Monetary Base (M0 or MB)

The monetary base (M0 or MB) is the narrowest measure of money in AP Macro, consisting of currency in circulation plus bank reserves held at the central bank. It is the raw material the banking system uses to create the larger money supply (M1 and M2).

Verified for the 2027 AP Macroeconomics examLast updated June 2026

What is the Monetary Base (M0 or MB)?

The monetary base, labeled M0 or MB, includes exactly two things: currency in circulation (the coins and bills in people's wallets and cash registers) and bank reserves (the deposits commercial banks hold at the central bank, plus vault cash). That's it. Per EK MEA-3.C.4, this is the definition the AP exam uses, so don't add anything else to it.

Here's the intuitive way to think about it. The monetary base is money the Fed directly creates. It's the foundation layer. Banks then take those reserves and lend against them, and that lending is what builds the bigger monetary aggregates like M1 and M2. So MB is small, but it punches above its weight, because every dollar of new reserves can support multiple dollars of new deposits through the money creation process. When the Fed conducts open market operations, what it's directly changing is the monetary base, and the money supply responds from there.

Why the Monetary Base (M0 or MB) matters in AP Macroeconomics

This term lives in Unit 4: Financial Sector, specifically Topic 4.3 (Definition, Measurement, and Functions of Money). It supports learning objective 4.3.A (define money and its functions) and 4.3.B (calculate measures of money using data). The CED explicitly names the monetary base in EK MEA-3.C.4, so you're expected to know its two components cold and be able to sort assets into the right aggregate when given a table of data. It also sets up everything that follows in Unit 4. You can't understand the money multiplier, fractional reserve banking, or how the Fed changes the money supply without first knowing what the base is.

How the Monetary Base (M0 or MB) connects across the course

M1 (Unit 4)

M1 and MB overlap on currency in circulation, but then they split. MB adds bank reserves, while M1 adds checkable deposits instead. Reserves are in MB but NOT in M1, and that distinction is a classic MCQ trap.

Money Supply (Unit 4)

The monetary base is the seed; the money supply is the harvest. Through fractional reserve banking, each dollar of reserves in MB supports multiple dollars of deposits, which is why M1 and M2 are much larger than the base.

Open Market Operations (Unit 4)

When the Fed buys or sells bonds, the thing it directly changes is the monetary base. Buying bonds injects reserves into banks, expanding MB, and the money multiplier turns that into a larger change in the money supply.

Reserve Requirements (Unit 4)

Reserve requirements determine how much of the monetary base banks must sit on versus lend out. The reserve ratio is the dial that controls how big the money supply gets from a given monetary base.

Is the Monetary Base (M0 or MB) on the AP Macroeconomics exam?

The monetary base shows up most often in multiple-choice questions that test whether you can identify its components. A typical stem asks which of the following is included in the monetary base, and the right answer involves currency in circulation or bank reserves, while distractors throw in checkable deposits, savings accounts, or credit cards. You may also get a data table and have to calculate MB, M1, or M2 (that's LO 4.3.B). No released FRQ has used "monetary base" verbatim, but the concept is baked into Unit 4 FRQs about monetary policy: when an FRQ asks how an open market purchase affects the money supply, the mechanism runs through the monetary base. Know the two components, and know that reserves belong to MB but not to M1.

The Monetary Base (M0 or MB) vs M1

Both include currency in circulation, which is exactly why people mix them up. The difference is the second ingredient. MB adds bank reserves (money sitting at the Fed or in vaults, not spendable by the public). M1 adds checkable deposits (money the public can spend right now). A quick check: ask who can spend it. If only banks and the Fed touch it, it's reserves, so it's in MB only. If you can write a check on it, it's in M1 but not MB.

Key things to remember about the Monetary Base (M0 or MB)

  • The monetary base (M0 or MB) equals currency in circulation plus bank reserves, and the CED (EK MEA-3.C.4) defines it with exactly those two components.

  • Bank reserves are part of the monetary base but are NOT part of M1, because the public can't spend reserves.

  • Checkable deposits are in M1 but not in the monetary base, so MB and M1 are overlapping but different measures.

  • The Fed's open market operations directly change the monetary base, and the money multiplier translates that into a larger change in the overall money supply.

  • The monetary base is the smallest monetary measure because fractional reserve banking lets banks build M1 and M2 on top of it.

Frequently asked questions about the Monetary Base (M0 or MB)

What is the monetary base (M0 or MB) in AP Macro?

It's the narrowest measure of money, made up of currency in circulation plus bank reserves held at the central bank. The AP CED defines it this way in Topic 4.3 (EK MEA-3.C.4).

Is the monetary base the same as the money supply?

No. The monetary base is just currency plus reserves, while the money supply (measured by M1 and M2) is much larger because banks create additional deposit money by lending out reserves. MB is the foundation; M1 and M2 are built on top of it.

How is the monetary base different from M1?

Both include currency in circulation, but MB adds bank reserves while M1 adds checkable deposits. Reserves can't be spent by the public, so they count in MB but not M1, and that swap is a favorite multiple-choice trap.

Are checking account deposits part of the monetary base?

No. Checkable deposits belong to M1, not the monetary base. MB only counts physical currency in circulation and the reserves banks hold at the central bank or in their vaults.

Is the monetary base actually tested on the AP Macro exam?

Yes. It's named directly in the CED under Topic 4.3, and learning objective 4.3.B expects you to calculate measures of money from data. Multiple-choice questions commonly ask you to identify which assets belong in MB versus M1 or M2.