This MCQ module is based on: RBI, Commercial Banks & Money Creation
RBI, Commercial Banks & Money Creation
This assessment will be based on: RBI, Commercial Banks & Money Creation
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RBI, Commercial Banks & the Money Creation Multiplier
Banks accept your deposit, and somehow the same rupee ends up funding a friend's home loan, a farmer's tractor, a small-business expansion — all at once. Where do banks find the resources? In Part 2 we step into the Reserve Bank of India, the institution that issues India's currency and runs its monetary policy, and into the everyday workings of commercial banks. We then perform the most surprising trick in introductory economics: turning ₹100 in primary deposits into ₹1,000 of total deposits — using nothing but a 10% reserve rule, a calculator, and the iron logic of arithmetic.
3.4 The Reserve Bank of India — The Banker's Bank
Almost every modern country has a single central bank. India got its central bank in 1935 with the establishment of the Reserve Bank of India?, headquartered in Mumbai. The RBI was nationalised in 1949 and now operates under the Reserve Bank of India Act, 1934. It performs six classical functions of a central bank.
The Six Functions of the Reserve Bank of India
Bloom: L2 Understand3.4.1 Currency Authority
The most visible function of the RBI? is the issue of currency notes. Under Section 22 of the RBI Act, 1934, the RBI has the sole right to issue all currency notes of denominations ₹2 and above. (The ₹1 note and all coins are issued by the Government of India, although they too circulate through RBI channels.) Notes are printed at four currency presses — Mysore, Salboni, Nashik and Dewas. RBI maintains a Note Issue Department whose accounts are kept separately from those of the rest of the bank.
3.4.2 Banker to the Government
The RBI maintains the cash balances of the central and state governments, accepts receipts and makes payments on their behalf, and floats and redeems government bonds (G-Secs, T-bills). It manages the country's public debt: when the Government of India needs to borrow, the RBI auctions G-Secs in the market on its behalf.
3.4.3 Banker's Bank — Custodian of Cash Reserves
Every commercial bank in India is required to maintain cash reserves with the RBI under the Cash Reserve Ratio (CRR)?. These reserves act as a safety buffer and are the lever through which the RBI influences the lending capacity of the banking system. Beyond statutory reserves, the RBI also clears interbank settlements — when SBI customer A pays HDFC customer B, the net settlement happens through these reserve accounts.
3.4.4 Lender of Last Resort
When commercial banks are short of liquidity and cannot borrow from the market, they may approach the RBI. The RBI's willingness to lend in such moments — at the bank rate, the repo rate, or under the Marginal Standing Facility (MSF) — keeps a temporary liquidity squeeze from snowballing into a systemic banking panic. This crucial role is called the lender of last resort?.
3.4.5 Controller of Credit / Monetary Authority
This is the macro-economically most important function. The RBI controls the supply of money in the economy through quantitative tools (CRR, SLR, repo rate, OMO) and qualitative tools (margin requirements, moral suasion, credit allocation). Each is studied in detail in Part 3.
3.4.6 Custodian of Foreign Exchange Reserves
The RBI holds and manages India's foreign exchange reserves — currently in the range of US $640–700 billion (2024–25), among the largest in the world. It also intervenes in the foreign exchange market to smooth excessive volatility in the rupee.
3.5 Commercial Banks — The Workhorses of the Banking System
Commercial banks? are the second pillar of the money-creating system. They mediate between people with surplus funds and those who need funds. They have three classical functions.
| Function | How It Works | Why It Matters |
|---|---|---|
| ① Accept Deposits | Savings, current and time deposits from households & firms | Mobilises savings in the economy |
| ② Advance Loans | Home, vehicle, education, crop, business loans at interest | Channels savings into productive use |
| ③ Create Credit (Money) | Lend out a fraction of deposits, retain only required reserves | Multiplies the original currency injected |
Why people prefer banks. Just like the villagers preferred to keep their gold with Lala the goldsmith, depositors today prefer to keep funds with banks because (i) banks pay interest on deposits; (ii) deposits are safer than cash at home; and (iii) demand deposits make transactions cheap and fast through cheques, debit cards, NEFT/RTGS and UPI. Carrying ₹50 lakh in cash to buy a flat is unthinkable — but a single cheque or a single UPI transfer settles it in seconds.
The bank's "spread". Commercial banks earn the difference between the interest charged on loans and the interest paid to depositors — this spread is the bank's gross profit before operating costs.
3.5.1 The Bank's Balance Sheet
A balance sheet is a record of assets and liabilities of any firm. For a bank, the picture has a peculiar shape:
Assets = Reserves + Loans | Liabilities = DepositsNet Worth = Assets − LiabilitiesReserves are the bank's deposits with the RBI plus its own cash; loans are the bank's claims on its borrowers; deposits are what the bank owes its depositors. By accounting rule, both sides must balance.
