Ask Question
Today, 01:07

If a bank depositor withdraws $1000 of currency from an account, what happens to bank reserves, checkable deposits, and the monetary base? Assume that the required reserve ratio on checkable deposits is 10% and banks do not hold any excess reserves.

a) reserves fall by $1,000, checkable deposits fall by $10,000, and the monetary base remains unchanged

b) reserves do not change, checkable deposits fall by $10,000, and the monetary base falls by $1,000

c) reserves do not change, checkable deposits fall by $1000 and the monetary base falls by $10,000

d) reserves fall by $10,000, checkable deposits fall by $1000 and the monetary base remains unchanged

+5
Answers (1)
  1. Today, 02:06
    0
    a) reserves fall by $1,000, checkable deposits fall by $10,000, and the monetary base remains unchanged

    Explanation:

    The bank reserves will decrease by the same amount that the client withdrew from the bank, in this case $1,000.

    Since the required reserve ratio for checkable deposits is 10%, then the checkable deposits will decrease by 10 times the amount withdrawn from the bank ($1,000 x 10 = $10,000).

    The monetary base remains unchanged since the money is still out there in the economy, it only changed from being in the bank to being in the client's pocket.
Know the Answer?
Not Sure About the Answer?
Get an answer to your question ✅ “If a bank depositor withdraws $1000 of currency from an account, what happens to bank reserves, checkable deposits, and the monetary base? ...” in 📙 Business if there is no answer or all answers are wrong, use a search bar and try to find the answer among similar questions.
Search for Other Answers