Credit Creation by Commercial Bank

Taylor Emma
2 Min Read
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•         A commercial bank is called a dealer of credit.

•         It can create credit i.e. can expand the monetary base of a country.

•         It does so not by issuing new money but by its loan operations.

•         Banks create money on the basis of the cash deposits.

•         The process of credit creation is that the depositors think they have so much money with banks and borrowers from bank say they have so much money with them.

•         Summing the two, we find an amount more than the cash deposit.

•         Suppose a bank receive a sum of ` 1,000 as deposit, keeps with it 20% (` 200) as CRR (cash reserve ratio) and lends and rest.

•         Depositor will claim he has ` 1,000 and bank borrower too possesses ` 800.

•         Thus total money supply appears to be ` 1,800 only. It is the credit creation by a single bank.

•         The above example can be extended to cover the banking system as whole. Suppose ` 800 is deposited to another bank.

•         This bank’s base will now expand. It will keep 20% of ` 800 (` 160) as cash reserve and will lend ` 640.

•         This sum is redeposited to a third bank which keeps 20% of ` 640 (` 128) and grants a loan of ` 512.

•         This process will continue and the amount of fresh deposit will go on falling.

•         A time will come when deposited sum will be equal to CRR.

•         The process will then come to an end.

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A senior editor for The Mars that left the company to join the team of SenseCentral as a news editor and content creator. An artist by nature who enjoys video games, guitars, action figures, cooking, painting, drawing and good music.
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