Quote:
Originally Posted by blankall
I haven't looked at this stuff in a while, but my understanding was that chartered banks could create money as long as they met the necessary reserve ratio.
So if the reserve ration was 5:1. They could create 5 dollars for every 1 dollar they had invested.
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When people say this, this is what they mean:
Bob walks into the bank and deposits $1000 cash in his account.
Jim wants a hooker bad but doesn't have any cash, he comes into the bank and borrows $1000. They give him a bank draft and he goes straight to the massage parlour for the full treatment. He signs the bank draft over to the hooker.
Later that day, the hooker comes back to the bank and deposits the $1000 bank draft in the account. The bank now has another $1000 which it will lend out to a church group later in the afternoon.
So, at the bank, we now have two people who each have $1000 in their savings accounts, so you could say that the supply of money in the economy has grown. But the money isn't created out of nothing. The $1000 that they lent to Jim came from Bob, and the $1000 for the church group is owed to the hooker. The bank isn't $1000 richer.
Moreover, both the hooker and Bob will want interest on their savings account. The bank has to pay them interest. When they lend the money out, they have to lend out at a rate that is higher than what they are paying on savings plus a margin of profit plus a risk premium to cover the cost of defaults on loans plus the costs of operating the bank.