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TOTAL VARIABLE COST AND TOTAL PRODUCT: Because variable cost is largely associated with the cost of employing a variable input in the short run, it's possible to derive the total variable cost curve from the total product curve. This admittedly simplistic connection between total product and total variable cost is designed to illustrate the fundamental role that the law of diminishing marginal returns plays in the slope and shape of the total variable cost curve. Because he slope of the total variable cost curve, which is also the slope of the total cost curve, is marginal cost, this analysis also indicates how the law of diminishing marginal returns relates to marginal cost.

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NO-RESERVE BANKING:

A (hypothetical) method of banking in which banks keep 0 percent of their deposits in the form of bank reserves, meaning that ALL deposits are used for interest-paying loans. No-reserve banking is one of two theoretical alternatives designed to help illustrate a contrast to the fractional-reserve banking actually practiced by modern banks. The other alternative is full-reserve banking. With the no-reserve approach a bank operates as financial intermediary or broker, matching up borrowers and lenders.
No-reserve banking occurs if banks keep no deposits in reserve. Customers make deposits, which is then transferred (almost immediately) to awaiting borrowers. None of the deposits are set aside as reserves to satisfy withdrawal demands of the customers. The only way deposits can retrieve funds is to await loan repayments by the borrowers.

The Fractional Alternative

No-reserve banking is a theoretical alternative to fractional-reserve banking. Fractional-reserve banking is a method of banking activity in which banks keep less than 100 percent of their deposits in the form of bank reserves and use the rest for interest-paying loans.

Fractional-reserve banking makes it possible for banks to function as profit-seeking financial intermediaries (matching up lenders and borrowers) while ensuring the safety and liquidity of deposits, especially checkable deposits that are part of the economy's money supply.

While modern banks practice fractional-reserve banking, they actually come close to the no-reserve alternative. That is, most banks keep less than five percent of deposits in reserve, often in the range of one percent. While some reserves are available to process deposit withdrawals, the inflow of loan repayments and new deposits is often sufficient to satisfy the demand for withdrawals.

Two Goals

Consider how no-reserve banking would work toward the two goals of the modern banking system--profitability as a financial intermediary and safekeeping of deposits.
  • First, banks would be able to profitably function as financial intermediaries. Banks would be able to use all deposits for no loans. More loans mean more interest payments and thus more revenue and profit.

  • Second, the safekeeping goal IS not necessarily well served with no-reserve banking. Customers are likely to encounter problems retrieving their deposits. While the inflow of loan payments and new deposits might be sufficient to satisfy withdrawals, the safety net provided by reserves is not available. The odds are relatively high that banks will fall short of meeting the demand for withdrawals.

  • Third, if customers are unable to withdraw deposits, then they are unlikely (very unlikely) to make deposits. With no deposits, banks would not be able to function as financial intermediaries and make interest-paying loans.

The Full-Reserve Alternative

To polar opposite to no-reserve banking is full-reserve banking. With this alternative, banks keep 100 percent of deposits in reserve. Every dollar of deposits received by banks is stored securely and safely in a vault. In effect, banks are nothing more than storage facilities.

With full-reserve banking, the safekeeping goal is well served. Customers are able to retrieve their deposits. However, banks cannot function as financial intermediaries. They cannot make loans. And with no loans that generate interest, they need to obtain revenue in other ways, presumably by charging for the storage of deposits.

With full-reserve banking, the temptation to use the stockpiles of cash locked away in bank vaults is enormous. Businesses, consumers, government agencies, and even the bank itself undoubtedly are motivated to use this cash, to borrow this wealth for capital investment, home construction, car purchases, or government spending. But if banks give in to this temptation, then they are back into the financial intermediary business, and fractional-reserve banking.

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Recommended Citation:

NO-RESERVE BANKING, AmosWEB Encyclonomic WEB*pedia, http://www.AmosWEB.com, AmosWEB LLC, 2000-2024. [Accessed: October 30, 2024].


Check Out These Related Terms...

     | banks | banking | fractional-reserve banking | full-reserve banking | reserves | traditional banks | savings and loan associations | credit unions | mutual savings banks | thrift institutions | excess reserves | legal reserves | required reserves | vault cash | Federal Reserve deposits |


Or For A Little Background...

     | money | M1 | profit | industry | monetary economics | government functions | financial markets | liquidity |


And For Further Study...

     | money creation | Federal Reserve System | Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation | Comptroller of the Currency | central bank | monetary policy | bank panic | monetary aggregates | barter |


Related Websites (Will Open in New Window)...

     | Federal Reserve System | Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation | Comptroller of the Currency |


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