined, 00:00:18.386 --> 00:00:22.878 we'll learn how banks can affect the supply of money 00:00:22.878 --> 00:00:26.101 through fractional reserve banking. 00:00:26.101 --> 00:00:28.467 Let's imagine that you graduate from college, 00:00:28.467 --> 00:00:31.980 and your grandma gives you $1,000 in cash -- 00:00:31.980 --> 00:00:37.142 that she's been saving under her mattress since the 1970s -- 00:00:37.142 --> 00:00:40.488 and you deposit this cash in your checking account. 00:00:40.488 --> 00:00:42.393 What does the bank do with your money? 00:00:42.393 --> 00:00:45.712 Does it sit in a vault with your name on it? 00:00:45.712 --> 00:00:46.831 No. 00:00:46.831 --> 00:00:52.389 Banks lend most of your money to people who want to borrow. 00:00:52.389 --> 00:00:57.634 Banks keep in reserve only a fraction of your money -- 00:00:57.634 --> 00:01:00.396 money they keep in cash for the ATM, 00:01:00.396 --> 00:01:02.641 or to meet withdrawal demands. 00:01:02.641 --> 00:01:07.870 This is why this system is known as "fractional reserve banking." 00:01:07.870 --> 00:01:11.447 So what fraction of your deposit do banks keep in reserve? 00:01:11.447 --> 00:01:14.167 Well, large banks in the United States 00:01:14.167 --> 00:01:20.526 must keep in reserve at least $1 for every $10 in deposits, 00:01:20.526 --> 00:01:23.779 or we say large banks are required 00:01:23.779 --> 00:01:28.249 to have a reserve ratio of at least 10%. 00:01:28.249 --> 00:01:31.584 But banks often have higher reserve ratios 00:01:31.584 --> 00:01:35.202 depending upon how liquid that they want to be. 00:01:35.202 --> 00:01:36.338 If a bank is worried 00:01:36.338 --> 00:01:39.142 that its customers might withdraw most of their money, 00:01:39.142 --> 00:01:42.849 or if bank loans are just not that profitable, 00:01:42.849 --> 00:01:45.771 banks will hold more reserves. 00:01:45.771 --> 00:01:49.362 So the reserve ratio can be greater than 10% 00:01:49.362 --> 00:01:52.460 and it can change over time. 00:01:52.460 --> 00:01:54.496 Because of fractional reserve banking 00:01:54.496 --> 00:01:58.168 the banking system has a big effect on the supply of money. 00:01:58.168 --> 00:01:59.666 Let's see how. 00:01:59.666 --> 00:02:04.482 Suppose that your bank keeps 10% of your $1,000 deposit, 00:02:04.482 --> 00:02:06.999 or $100 as reserve. 00:02:06.999 --> 00:02:13.962 And suppose it lends out 90%, or $900, say to Tyler, 00:02:13.962 --> 00:02:16.075 who's interested in starting a business. 00:02:16.075 --> 00:02:22.242 That $900 loan is credited to Tyler's checking account. 00:02:22.242 --> 00:02:27.554 So now there's $1,900 in new deposits, 00:02:27.554 --> 00:02:31.855 and since checkable deposits are part of the money supply, 00:02:31.855 --> 00:02:35.061 the money supply has increased. 00:02:35.061 --> 00:02:36.966 And it doesn't stop there. 00:02:36.966 --> 00:02:41.786 Suppose that the bank holds 10% of Tyler's deposit in reserve, 00:02:41.786 --> 00:02:48.222 and it lends out 90%, or $810, say to Janet. 00:02:48.222 --> 00:02:54.141 Now deposits have increased by $2,710. 00:02:54.141 --> 00:02:57.426 And suppose that 10% of Janet's money is held in reserve, 00:02:57.426 --> 00:02:59.263 and the rest is lent out. 00:02:59.263 --> 00:03:01.768 And so this process continues. 00:03:01.768 --> 00:03:04.610 And as the banks make more loans, 00:03:04.610 --> 00:03:06.883 that increases the number of deposits, 00:03:06.883 --> 00:03:08.501 which increases the number of loans, 00:03:08.501 --> 00:03:10.478 which increases the number of deposits. 00:03:10.478 --> 00:03:14.374 So how much money do we ultimately end up with? 00:03:14.374 --> 00:03:15.947 You can figure that out 00:03:15.947 --> 00:03:19.517 using what's called the "money multiplier." 00:03:19.517 --> 00:03:21.086 The money multiplier tells us 00:03:21.086 --> 00:03:24.620 how many dollar's worth of deposits are created 00:03:24.620 --> 00:03:28.024 with each additional dollar of reserves. 00:03:28.024 --> 00:03:30.459 And the money multiplier is simple. 00:03:30.459 --> 00:03:35.048 It's just 1 divided by the reserve ratio. 00:03:35.048 --> 00:03:37.294 So if the reserve ratio is 10%, 00:03:37.294 --> 00:03:42.415 the money multiplier is 1 divided by 0.1, or 10. 