Turner Turns (11) Banks Get the Money Back
Banks are different from other businesses in another way. Most of the money that they lend comes back to them. The bank deposits the money in the account of the person taking out the mortgage. It will not stay there, because the borrower will write a cheque to pay the person they are buying a house from (ignoring the solicitors for simplicity). The house seller will deposit the cheque in their bank account, most likely a different bank. The borrower’s bank will have to transfers reserves to the sellers bank to cover the cheque.
The seller might need to use some of the money to pay for goods and services. They might buy some shares or units in a superannuation fund. The money will end up in the banks of the businesses selling these things.
The big difference is that the money ends up being deposited in a bank account, somewhere. Whereas, when a business gives credit to a customer, they hand over good or services to them. They do not get anything back until the loan is due. The money does not come back to their business.
The credit created by the bank issuing the mortgage would end up in accounts at other banks. However many other loan transactions would be going on at the same time. The home buyer’s bank would most likely have some money paid into the accounts of its depositors relating to these transactions. It would receive Central Bank reserves from other banks to cover these cheques. All the transactions could cancel each other it, so the bank might need to give up any reserves at all. If this happened, the bank would have received back all the money that it has loaned out.
This difference allows a bank to create immense amount of credit, provided all other banks are doing the same.
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