NCERT's opening illustration: a fictional bank starts when Ms Fernandes deposits ₹100 with it; the bank in turn deposits the entire ₹100 as reserves with the RBI. So:
| Assets | Amount | Liabilities | Amount |
|---|---|---|---|
| Reserves | ₹100 | Deposits | ₹100 |
| Net Worth | ₹0 | ||
| Total | ₹100 | Total | ₹100 |
If we assume there is no currency in circulation outside the bank, total money supply M1 = Currency + Deposits = 0 + 100 = ₹100. So far, no money has been created. The magic begins when the bank starts to lend.
3.6 Money Creation by the Banking System — The Multiplier in Action
3.6.1 The Goldsmith Story Revisited
Recall NCERT's Lala-the-goldsmith story from Part 1. The villagers' gold deposits totalled 100 kg; Lala issued paper receipts for 100 kg and people exchanged the receipts as money. Now Ramu asks Lala for a loan of 25 kg of gold. Can Lala lend? The 100 kg already has claimants — but Lala notices that not everyone withdraws on the same day. So he lends 25 kg of gold to Ramu, who pays Ali, who deposits it back with Lala for a fresh 25-kg receipt. The receipts in circulation have now risen from 100 kg to 125 kg. Lala has created money out of thin air. Modern banking works exactly the same way.
3.6.2 Two Brakes on Lending — CRR and SLR
Could banks then create unlimited money? No. The RBI imposes two reserve requirements as legal brakes:
SLR (Statutory Liquidity Ratio) = Percentage of deposits that banks must keep in liquid form (mainly approved government securities and gold) with themselves, in addition to CRR.
3.6.3 Worked Example: ₹100 → ₹500 (CRR = 20%)
NCERT's Table 3.2 walks through the multiplier process. Assume a single bank, no currency leakage, CRR = 20%, and Leela makes the original deposit of ₹100. Round by round, the bank lends out 80% of every fresh deposit; the borrower spends it; the recipient redeposits; and so on. The cascade ends when total required reserves equal ₹100 (i.e., when total deposits reach ₹500, since 20% of 500 = 100).
| Round | Deposit in Bank (₹) | Required Reserve (₹) | Loan Made (₹) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 100.00 | 20.00 | 80.00 |
| 2 | 180.00 | 36.00 | 64.00 |
| 3 | 244.00 | 48.80 | 51.20 |
| 4 | 295.20 | 59.04 | 40.96 |
| ... | ... | ... | ... |
| Last | 500.00 | 100.00 | 400.00 |
Final balance sheet: Reserves ₹100 + Loans ₹400 = Deposits ₹500. With currency in circulation = 0, money supply M1 = 0 + 500 = ₹500. The original ₹100 has become ₹500 — money supply has multiplied fivefold.
The Money Creation Cascade — Visualised
Bloom: L3 Apply3.6.4 The Money Multiplier — One-Line Formula
Money Multiplier (m) = 1 ÷ CRRTotal Deposits = Initial Deposit × Money MultiplierWorked: with CRR = 20%, m = 1/0.20 = 5; deposits = 100 × 5 = ₹500.
Worked: with CRR = 10%, m = 1/0.10 = 10; deposits = 100 × 10 = ₹1,000.
Worked: with CRR = 25%, m = 1/0.25 = 4; deposits = 100 × 4 = ₹400.
Mathematically, the multiplier is the sum of the infinite geometric series 1 + (1−r) + (1−r)² + … where r is the reserve ratio. Using the formula for the sum of an infinite GP (NCERT Appendix 3.1): S = a / (1−common ratio) = 1 / r = 1/CRR.
3.6.5 Why Higher CRR Cuts Money Supply
If the RBI raises CRR from 20% to 25%, the same ₹100 in reserves now supports only ₹400 of deposits (1/0.25 = 4). Banks would have to call back some loans to meet the higher reserve requirement. Money supply contracts. Conversely, a CRR cut releases lending capacity and expands money supply. This is one of the most powerful tools the RBI has — small CRR changes ripple through the economy in a big way.
3.6.6 The Worked NCERT Example: ₹100 + 10% CRR → ₹1,000
The case the brief asks for: take a primary deposit of ₹100 and a CRR of 10%. Money multiplier m = 1/0.10 = 10. Total deposits supported = 100 × 10 = ₹1,000. Total loans created = 1,000 − 100 = ₹900. Reserves held = 100. Successive lending: Round 1 lend ₹90 of a ₹100 deposit; Round 2 lend ₹81 of a ₹90 redeposit; … the geometric series 90 + 81 + 72.9 + 65.61 + … sums to ₹900 over infinite rounds.
