reserve requirement
Economics
(noun)
The minimum amount of deposits each commercial bank must hold (rather than lend out).
Business
Examples of reserve requirement in the following topics:
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The Reserve Requirement
- The Federal Reserve is in charge of setting reserve requirements for all depository institutions in the country.
- Reserve requirements have long been a part of the United States banking history.
- The Federal Reserve can adjust reserve requirements by changing required reserve ratios, the liabilities to which the ratios apply, or both.
- Changes in reserve requirements can have profound effects on the money stock and on the cost to banks of extending credit and are also costly to administer; therefore, reserve requirements are not adjusted frequently.
- Discuss what happens when the Fed increases or decreases the reserve requirement
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Reserve Requirement
- Fed can use reserve requirements as a monetary tool.
- The Fed rarely changes the reserve requirements because changes in the reserve requirements have a significant and disruptive impact on the banking system.
- The Fed can use reserve requirements to alter the money supply.
- Consequently, the Fed can increase the reserve requirement ratio, switching some excess reserves to required reserves.
- Required reserves impose a cost to the banks because they cannot lend these reserves to borrowers, and therefore, do not earn interest income on required reserves.
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The Fractional Reserve System
- The fraction of deposits that a bank must hold as reserves rather than loan out is called the reserve ratio (or the reserve requirement) and is set by the Federal Reserve.
- If, for example, the reserve requirement is 1%, then a bank must hold reserves equal to 1% of their total customer deposits.
- Banks can also choose to hold reserves in excess of the required level.
- Any reserves beyond the required reserves are called excess reserves.
- Excess reserves plus required reserves equal total reserves.
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Example Transactions Showing How a Bank Can Create Money
- Assume that all banks are required to hold reserves equal to 10% of their customer deposits.
- Anderson and Brentwood both operate in a financial system with a 10% reserve requirement.
- Anderson will loan out the maximum amount (90%) and hold the required 10% as reserves.
- Thus, with a required reserve ratio of 0.1, an increase in reserves of $1 can increase the money supply by up to $10 .
- The graph shows the total amount of money that can be created with the addition of $100 in reserves, using different reserve requirements as examples.
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The Reserve Ratio
- The reserve ratio is the percentage of deposits that a bank is required to hold in reserves, or funds that are not allowed to be loaned.
- The ratio is a set percentage of customer deposits that a bank is required to hold in reserves, or funds that are not allowed to be loaned.
- Required reserves are normally in the form of cash stored physically in a bank vault (vault cash) or deposits made with a central bank.
- The required reserve ratio is a tool in monetary policy, given that changes in the reserve ratio directly impact the amount of loanable funds available .
- The conventional view in economic theory is that a reserve requirement can act as a tool of monetary policy.
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The Money Multiplier in Theory
- That is, in a fractional-reserve banking system, the total amount of loans that commercial banks are allowed to extend (the commercial bank money that they can legally create) is a multiple of reserves; this multiple is the reciprocal of the reserve ratio.
- We start with the reserve ratio requirement that the the fraction of deposits that a bank keeps as reserves is at least the reserve ratio:
- Theoretically, then, a central bank can change the money supply in an economy by changing the reserve requirements.
- A 10% reserve requirement creates a total money supply equal to 10 times the amount of reserves in the economy; a 20% reserve requirement creates a total money supply equal to five times the amount of reserves in the economy.
- The graph shows the theoretical amount of money that can be created with different reserve requirements.
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Chapter Questions
- Required reserve ratio equals 5%; the banks hold zero excess reserves, and the public does not withdraw money out of their currency accounts.
- Required reserve ratio equals 20%; the banks hold zero excess reserves, and the public does not withdraw money out of their currency accounts.
- Required reserve ratio equals 10%, and the banks hold zero excess reserves.
- Required reserve ratio equals 10%, and the banks hold zero excess reserves.
- Why do excess reserves present a problem for the Fed?
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Multiple Deposit Expansion and Contraction
- Bank must hold 10% of its deposits as required reserves.
- Bank must hold 10% of its deposits as required reserves.
- Second equation calculates required reserves.
- If the required reserve ratio equals 10%, then we substitute this into Equation 7.
- Bank pays your $200 from required reserves.
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Adjusting for LIFO Reserve
- The difference between the cost of an inventory calculated under the FIFO and LIFO methods is called the LIFO reserve.
- The difference between the cost of an inventory calculated under the FIFO and LIFO methods is called the LIFO reserve.
- This reserve is essentially the amount by which an entity's taxable income has been deferred by using the LIFO method.
- The SEC requires that all registered companies that use LIFO report their LIFO reserves for the start and end of the year.
- Explain how the LIFO reserve is calculated and how to report it on the financial statements
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Structure of the Federal Reserve
- The Federal Reserve (the Fed) was designed to be independent of the Congress and the government.
- Twelve regional Federal Reserve Banks located in major cities throughout the nation, which divide the nation into twelve Federal Reserve districts.
- The Federal Reserve Banks act as fiscal agents for the U.S.
- Numerous other private U.S. member banks, which own required amounts of non-transferable stock in their regional Federal Reserve Banks.
- Recall the structure of the Federal Reserve System of the United States