Banks can create money like a cookie factory, by making more cookies from just one batch.
Imagine you have a piggy bank that’s half full. That’s like a fractional reserve system, where the bank keeps only part of your money and lends out the rest.
How Banks Create Money
Let’s say you put $100 in the bank. The bank doesn’t keep all $100; it keeps just $20 (that’s its reserve) and lends out the other $80 to someone else. That person now has $80, which they might spend at a store or save again.
Now that money is in another piggy bank, and the process repeats! The next bank keeps $20 of that new $80 and loans out $60. It’s like making more cookies from just one batch, you keep some for yourself and give the rest to others, who then make even more cookies!
What's the Fractional Reserve System?
It’s when banks only keep a fraction (a part) of your money in reserve and lend out the rest. This system lets banks create more money than they originally had, like turning one cookie into many by sharing it around.
So, from $100, you can end up with way more money just because of this fun, everyday system!
Examples
- Banks only keep a small part of deposits as cash, allowing them to lend more than they have.
- If banks all do this, the total amount of money in the economy can grow.
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See also
- How Banks Create Money - Macro Topic 4.4?
- How is Money Created? – Everything You Need to Know?
- How does fractional-reserve banking create new money in an economy?
- How does fractional-reserve banking create money in an economy?
- How Does Fractional Reserve Banking and the Money Multiplier Made Simple Work?