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14.2: The Role of Banks in the Financial System

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    288002
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    Banks play a pivotal role in the financial ecosystem. They accept deposits, provide loans, manage payments, and invest in securities. Their decisions directly influence household consumption and business investment. Table 1 presents a simplified bank balance sheet showing two primary asset classes: loans and reserve balances (banks can also hold financial securities as assets). On the liabilities side, banks hold customer deposits. 

    Table 1 
    Bank A
    Assets Liabilities
    Required reserves                                                                   $36 Deposit                                                                                       $100
    Excess reserves                                                                      $64 Jane's account                                                                               $80 
    Loans*                                                                                  $80  
    Total                                                                                    $180                                                                                                  $180

    Banks are profit-driven institutions. In deciding how to allocate assets, they consider expected returns, risk, and regulatory requirements. One particularly risk-free asset banks hold is reserve balances (deposits they hold in their vault or maintain at the Federal Reserve). Reserves held with the Federal Reserve are liquid and earn interest through a rate set by the Fed called the Interest on Reserve Balances (IORB). 

    The IORB functions as a "reservation rate" (a bank won’t invest in any asset offering a return lower than the IORB). This interest rate has become a cornerstone of monetary policy implementation. 

    Example \(\PageIndex{1}\)

    Suppose a commercial bank has $10 million in excess reserves. The Federal Reserve is currently paying an Interest on Reserve Balances (IORB) rate of 4.75%. A potential borrower approaches the bank seeking a short-term loan with an interest rate of 4.25%. 

    From the bank’s perspective, this loan carries some risk of default, involves administrative costs, and ties up capital that could be used elsewhere. In contrast, simply holding the reserves at the Fed earns a risk-free 4.75% return through the IORB facility. 

    Because lending at 4.25% earns less than the 4.75% IORB, the bank declines the loan. It chooses instead to hold the excess reserves at the Fed, collecting the higher, risk-free IORB rate. 

    This example demonstrates how the IORB acts as a floor for the rates banks are willing to accept on other short-term assets. Lending below the IORB would be economically irrational for the bank. 


    This page titled 14.2: The Role of Banks in the Financial System 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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