The Free Market Center
The Free Market Center
The United States has a reserve banking system. Banks maintain cash reserves that amount to only a fraction of their deposit liabilities (what they owe to their customers).
Note: To understand the concept of "fractional reserve banking" it does not matter where the bank keeps its reserves. For the sake of this explanation, they could even keep their reserves in their own vault. They do, however, maintain a deposit account for reserves with the Federal Reserve bank.
The fraction of the money commodity held in "reserve" we call the reserve ratio. If the reserve ratio equals 50%, the reserves amount to half the deposit liabilities. If the reserve ratio equals 8%, the reserves amount to 8% of the deposit liabilities.
Bank reserves get a little confusing because demand deposits and time deposits (now referred to as transaction accounts and non-transaction accounts respectively) have different reserve requirements. Time deposits have historically had lower reserve requirements, because depositors did not have ready access to those funds like they did with their demand deposits.
The lower reserve requirements for time deposits have become more significant with the advent of bank checking alternatives, like money market mutual funds.
The Required Reserves equal a bank's total deposits multiplied by the reserve ratio for each deposit category. The bank must have balances in their reserve accounts of no less than their Required Reserves.
We call the actual amount of reserves in account the Actual Reserves.
Excess reserves equal Actual Reserves less Required Reserves. Excess reserves determine the current money creating capacity or credit potential of the bank (or the banking system.) I will explain in a moment.
We can determine the current money creating capacity or credit potential of the bank by dividing excess reserves by the reserve ratio. A bank with a reserve ratio of 10% and $1,000,000 in excess reserves has the credit potential of $10,000,000. (Credit potential actually applies system wide, to the whole banking system.)
In a banking system that uses fractional reserves, money creating (or credit) potential varies dramatically with changes in the reserve ratio.
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