Our financial markets are based on a fractional reserve banking system. Simply put, a lending institution is allowed by regulators to lend out more money than it has accepted in deposits. If a bank secures $100 in deposits, it is possible for the bank to create roughly $1,000 in loans. Let's take a look....
A bank is required to hold on reserve only a fraction of the deposits it garners. Only a fraction is held because it is postulated that depositors don't redeem their deposits at one time. The required reserve ratio is set by the Federal Reserve. The current ratio is tiered, based on bank size and deposit type.
Type of liability | Requirement |
(Percentage of liabilities) | |
0 | |
More than $10.3 million to $44.4 million | 3 |
More than $44.4 million | 10 |
Nonpersonal time deposits | 0 |
Eurocurrency liabilities | 0 |
The caveat: banks do not have to make the maximum amount of loans. All we know is that there is somewhere in between $1,000 and $10,000 introduced into the system.
However, when the customer withdraws that $1,000, the net impact on the system IS a drop of $10,000. In an earlier post, I mentioned that the Fed was in a race to put money into the system at a faster rate than it was being removed. This is compounded by the fact that the Fed can't control how many loans are made with the additional liquidity (pushing on a string). If banks choose to be conservative, the Fed must over-supply the market with funds relative to the anticipated amount of money creation implied by the reserve ratio.
Loan defaults deplete the system, just like withdrawals. So each time you here about a $1 billion of loans written off and not recovered, $10 billion have just been removed from the system.
1 comment:
Excellent point made in your comment! Why is no one talking about this in the main stream media?
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