I think you may be a bit confused.
Good so far
Ummm... Loans are assets (eg. If you buy a bond, that IOU you receive from the government is considered an asset, not a liability).
Therefore, if the bank makes a $9 loan, it still has $10 in assets ($9 loan + $1 in reserves), and $10 in liabilities (ie. what the bank owes the initial $10 depositor).
This is not taking into account the interest the bank would receive from that loan, in which case, the banks assets > the banks liabilities.
I'm assuming you mean the bank makes an $8.10 loan because the initial person who that $9 was loaned to deposited it back in the bank.
Well, not including interest, the bank actually has $19 in assets ($9 loan + $8.10 loan + $1.90 reserves), and $19 in liabilities (initial $10 deposit + the new $9 deposit).
No, the end result as this continues is that the bank will have $100 in assets, $100 in liabilities, and $10 in reserves (assuming the bank didn't collect interest on their loans). The money supply has not increased. Money =/= assets. Its essentially an oversimplification that the hippies use in a pathetic attempt to prove that banks are evil.
Well, if I ive them 10, they don't just lend out 100.
I deposit 10 (bank as $10 asset and $10 of liabilities = 100%)
Good so far
Makes $9 loan (bank $10 of assets and $19 of liabilities)
Ummm... Loans are assets (eg. If you buy a bond, that IOU you receive from the government is considered an asset, not a liability).
Therefore, if the bank makes a $9 loan, it still has $10 in assets ($9 loan + $1 in reserves), and $10 in liabilities (ie. what the bank owes the initial $10 depositor).
This is not taking into account the interest the bank would receive from that loan, in which case, the banks assets > the banks liabilities.
Then makes an $8.10 ( Bank has $10 of assets and 27.10)
I'm assuming you mean the bank makes an $8.10 loan because the initial person who that $9 was loaned to deposited it back in the bank.
Well, not including interest, the bank actually has $19 in assets ($9 loan + $8.10 loan + $1.90 reserves), and $19 in liabilities (initial $10 deposit + the new $9 deposit).
THe end result as this continues each $1 will become $10
No, the end result as this continues is that the bank will have $100 in assets, $100 in liabilities, and $10 in reserves (assuming the bank didn't collect interest on their loans). The money supply has not increased. Money =/= assets. Its essentially an oversimplification that the hippies use in a pathetic attempt to prove that banks are evil.
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