As noted earlier, the Bank of Canada is empowered to require the chartered banks to maintain secondary reserves of 0-12 percent of their deposits. The more of their funds that they are required to place into secondary reserves (mostly very short-term government promissory notes, or “treasury bills”), the fewer loans the banks will be able to make. Thus, another way in which the Bank of Canada can influence the banks’ lending and the money supply is by varying the required secondary reserve ratio: a lower ratio will permit more lending and a higher money supply, while an increase in the ratio will have the opposite effect, creating a “tight money” situation.
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