Model simple and adjusted multipliers with banking inputs. Test reserve, currency, and excess reserve assumptions. Visualize deposit expansion and money supply outcomes with confidence.
Enter banking assumptions, then calculate multiplier behavior, deposit recycling, and money supply effects under both simple and adjusted frameworks.
This sample shows how the calculator behaves with common textbook-style assumptions for reserve requirements, excess reserves, and cash leakage.
| Item | Sample Value |
|---|---|
| Monetary Base | 100,000.00 |
| Initial Deposit | 50,000.00 |
| Required Reserve Ratio | 10.00% |
| Excess Reserve Ratio | 2.00% |
| Currency Ratio | 15.00% |
| Simple Multiplier | 10.0000 |
| Adjusted Multiplier | 4.2593 |
| Adjusted Money Supply | 425,925.93 |
| Maximum Deposit Stock | 370,370.37 |
The calculator combines the textbook reserve-only model with an adjusted model that includes excess reserves and cash withdrawals.
Simple money multiplier: m = 1 / rr
Adjusted money multiplier: m = (1 + c) / (rr + er + c)
Deposit multiplier: d = 1 / (rr + er + c)
Money supply from base: M = Monetary Base × Adjusted Multiplier
Round recycling factor: q = 1 − rr − er − c
Finite deposit expansion: Total Deposits = Initial Deposit × (1 − qn) / (rr + er + c)
rr is the required reserve ratio, er is the excess reserve ratio, c is the currency ratio, and n is the number of lending rounds.
It estimates how much money supply or deposits can be supported by a given monetary base. Higher leakages and reserve holdings usually lower the multiplier.
The adjusted version subtracts extra frictions. Currency withdrawals and excess reserves prevent all loaned funds from returning as deposits, so money creation weakens.
It is the portion of deposits the public prefers to hold as cash. More cash outside banks reduces redepositing and slows deposit expansion.
A higher required reserve ratio raises the drain on each deposit round. That reduces lending capacity, deposit growth, and the multiplier.
The monetary base estimates system-wide supportable money. The initial deposit powers the round-by-round simulation, showing how one deposit propagates through lending cycles.
No. Real outcomes depend on regulation, loan demand, interest rates, capital constraints, and central bank operations. This tool is a structured scenario model.
It estimates the money supply effect of an increase or decrease in the monetary base. The calculator shows both simple and adjusted impacts.
The simple model is useful for quick teaching examples and rough intuition. It highlights reserve requirements clearly, even though it ignores practical leakages.
Important Note: All the Calculators listed in this site are for educational purpose only and we do not guarentee the accuracy of results. Please do consult with other sources as well.