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  2. Money creation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Money_creation

    Banks create capital by creating loans (assets) and destroying bank liabilities, which occurs when loans are repaid. This process increases bank equity, enabling banks to create commercial bank deposit liabilities (money) for their own use. In this way, banks create and manage their own capital levels.

  3. Monetary system - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monetary_system

    Put simply, banks lending currency to customers, subject to each bank's regulatory limit, is the principal mode of new deposit creation. [5] The central bank does not directly fix the amount of currency in circulation. Money creation is primarily accomploshed via lending by commercial banks. Borrowers who receive the money created by new ...

  4. Deposit account - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deposit_account

    For example, if a bank in the United States makes a loan to a customer by depositing the loan proceeds in that customer's checking account, the bank typically records this event by debiting an asset account on the bank's books (called loans receivable or some similar name) and credits the deposit liability or checking account of the customer on ...

  5. Bank Run: What It Is and How It Affects You - AOL

    www.aol.com/finance/bank-run-affects-220256631.html

    Bank runs can still happen, but they do not occur often. All it takes for a bank run to happen is for people to begin to suddenly withdraw their money and deposits from banks at the same time out ...

  6. Endogenous money - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Endogenous_money

    Loans create deposits: for the banking system as a whole, drawing down a bank loan by a non-bank borrower creates new deposits (and the repayment of a bank loan destroys deposits). So while the quantity of bank loans may not equal deposits in an economy, a deposit is the logical concomitant of a loan – banks do not need to increase deposits ...

  7. Money multiplier - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Money_multiplier

    As explained above, according to the monetary multiplier theory money creation in a fractional-reserve banking system occurs when a given reserve is lent out by a bank, then deposited at a bank (possibly different), which is then lent out again, the process repeating [2] and the ultimate result being a geometric series.

  8. Debits and credits - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Debits_and_credits

    A depositor's bank account is actually a Liability to the bank, because the bank legally owes the money to the depositor. Thus, when the customer makes a deposit, the bank credits the account (increases the bank's liability). At the same time, the bank adds the money to its own cash holdings account.

  9. Full-reserve banking - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Full-reserve_banking

    While a typical firm should have its assets be due prior to the payment date of its liabilities, so that the liabilities can be paid, the fractional reserve deposit bank has its demand deposit liabilities due at any point the depositor chooses, and its assets, being the loans it has made with someone else's deposits, due at some later date. [48]