Finance & economics | Free exchange

How much cash should be removed from the financial system?

Undoing quantitative easing provokes fierce debate

An open safe full of money.
Illustration: Álvaro Bernis

The world is still, in a sense, swimming in cash. Or at least the electronic equivalent: central-bank reserves. The Bank for International Settlements (BIS), a club of central banks, estimates that the balance-sheets of rich-country central banks amount to roughly 50% of collective GDP. That is down from 70% in 2021—a reduction which reflects quantitative tightening (QT), or the offloading of assets acquired while easing—but is still far above the pre-global-financial-crisis norm of around 10%.

Explore more

This article appeared in the Finance & economics section of the print edition under the headline “Break the safe”

From the July 6th 2024 edition

Discover stories from this section and more in the list of contents

Explore the edition

Discover more

Calendar with shopping related iconography in each day

Why Black Friday sales grow more annoying every year

Nobody is to blame. Everyone suffers

Donald Trump in Brownsville, Texas on November 19th 2024

Trump wastes no time in reigniting trade wars

Canada and Mexico look likely to suffer


Illustration of a large anvil falling down on a government building.

How Trump, Starmer and Macron can avoid a debt crunch

With deficits soaring, their finance ministers will have to be smart


What Scott Bessent’s appointment means for the Trump administration

The president-elect’s nominee for treasury secretary faces a gruelling job

What Donald Trump and Bernie Sanders get wrong about credit cards

Forget interest rates. Rewards are the real problem

Computers unleashed economic growth. Will artificial intelligence?

Two years after ChatGPT-3.5 arrived, progress has been slower than expected