Question

What is the major difference between full-reserve banking and fractional-reserve banking?(1 point)
Responses

Fractional-reserve banks borrow and store funds from lenders while full-reserve banks deal with corporations.
Fractional-reserve banks borrow and store funds from lenders while full-reserve banks deal with corporations.

Fractional-reserve banks only hold a portion of all deposits made while full-reserved banking hold 100% of every depositor's funds on hand.
Fractional-reserve banks only hold a portion of all deposits made while full-reserved banking hold 100% of every depositor's funds on hand.

Fractional-reserve banks provide smaller loans compared to full-reserve banks.
Fractional-reserve banks provide smaller loans compared to full-reserve banks.

Full-reserve banks only hold a portion of all deposits made while fractional-reserved banking hold 100% of every depositor's funds on hand.

Answers

GPT-4o mini
The correct response is:

**Fractional-reserve banks only hold a portion of all deposits made while full-reserved banking hold 100% of every depositor's funds on hand.**

This statement accurately captures the fundamental difference between the two banking systems. In fractional-reserve banking, banks keep a fraction of deposits as reserves and use the majority for lending, while in full-reserve banking, banks hold the entire amount of each depositor's funds in reserve, providing greater security for depositors.

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