ECO100Y5 Chapter Notes - Chapter 14: Money Multiplier, Open Market Operation, Excess Reserves

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ECO100Y5 Full Course Notes
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Macroeconomics: chapter 14 money, banking, and the central banking system. Money is any asset that can easily be used to purchase goods and services. Currency in circulation and chequeable deposits are both part of the money supply. Historically, money took the form first of commodity money, then of commodity-backed money. The bank of canada (boc) measures several monetary aggregates: m1, m1+, M1 is the narrowest definition of the money supply: it contains the most liquid assets, namely currency in circulation and demand deposits at chartered banks. M1+ includes m, plus the currency in demand deposits at other financial institutions such as credit unions, trust and mortgage loan companies, caisses populaires, and so on. Reserve requirements are rules set by the central bank that determine the minimum reserve ratio for banks. The desired (or voluntary) reserve ratio is the fraction of deposits that banks want to hold as reserves. A t-account is used to analyze a bank"s financial position.

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