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 freeWhy does the Federal Reserve require commercial banks to have reserves? Explain why reserves are an asset to commercial banks but a liability to the Federal Reserve Banks. What are excess reserves? How do you calculate the amount of excess reserves held by the bank? What is the significance of excess reserve?
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?
“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.
Suppose that the Fed has set the reserve ratio at 10 percent and that banks collectively have \(2 billion in excess reserves. What is the maximum amount of new checkable-deposit money that can be created by the banking system?
\)0
\(200 million
\)2 billion
$20 billion
Why is the banking system in the United States referred to as a fractional banking reserve system? What is the role of deposit insurance in a fractional reserve system?
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