00:03:42.415 --> 00:03:47.621 And what that means is that $1 in new reserves 00:03:47.621 --> 00:03:52.019 will ultimate lead, through the multiplier process, 00:03:52.019 --> 00:03:55.718 to $10 in additional money 00:03:55.718 --> 00:03:59.205 as measured by, say, M1 or M2. 00:03:59.205 --> 00:04:02.013 Now let's clarify our previous example, 00:04:02.013 --> 00:04:06.489 and why it was key that Grandma was pulling cash 00:04:06.489 --> 00:04:08.067 from under her mattress. 00:04:08.067 --> 00:04:11.964 If Grandma had instead given you a check for $1,000, 00:04:11.964 --> 00:04:15.572 she'd simply be transferring money from her account to yours -- 00:04:15.572 --> 00:04:19.567 which would not be creating new reserves, 00:04:19.567 --> 00:04:22.368 and so we wouldn't see this multiplier effect. 00:04:22.368 --> 00:04:26.596 And, actually, the key player here isn't Grandma -- 00:04:26.596 --> 00:04:28.586 it's Uncle Sam. 00:04:28.586 --> 00:04:32.826 The Federal Reserve can, with the click of a computer button, 00:04:32.826 --> 00:04:34.852 create new money, 00:04:34.852 --> 00:04:39.488 new money which it can use to buy financial assets, 00:04:39.488 --> 00:04:44.598 thus injecting new reserves into the banking system. 00:04:44.969 --> 00:04:46.173 But the Feds' control 00:04:46.173 --> 00:04:49.140 over the money-supply process is indirect. 00:04:49.140 --> 00:04:52.738 If banks hold the minimum amount of required reserves -- 00:04:52.738 --> 00:04:54.998 10% as we assumed earlier -- 00:04:54.998 --> 00:04:57.902 then the money multiplier will be close to 10. 00:04:57.902 --> 00:05:01.295 And if this is the case, the Fed will have a lot of leverage 00:05:01.295 --> 00:05:07.485 to move M1 and M2 with a small change in reserves. 00:05:07.485 --> 00:05:09.421 But in normal circumstances, 00:05:09.421 --> 00:05:13.006 the actual money multiplier is closer to 3. 00:05:13.006 --> 00:05:14.602 How come? 00:05:14.602 --> 00:05:19.870 Well, remember, banks can't hold less than 10% in reserve. 00:05:19.870 --> 00:05:21.744 They can always hold more. 00:05:21.744 --> 00:05:26.981 And the more banks hold in reserve, the lower the money multiplier. 00:05:26.981 --> 00:05:28.607 So it's important to understand 00:05:28.607 --> 00:05:32.104 that the money multiplier isn't a fixed number, 00:05:32.104 --> 00:05:37.175 and the multiplier process isn't a mechanical relation. 00:05:37.175 --> 00:05:38.541 Here's another factor. 00:05:38.541 --> 00:05:41.899 If Tyler had stashed some of his loan 00:05:41.899 --> 00:05:43.748 under his mattress 00:05:43.748 --> 00:05:46.870 instead of depositing it into a bank, 00:05:46.870 --> 00:05:48.292 then his bank -- 00:05:48.292 --> 00:05:51.568 it wouldn't have had the money to lend out his deposit, 00:05:51.568 --> 00:05:53.989 and the money multiplier would have been lower. 00:05:54.358 --> 00:05:55.814 And during a recession, 00:05:55.814 --> 00:05:58.523 both of these things can happen at the same time. 00:05:58.523 --> 00:06:01.017 Banks may be reluctant to lend, 00:06:01.017 --> 00:06:04.040 and they'll maybe put more cash in reserve, 00:06:04.040 --> 00:06:06.397 plus people tend to hold more cash, 00:06:06.397 --> 00:06:10.206 and not deposit their money in banks during a recession. 00:06:10.206 --> 00:06:14.239 Both of these factors cause the money multiplier to fall. 00:06:14.239 --> 00:06:18.668 So the Federal Reserve may have to push harder 00:06:18.668 --> 00:06:22.083 to increase the money supply during a recession 00:06:22.083 --> 00:06:23.782 than during a boom. 00:06:23.961 --> 00:06:25.350 We're going to dive further 00:06:25.350 --> 00:06:27.605 into how the Fed controls the money supply, 00:06:27.605 --> 00:06:30.313 and how that's changed since the Great Recession 00:06:30.313 --> 00:06:31.843 in our next video. 00:06:33.124 --> 00:06:35.535 [Narrator] You're on your way to mastering economics. 00:06:35.535 --> 00:06:38.982 Make sure this video sticks by taking a few practice questions. 00:06:38.982 --> 00:06:41.123 Or, if you're ready for more macroeconomics, 00:06:41.123 --> 00:06:42.477 click for the next video. 00:06:44.609 --> 00:06:45.453 Still here? 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