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by eru
1258 days ago
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Creating a loan out of thin air satisfies double entry accounting. You don't need to attract other deposits for that. When a bank makes a loan they already create a corresponding pair of asset and liability on their balance sheet. |
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The obvious factor is liquidity between banking institutions and liquidity requirements by the central bank.
When withdrawing cash, the bank has to give you central bank money, not commercial bank issued money. If it doesn't have this CB money it has to borrow it from the central bank. So having central bank deposits saves you these costs. The other factor is that transfers between banks are also settled with CB money so you either borrow it from the central bank or get it from customers. Finally, the central bank wants to limit maximum money creation by mandating that a bank must keep a percentage of central bank money.
In short the bank could exclusively operate on money borrowed from the central bank but customer cash deposits are cheaper.