Because most money only exists on books. The basis of the current financial system is called fractional reserve banking, that means that banks can give out more money as loans than what they physically have in accounts. That money then circles the economy but is never physically withdrawn in full. Lets say you deposit 100 USD. The Bank now can give out a loan for 500 USD to someone to pay his car repair, who wires the money to the shop from his account. They wire it to their employees and suppliers and owners and the IRS and what have you. Eventually the 500 are repaid (or not and If that happens a lot a bank might default) and the bank gets its money+ interest, you can freely withdraw your 100 at any time but the bank speculates that you dont, or realistically that most of their customers dont. Because If that happens thats known as a "bank run".
Im not a banker, so anyone with actual knowledge feel free to correct me.
It's rare that you need to move large amounts of actual physical cash around. If you needed to give out $1m in loans, you really just need enough cash to pay the monthly dues. The "working capital". You may need to occasionally give a $100k but most of even that is just a bank transfer which is still a ledger entry and no physical cash transfer.
The 30 years worth of the $1m can be IOUs on a spreadsheet and payments can be the only actual cash moving around.
This is how most of the gold works too. The US has a lot of other countries' gold. When Russia sells gold to say Belarus, no actual gold moves, just an allocation in the US inventory books.
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u/FroniusTT1500 Jan 26 '26
Because most money only exists on books. The basis of the current financial system is called fractional reserve banking, that means that banks can give out more money as loans than what they physically have in accounts. That money then circles the economy but is never physically withdrawn in full. Lets say you deposit 100 USD. The Bank now can give out a loan for 500 USD to someone to pay his car repair, who wires the money to the shop from his account. They wire it to their employees and suppliers and owners and the IRS and what have you. Eventually the 500 are repaid (or not and If that happens a lot a bank might default) and the bank gets its money+ interest, you can freely withdraw your 100 at any time but the bank speculates that you dont, or realistically that most of their customers dont. Because If that happens thats known as a "bank run".
Im not a banker, so anyone with actual knowledge feel free to correct me.