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Class 12 Economics Money And Banking Notes | Economics Chapter 2 Important Notes

This article will help you with Class 12 Economics Money and Banking Notes. Economics Chapter 2 Notes are very helpful if you want to score good marks, as I got 98 in CBSE 2025 Boards using these notes. study properly, and you will do good in economics. You can also check our YouTube channel for an explanation and quick concepts revision.

Class 12 Economics Money And Banking Notes

Money and Banking – Complete Study Notes for CBSE Class 12 Economics

These notes cover all key concepts from the Money and Banking chapter.


What is Money?

Money is anything that is generally accepted as a medium of exchange and can be used to settle payments for goods and services.

Functions of Money

FunctionMeaningExample
Medium of ExchangeUsed to buy/sell goods and servicesBuying groceries with cash
Measure of ValueStandard unit for quoting pricesPrice tag on a product
Store of ValueMeans to save purchasing powerSaving money in a bank
Standard of Deferred PaymentUsed for payments in futurePaying loan instalments monthly

Barter System: Earlier trade involved exchanging goods directly (barter), which was difficult due to “double coincidence of wants” (both parties wanting what the other had).


Types of Money

TypeDescriptionExample
Commodity MoneyHas value in itself (used historically)Gold, silver coins
Fiat MoneyValue by government order (legal tender)Currency notes
Fiduciary MoneyAccepted on trust, more than its face valueCheques, drafts
Credit MoneyCreated by commercial banks by lendingLoan balances

Measures of Money Supply in India

MeasureComponentsLiquidity
M1Currency with public + Demand deposits + Other deposits with RBIHighest/Narrow
M2M1 + Savings deposits with Post Office Savings BanksHigh
M3M1 + Net time deposits with banksBroad
M4M3 + All deposits with Post Office Saving BanksBroadest
  • Narrow Money (M1): Most liquid, easy to use for transactions
  • Broad Money (M3, M4): Less liquid, includes term deposits

Banking System in India

Types of Banks

TypeFunctionsExamples
Commercial BanksAccept deposits, give loans, credit creationSBI, ICICI, HDFC
Central BankControls money supply, regulator of all banksReserve Bank of India (RBI)
Cooperative BanksProvide credit, mostly for agriculture and rural areasDistrict Co-op Bank

Commercial Banks: Functions

1. Primary Functions

  • Accepting Deposits (Savings, Current, Fixed)
  • Advancing Loans (Term loans, Cash credit, Overdraft)
  • Credit Creation: Banks can lend more than they have as primary deposits, increasing money supply.

2. Secondary Functions

  • Agency Services (Collecting cheques, bills, providing locker)
  • General Utility Services (Debit cards, ATM, currency exchange)

Credit Creation Example
If a bank receives ₹1000 in deposits and maintains a Legal Reserve Ratio (LRR) of 20%, it can create total deposits of ₹5000 (using multiplier formula = 1/LRR).


Central Bank (RBI): Functions

FunctionDescription
Issuer of CurrencyResponsible for printing of notes, except 1 Rupee coins
Banker to GovernmentManages government’s accounts and transactions
Bankers’ BankSupervises and lends to commercial banks
Lender of Last ResortProvides emergency funds to banks
Controller of CreditUses policy tools to regulate money supply
Custodian of Foreign ExchangeManages India’s forex reserves

Credit Control Methods (by RBI)

Quantitative Tools

ToolWhat it Does
Bank RateRate at which RBI lends to commercial banks
Repo RateRate for short-term borrowing by banks
Reverse Repo RateRate at which RBI borrows from banks
CRR (Cash Reserve Ratio)% of deposits banks must keep with RBI
SLR (Statutory Liquidity Ratio)% to be kept in safe assets (like govt securities)

Qualitative Tools

ToolWhat it Does
Moral SuasionRBI persuades banks to follow its policies
Margin RequirementsRegulates security loan amounts
Direct ActionRestrictions on lending practices

Money Multiplier and Credit Creation

  • Money Multiplier: Shows how much total money the banking system can create with an initial deposit.
    • Formula: Money Multiplier = 1 / LRR
  • Credit Created: Initial Deposit × Money Multiplier
    • Example: ₹1000 initial deposit, LRR = 20% ⇒ Credit Created = ₹5000 (Total) – ₹1000 (Primary) = ₹4000 (Secondary)

Sample Table: Comparison of Measures of Money Supply

MeasureComponentsLiquidity
M1Currency, Demand DepositsMost liquid
M2M1 + Savings in Post OfficeLess liquid
M3M1 + Time Deposits with BanksBroad money
M4M3 + All Post Office DepositsBroadest

Common Terms and Definitions

TermDefinition
Legal Tender MoneyMust be accepted for payment by law
Fiat MoneyDeclared by government as money, no intrinsic value
Demand DepositsWithdrawable any time
Time DepositsWithdrawable after fixed time
Credit CreationBanks lend multiple times their actual cash base

Sample Numerical Problem

Question:
If RBI raises CRR from 5% to 10%, how will this affect money supply?

Answer:

  • Higher CRR means banks have to keep more money with RBI.
  • Less money left for lending.
  • Thus, money supply decreases in the economy.

Important Points for Exams

  • Money removes barter difficulty (“double coincidence of wants”)
  • Money supply: M1 is most liquid, M3 is broadest
  • RBI is the central bank, single currency issuer
  • Credit creation increases total money supply in the economy
  • Repo/Reverse Repo rates – Used by RBI to manage liquidity and control inflation.

Quick Revision Table

ConceptKey Point
MoneyAnything accepted for exchange
Commercial BankDeposit-acceptor, loan-provider, credit creator
Central Bank (RBI)Regulator, supervisor, lender of last resort
CRR/SLRReserve requirements to control lending
Money Multiplier1/LRR, shows money creation ability

Summary:
Money and Banking are crucial for functioning of any economy. Money makes buying and selling easy, and banks help manage and create money. RBI (Central Bank) controls the entire system to keep the economy stable. Knowing the measures of money supply, how banks create money, and the RBI’s role will help you ace your exams!


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