Online Lesson
About this lesson
grade level: 9-12
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curriculum standards:
11
12
20
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posted on: May 23, 2007![]()
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Teacher's Version
This lesson provides you with the resources that you will need to teach this lesson. We have also provided a link for your students to follow this lesson online. The link below contains only the information your students need:
Key Economic Concepts:
In this lesson students learn about banks and banking. The study the fractional reserve system, and the role the Fed plays in the money creation process.
Students will:
Many people remember a scene from the movie It's a Wonderful Life in which the worried townspeople of Bedford Falls race to the community's Building and Loan Bank. They congregate outside the bank's iron gates, which George Bailey's Uncle Billy has closed in a panic. When George arrives and opens the gates, the townspeople rush into the bank lobby, demanding to withdraw all of their funds. Uncle Billy says, "This is a pickle, George. This is a pickle." George tries to explain to the people that their money is tied up in their neighbors' homes, as an investment, and the bank has very little cash left to give out.
Bank failures of the sort depicted in this scene almost never occur today, but they were common in the United States in the nineteenth century and early in the twentieth century. What caused these bank failures, and why don't they occur today? This lesson addresses these questions. It introduces students to basic banking procudures, the money creation process in the economy, and ways in which the Fed uses monetary policy to influence the economy.
Federal Reserve Web site: www.federalreserve.gov/
[1]
Monetary Policy: www.federalreserve.gov/policy.htm
[2]
Teacher Resources from the Fed:
The Federal Reserve System provides many resources for instruction. These include conferences for teachers, the annual Fed Challenge competition for highschool students and a variety of print and electronic materials. The regional Federal Reserve Banks offer many of these same resources, andy often provide tours for teachers and high school students.
To learn about these resources, your first step might be to visit the Federal Reserve Education site, http://www.federalreserveeducation.org/
[3]
. This website has several great features. It introduces teachers to the Fed Challenge. This is an academic competition that provides high school students (grades 9-12) with an insider's view of how the Fed makes monetary policy. Learn more by going towww.federalreserveeducation.org/resources/classroom/competitions/fed-challenge/
[4]
The Federal Reserve Education site also features resources on personal finance, including information about the following topics:
The Federal Reserve Education site also features a section called Fed 101. Here you can learn about the history and structure of the Fed as well and find information about monetary policy, banking supervision, and financial services. You will also find a short video [5] and an interactive flow chart [6] on the money creation process.
Finally, the Federal Reserve Education site provides a wide range of other resources:
For a good example of the resources provided by the regional Fed banks, go to the site for the Federal Reserve Bank or San Francisco at www.frbsf.org [7] . Click on Educational Resources. Here you will find, for exmaple, a newsletter titled Econ Ed and the Fed. It offers a lesson on The Federal Reserve (the Fed), the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC), and monetary policy. You also can click on Open & Operating to learn about a video describing the response of the Fed following the attacks of 9-11. And you can click on Dr. Econ which presents answers in response to questions you enter. Other resources here include the following:
The famous movie scene summarized earlier in this lesson illustrates a fundamental point about banks and banking: banks do not have all of their customer's deposits on hand. Even today, if all the customers of your local bank demanded to withdraw all their deposits at once, the bank would not have enough cash on hand to satisfy their demands. Most of the money deposited by bank customers is not kept in the bank's vault; instead , most of it is lent out to other customers, to be used for productive purposes.
This role of a bank, often called financial intermediation, is vital to the efficient workings of a market economy. Banks bring people together: people with extra money (the lenders or savers) and people who need money (the borrowers or spenders). It is a very important service. It enables people to buy homes, to start new businesses, to go to college or (in the case of loans to the local school district) to build a new state-of-the-art school.
How might people do these things if there were no banks? Consider the prospects of a young teacher trying to buy a $150,000 home. Perhaps, by diligently saving her money, she is able to acquire the $30,000 needed for a 20 percent down payment. In that case, she still needs $120,000 to purchase the home. Since she can't go to a bank to borrow the money, she might seek loans from members of her family, friends and neighbors, maybe even co-workers. While she might possibly come up with all of the money she needs to buy the home in this way, each of these loans would almost certainly be negotiated with its own terms and conditions, and borrowing from friends and relatives might involve complicated personal issues. The costs of acquiring money in this manner are very high.
