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Money
& Banking MGT411
VU
Lesson
21
ROLE
OF FINANCIAL INTERMEDIARIES
Role
of Financial Intermediaries:
Pool
Savings
Safekeeping,
accounting services and
access to the payments
system
Liquidity
Risk
diversification
Information
Services
Role
of Financial Intermediaries
As
a general rule, indirect finance
through financial intermediaries is
much more important
than
direct
finance through the stock and bond
markets
In
virtually every country for
which we have comprehensive data, credit extended by
financial
intermediaries
is larger as a percentage of GDP
than stocks and bonds
combined
Around
the world, firms and individuals
draw their financing
primarily from banks and
other
financial
intermediaries
The
reason for this is
information;
Financial
intermediaries exist so that
individual lenders don't have to worry
about getting
answers
to all of the important questions
concerning a loan and a
borrower
Lending
and borrowing involve transactions
costs and information costs, and
financial
intermediaries
exist to reduce these
costs
Financial
intermediaries perform five
functions:
They
pool the resources of small
savers;
They
provide safekeeping and accounting
services as well as access to the
payments system;
They
supply liquidity;
They
provide ways to diversify risk;
and
They
collect and process information in ways
that reduce information
costs
International
banks handle transactions that
cross borders, which may
mean converting
currencies
Taking
deposits from savers in one
country and providing them to investors
in another country
Converting
currencies to facilitate transactions
for customers who do
business or travel
Pooling
Savings
The
most straightforward economic function of
a financial intermediary is to pool the
resources
of
many small savers
To
succeed in this endeavor the intermediary
must attract substantial numbers of
savers
This
is the essence of indirect finance,
and it means convincing
potential depositors of the
soundness
of the institution
Banks
rely on their reputations and
government guarantees like
deposit insurance to make
sure
customers
feel that their funds
will be safe
Safekeeping,
Payments System Access, and
Accounting
Goldsmiths
were the original bankers;
People
asked the goldsmiths to store
gold in their vaults in
return for a receipt to
prove it was
there
People
soon realized that trading
the receipts was easier than
trading the gold
itself.
Eventually
the goldsmiths noticed that there
was gold left in the vaults
at the end of the day, so
it
could safely be lent to
others
Today,
banks are the places where we
put things for
safekeeping;
We
deposit our paychecks and entrust
our savings to a bank or other
financial institution
because
we believe it will keep our
resources safe until we need
them
Banks
also provide other services,
like ATMs, checkbooks, and monthly
statements, giving
people
access to the payments
system
69
Money
& Banking MGT411
VU
Financial
intermediaries also reduce the
cost of transactions and so promote
specialization and
trade,
helping the economy to function more
efficiently.
According
to the principle of comparative advantage,
people and companies concentrate on
the
activities
At
which they are the best
and
For
which their opportunity cost
is lower
This
leads to specialization in a particular
activity
More
specialization => more trading => more
financial transaction => calls for low
cost of
transaction
The
bookkeeping and accounting services
that financial intermediaries
provide help us to
manage
our finances
Pay-Cheques
House-rents
Utility
bills
Loan
payments
Food
clothing and other
expenses
Savings
and retirement plans
Providing
safekeeping and accounting services as
well as access to the payments
system forces
financial
intermediaries to write legal
contracts, which are
standardized
Much
of what financial intermediaries do
takes advantage of economies of
scale,
The
average cost of producing a
good or service falls as the quantity
produced increases
Information
is also subject to economies of
scale
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