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12.4: Money Creation- Introduction

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    287996
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    Who creates all the different types of money we learned about earlier in this lesson? If you answered the government, you are only partially correct.  The U.S. Department of the Treasury oversees the actual printing (and minting) of the nation’s currency, but it does so only at the request of a quasi-governmental agency called the Federal Reserve System (more about the Federal Reserve System later).   

    If you glance again at the depiction of M2 (link to Figure 1) you can see that the currency component (paper money and coinage) of the money supply is just a fraction of the total of M2.  The bulk of the money supply comes from checking and savings accounts.  This means that the private banking system is by far the largest creator of money. 

    How does a private bank create money?  Money-creating banks started with the goldsmith profession.  Goldsmiths used to provide a safekeeping service.  They would accept gold deposits and charge a vault storage fee.  Instead of returning to the goldsmith to redeem a portion of their gold every time they wanted to make a purchase, depositors soon discovered that it was far more efficient to use deposit receipts (i.e., bank notes) as a means of payment.  These notes were used as money since they were accepted as payment and could be easily redeemed for gold.  

    Goldsmiths (let’s start calling them bankers) soon realized that they could issue loans and instead of gold, they would give the borrowers bank notes. More bank notes could be issued than the gold (i.e., deposits) the bankers held in reserve because only a portion of these outstanding notes would be redeemed at any one time.  This is how banks started to create money.   

    Checks drawn upon transaction accounts (e.g., checking accounts) are the modern-day equivalent to bank notes.  

    It should now be clear that banks perform two essential functions for the economy: 

    • Transfer money from savers to spenders by lending reserves held on deposit. 
    • Create additional money by making loans in excess of total reserves. 

    Figure 4 relates these essential functions to the income circular flow.  

    clipboard_e556018da1143ff77d448c15f829e7903.png

    Figure 4 

    It is important to understand that in this simplified economic model, if households deposit money (i.e., save) and banks do not lend that money out, there would be a draining effect on the circular flow of income - meaning economic activity would decline. Conversely, the more common scenario - where bank lending exceeds savings - has a stimulating effect. This is why saving is considered a leakage from, and lending an injection into, the circular flow of income. 


    This page titled 12.4: Money Creation- Introduction is shared under a CC BY-NC-SA 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Martin Medeiros.

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