Today, as an alternative, we have banks that utilize something called a fractional reserve system. In a fractional reserve system, only a fraction of bank deposits is actually kept in the bank to satisfy withdrawals. The rest of the money is lent out to individuals, firms, municipalities, the federal government or other borrowers to be used for productive purposes. The money that banks keep on hand to satisfy withdrawals is called reserves. Reserves are held in the bank's vault or in an account at a Federal Reserve Bank. The Federal Reserve, also known as the Fed, mandates a required reserve ratio, typically around 10 percent of checking deposits, which banks must hold in reserve to provide liquidity and satisfy requests for withdrawals. The required reserve ratio has an effect on the country's supply of money.

Because banks utilize a fractional reserve system, it is often said that banks "create money." While this term may conjure up images of a banker running a printing press in the bank basement, that is not how banks create money. To understand how banks do create money, we first need to understand how an economists define money. Economists consider money to be anything that is generally accepted as payment for goods and services. That definition clearly includes cash and currency. However, it also includes checking accounts, since checks can be written on these accounts and used to pay for items that people purchase. So, how does a bank create money?
Consider the following scenario. Sally Saver goes to First National Bank and deposits $1,000 that she received as a gift from her grandparents. She now has a checking account with a balance of $1,000 from which she can write checks. What will First National Bank do with this newly deposited money? Well, if there is a 10 percent reserve requirement, the bankers will put $100 in their vault and lend out the rest to people who want loans. Say Mike Inventor walks into First National Bank looking to borrow $900 to develop his next great invention. If the bankers decide that his project is worthwhile, they might give him the $900 he requests. If Mike puts the $900 in his checking account, he then can write checks for this amount. There is now $1,900 of money available ($1,000 in Sally's checking account and $900 in Mike's) to be spent. In other words, $900 in new money has been "created." This process will continue over and over again as the bank lends out $810 of Mike's deposit while putting $90 in reserves and thus "creating" more money -- up to as much as $10,000. Our fractional reserve banking system leads to this multiplier effect on money.
Banks play an important role in the economy. They bring together those people who have extra money and people who need money. Banks utilize a fractional reserve system. This system creates money through the lending process.
Have the students click here for an online assessment activity.
The students can track the growth of money in the fractional reserve system by filling out this worksheet.
How does the Federal Reserve control the supply of money? Discuss the role of the Fed with your students, concentrating on monetary policy and the money supply process.
A 1978 amendment to the Federal Reserve Act gives the Fed responsibility for pursuing a number of goals for the nation's economy. Essentially, this Act states that the Fed should promote high employment, stable prices and sustainable economic growth. The Fed cannot guarantee that everyone will have a job or that inflation will remain under control; employment rates and inflation are affected by the decisions of millions of firms and households interacting in the economy. However, the Fed can help create an environment in which these goals are more likely to be achieved. How does the Fed do this? The answer is through monetary policy. Through monetary policy decisions, the Fed influences interest rates and the supply of money and credit, thus influencing the path of economic activity. The Fed does this primarily by using three tools:
Have the students record the definitions and any other important information on this worksheet.
Links Used:
1. ^ "Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System: Recent Developments" - (www.federalreserve.gov) Provides links to articles on recent decisions made by the board.
2. ^ ^ "Monetary Policy" - (www.federalreserve.gov) Links providing information on monetary policy.
3. ^ "Federal Reserve Education" - (www.federalreserveeducation.org) Provides links to instructional materials and tools that can increase your understanding of the Federal Reserve, economics and financial education.
4. ^ "High School Fed Challenge" - (www.federalreserveeducation.org) An academic competition that provides students the opportunity to study the U.S. economy through the lens of the U.S. central bank.
5. ^ "The Fed Today Video" - (www.federalreserveeducation.org) This 13-minute video covers the Fed's history from its creation in 1913 to the technological innovations of 21st century banking.
6. ^ "interactive flow chart" - (www.federalreserveeducation.org)
7. ^ "Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco" - (www.frbsf.org) Homepage for the Federal Reserve Bank or San Francisco.
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