Chapter 15: Q5. (page 319)
The two conflicting goals facing commercial banks are:
profit and liquidity.
profit and loss.
deposits and withdrawals.
assets and liabilities.
Short Answer
Option (a) profit and liquidity
Chapter 15: Q5. (page 319)
The two conflicting goals facing commercial banks are:
profit and liquidity.
profit and loss.
deposits and withdrawals.
assets and liabilities.
Option (a) profit and liquidity
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Get started for freeA commercial bank has \(100 million in checkable-deposit liabilities and \)12 million in actual reserves. The required reserve ratio is 10 percent. How big are the bank’s excess reserves?
\(100 million
\)88 million
\(12 million
\)2 million
How would a decrease in the reserve requirement affect the (a) size of the monetary multiplier, (b) amount of excess reserves in the banking system, and (c) extent to which the system could expand the money supply through the creation of checkable deposits via loans?
Suppose that Serendipity Bank has excess reserves of \(8,000 and checkable deposits of \)150,000. If the reserve ratio is 20 percent, how much does the bank hold in actual reserves?
“Whenever currency is deposited in a commercial bank, cash goes out of circulation and, as a result, the supply of money is reduced”. Do you agree? Explain why or why not.
If the required reserve ratio is 10 percent, what is the monetary multiplier? If the monetary multiplier is 4, what is the required reserve ratio?
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