3.6.7 Limitations of Credit Creation
The textbook multiplier 1/CRR is the maximum creation. In practice it leaks for several reasons:
- Currency drain — borrowers don't redeposit the entire loan; some is held as cash by the public, leaking out of the multiplier process.
- Excess reserves — banks may hold reserves above the CRR for safety, especially during recessions, reducing actual lending.
- Demand for loans — there must be borrowers willing to take loans. In a slowdown, even cheap credit goes uncollected.
- SLR — banks must additionally keep liquid assets (currently 18%), further trimming lendable resources.
- Capital adequacy norms (Basel III) — banks must maintain a minimum capital base relative to risk-weighted assets, restricting riskier lending.
The RBI changes the CRR. For each scenario below, calculate the new money multiplier and the new total deposits supported by ₹200 of initial reserves.
- CRR is cut from 5% to 4%.
- CRR is raised from 4% to 6%.
- Banks suddenly want to hold 1% extra excess reserves on top of CRR = 4%. Effective ratio?
The Reserve Bank of India is given the sole right to issue bank notes in India under Section 22 of the RBI Act, 1934. The Bank may issue notes of denominations ₹2, ₹5, ₹10, ₹20, ₹50, ₹100, ₹200, ₹500, ₹2,000 and other denominations specified by the Central Government.
Competency-Based Questions — Part 2
(A) Both A and R are true, and R is the correct explanation of A.
(B) Both A and R are true, but R is NOT the correct explanation of A.
(C) A is true, but R is false.
(D) A is false, but R is true.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the role of the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) in NCERT Class 12?
The Reserve Bank of India is India's central bank, set up in 1935 and nationalised in 1949. NCERT Class 12 lists seven functions: (1) bank of issue — it issues all currency notes; (2) banker to the government — it manages the central government's accounts; (3) banker to the banks — commercial banks keep deposits with it; (4) controller of credit — it sets the CRR, SLR, repo rate; (5) custodian of foreign exchange reserves; (6) lender of last resort to commercial banks; and (7) promoter of the financial system. Every later monetary-policy concept in the chapter rests on these seven roles.
How do commercial banks create money in NCERT Class 12?
When a commercial bank receives a primary deposit of ₹1,000 and the cash reserve ratio (CRR) is 10 percent, it keeps ₹100 as reserves and lends out ₹900. The borrower spends the loan, which gets re-deposited in another bank as a derivative deposit. That bank keeps 10 percent (₹90) and lends out ₹810. The cascade continues, and the total deposits created equal the initial deposit divided by the CRR. With CRR = 0.10, ₹1,000 of primary deposits supports ₹10,000 of total deposits — the deposit multiplier in action.
What is the deposit multiplier formula?
The deposit multiplier is the reciprocal of the cash reserve ratio: deposit multiplier = 1 / CRR. If the CRR is 10 percent (0.10), the multiplier is 10, so each rupee of fresh deposits supports up to ten rupees of total bank deposits in the system. NCERT Class 12 derives this as the sum of an infinite geometric series of leakages-into-reserves at every round of lending. The actual real-world multiplier is smaller because banks hold excess reserves and the public holds part of new money as currency, both of which leak out of the cascade.
What is the difference between primary and derivative deposits?
A primary deposit is a deposit a bank receives as cash from the public — a household or firm bringing money to the bank counter. A derivative deposit is created when the bank lends part of an existing deposit and the loan amount returns to the banking system as a deposit in another account. The total money supply expands only because of derivative deposits; primary deposits by themselves do not multiply the money stock. NCERT Class 12 builds the entire money-creation cascade on this distinction.
What are the main functions of commercial banks in NCERT Class 12?
Commercial banks accept deposits from the public, give loans and advances to borrowers, and provide payment services such as cheques, drafts, RTGS and digital transfers. They also offer agency services like collecting bills, paying utility bills and managing safe-deposit lockers. Macroeconomically, the most important commercial-bank function is creating credit — by making loans they expand the money supply, as the deposit multiplier shows. Their balance sheets are the operational layer through which RBI monetary policy reaches the economy.
How does the cash reserve ratio (CRR) limit money creation?
The cash reserve ratio is the fraction of deposits commercial banks must keep as reserves with the Reserve Bank of India. A high CRR forces banks to lock up more of every new rupee of deposits, so they can lend less and the deposit multiplier (1/CRR) becomes smaller. A low CRR releases more lendable funds and increases the multiplier. The RBI uses CRR changes as one of its main tools to slow or accelerate money supply growth, especially during inflation or deflation episodes.