Ask Question
2 October, 17:48

Assume the reserve requirement is 10%. First National Bank receives a deposit of $5,400. If there is no slippage, how much could the money supply expand?

+1
Answers (1)
  1. 2 October, 17:52
    0
    The core of the question is the money multiplier. assuming first national receives $5,400, the bank has to keep 10% * $5400 = $540 because of the reserve requirement and can lend the remaining $5400-$540 = $4860. Now this money goes to circulation again and the next step is analogous: 10% * $4860 = $486 have to be kept as a reserve requirement and the remaining $4860 - $486 = $4374 are circulated back into the economy. i can go on forever adding up the money that will go into the economy and hence expand the money supply ($4860 + $4374 + ...), but there is a simple mathematical formula that makes my life easier: it is called a geometric series. in our case $5400 + $4860 + $4374 + ... is abbreviated to $5400∗ (1+0.9 + 0.92 + ...) and the term in the brackers is the geometric series 1 1-0.9 which equals 10. This is the power of money. your answer is that with a deposit of $5400 the money supply increases by $5400 * 10 = $54 000.
Know the Answer?
Not Sure About the Answer?
Find an answer to your question 👍 “Assume the reserve requirement is 10%. First National Bank receives a deposit of $5,400. If there is no slippage, how much could the money ...” in 📗 Business if the answers seem to be not correct or there’s no answer. Try a smart search to find answers to similar questions.
Search for Other Answers