How Dollars Are Born
Where Does Money Come From?
Ask most people where money comes from and they'll say the government prints it. That's partially true. The Bureau of Engraving and Printing produces physical bills. The US Mint stamps coins. But physical currency accounts for roughly 10% of the total US money supply. The other 90% doesn't exist as paper or metal. It exists as numbers in bank ledgers, digital entries created through a mechanism most people never learn about in school. Understanding where dollars actually come from changes how you think about savings, debt, interest rates, and inflation.
Fractional Reserve Banking
When you deposit $1,000 at a bank, the bank does not store that $1,000 in a vault waiting for you to come back and withdraw it. The bank is required to keep a fraction of your deposit in reserve and is permitted to lend the rest to other customers. That's fractional reserve banking: the bank holds a fraction, lends the remainder. Your account still shows $1,000. You can check your balance and see it right there. But the bank has already sent $900 of it out the door as a loan to someone else. Both you and the borrower now have claims on money that originated from the same $1,000 deposit. This is not a glitch. It is the design. It is the foundational mechanism of modern banking in every developed economy on Earth.
The Money Multiplier
Follow the $1,000. You deposit it at Bank A. Bank A keeps $100 (10% reserve) and lends $900 to a borrower. That borrower spends the $900 at a business, which deposits it at Bank B. Bank B keeps $90 (10%) and lends $810. That $810 gets spent and deposited at Bank C. Bank C keeps $81 and lends $729. The cascade continues through Bank D, Bank E, and beyond. By the time the chain plays out, your original $1,000 deposit has generated approximately $10,000 in total deposits across the banking system. The formula: 1 divided by the reserve ratio. At 10% reserves, the money multiplier is 10. One real dollar becomes ten accounting dollars spread across multiple banks. None of this is hidden or controversial. It's described in Chapter 1 of every introductory economics textbook. It is the fundamental mechanism through which the modern money supply expands and contracts.
- Bank A: receives $1,000 deposit, keeps $100, lends $900
- Bank B: receives $900 deposit, keeps $90, lends $810
- Bank C: receives $810 deposit, keeps $81, lends $729
- Bank D: receives $729 deposit, keeps $73, lends $656
- Bank E: receives $656 deposit, keeps $66, lends $590
- Total deposits created from original $1,000: approximately $10,000
How $1,000 Becomes $10,000
Each bar shows cumulative deposits in the banking system after each round of lending. The original $1,000 deposit generates nearly $10,000 in total money supply through successive rounds of fractional reserve lending.
The Federal Reserve's Levers
The Federal Reserve influences how much money flows through this system using three primary tools. First, open market operations: when the Fed wants to increase the money supply, it buys Treasury bonds from banks, crediting their reserve accounts with newly created money. Those fresh reserves flow through the fractional reserve multiplier and expand the money supply. When the Fed wants to contract, it sells Treasury bonds, pulling reserves out. Second, the federal funds rate: the interest rate banks charge each other for overnight loans of reserves. A lower rate makes borrowing cheaper, encouraging banks to lend more aggressively. A higher rate does the opposite. Third, reserve requirements: the percentage banks must hold back from each deposit (though this lever changed dramatically in 2020). These tools affect mortgage rates, car loans, credit cards, business lending, and ultimately how many dollars exist in the economy.
- Fed buys bonds = more reserves in the system = more lending = money supply grows
- Fed sells bonds = fewer reserves = less lending = money supply contracts
- Lower interest rates = cheaper to borrow = more money creation
- Higher interest rates = expensive to borrow = less money creation
Where Dollars Come From
Three mechanisms create US dollars. Their relative scale matters for understanding the system.
| Method | Share of Supply | Mechanism |
|---|---|---|
| Physical currency | ~10% | Treasury prints, Fed distributes |
| Bank lending | ~90% | Fractional reserve multiplier |
| Quantitative easing | Emergency tool | Fed buys securities, credits reserves |
A Note on Reserve Requirements
In March 2020, the Federal Reserve reduced the required reserve ratio to 0%. Banks are no longer required to hold any minimum fraction of deposits in reserve. The theoretical money multiplier became infinite. In practice, banks still maintain reserves for operational and regulatory reasons, and separate capital adequacy requirements (Basel III) constrain lending. But the formal reserve ratio that every economics textbook teaches, the foundation of the multiplier example above, is currently zero. This is worth sitting with. The mechanism described in this lesson is real and active. The specific numerical constraint that limited it for over a century was removed.
Most dollars are created through bank lending, not government printing. Fractional reserve banking multiplies each deposit through successive rounds of lending. The Federal Reserve controls the pace of this creation through interest rates, bond purchases, and reserve requirements. Understanding this mechanism is foundational. Every lesson that follows, from budgeting to investing to real estate, operates within a system where 90% of the money was created by commercial banks extending credit.
The vast majority of US dollars are not printed by the government. They are created when banks make loans, multiplied through the fractional reserve system. The Federal Reserve controls the pace of this creation. Understanding this mechanism is essential for understanding inflation, interest rates, and why monetary policy affects your personal finances.