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Macroeconomic Policy Fundamentals

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Presentation on theme: "Macroeconomic Policy Fundamentals"— Presentation transcript:

1 Macroeconomic Policy Fundamentals
Chapter 13

2 Discussion Topics Characteristics of money Federal Reserve System
Changing the money supply Money market equilibrium Effects of monetary policy on economy The federal budget deficit The national debt Fiscal policy options

3 Functions of Money Medium of exchange – facilitates payment to others for goods and services Unit of accounting – assessing profitability of businesses, household budgets and aggregate variables like GDP Store of value – money is a liquid asset which has value in investment portfolios and cash flow decisions of businesses and households Page 299

4 Functions of the Fed Supply the economy with paper currency
Supervise member banks Provide check collection and clearing services Maintain the reserve balances of depository institutions Lend to depository institutions Act at the federal government’s banker and fiscal agent Regulate the money supply Page

5 Location of the 12 District
Federal Reserve Banks Page 301

6 Changing of the Guard Alan Greenspan Ben Bernanke

7 The Fed’s Policy Tools Reserve requirements – depository institutions are required to maintain a specific fraction of their customers’ deposits as reserves. Discount rate – rate depository institutions pay when they borrow from the Fed Open market operations – Fed can buy or sell government securities to alter the money supply Page 304 – 305

8 Role of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System Page 303

9 Role of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System Page 303

10 Role of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System Page 303

11 Key role played by the Federal Open Market Committee or FOMC Page 303

12 Recent Fed Rate Actions

13 Role of the 12 District Federal Reserve Banks located throughout the country Page 303

14 Determinants of the Money Supply

15 Existing money supply curve. Note it is perpendicular to the quantity axis, implying it is unaffected by the interest rate. Page 309

16 Expansionary monetary policy
actions will shift the MS curve to the right over a period of 12 months or so. Page 309

17 Contractionary monetary
policy actions, on the other hand, will shift the money supply curve to left over a similar time period. Page 309

18 Suppose a depositor in Bank Ag sells $1 million in government securities
to the Fed. He then deposits the proceeds from the sale in his bank. If the fractional reserve requirement ratio is 20 percent, Bank Ag can increase the volume of its loans by $800,000. Suppose the proceeds of these loans are deposited in Bank B. Follow the trail to the Total line. Page 307

19 Change in the Money Supply
We can skip tracing deposits through the economy by using the following money supply (MS) equation: MS = (1.0 ÷ RR) × TR = MM × TR where TR represents total reserves and RR is the reserve requirement ratio. The expression with the brackets is known as the money multiplier. We can restate this equation in terms of the change in the money supply as follows: MS = (1.0 ÷ RR) ×  TR = MM × TR Page 307 – 308

20 Change in the Money Supply
Using the example in Table 13.3 of the $1 million deposit on page 307 and 20% reserve requirements ratio, we see that the change in the money supply is: MS = (1.0 ÷ .20) x TR = 5.0 x $1 million = $5 million This results in a change in loans of loans = MS - TR = $5 million - $1 million = $4 million See bottom line in Table 13.3 Page 307 – 308

21 = + Change in money supply Change in loan volume Initial infusion
Page 307

22 Impacts of Policy Tools
Expansionary actions: Effects of action: Fed buys securities Total reserves increase Fed lowers the discount rate Total reserves increase Fed lowers required reserve ratio Money multiplier increases Greenspan Page

23 Impacts of Policy Tools
Expansionary actions: Effects of action: Fed buys securities Total reserves increase Fed lowers the discount rate Total reserves increase Fed lowers required reserve ratio Money multiplier increases Contractionary actions: Effects of action: Fed sells securities Total reserves decrease Fed raises the discount rate Total reserves decrease Fed raises required reserve ratio Money multiplier decreases Greenspan Page

24 Determinants of the Money Demand

25 Demand for Money Transactions demand for money – carry cash to pay for normal expenditures Precautionary demand for money – carry cash to cover unexpected expenditures Speculative demand for money – hold cash as an asset in investment portfolios since the value of cash does not decline during periods of falling asset prices. Page

26 The money demand curve is given by equation (16.5): MD = c –d(R) + e(NI) where R is the rate of interest and NI is national income. The coefficient d is the slope of the curve and e represents MD÷ NI. Page 311

27 MD = c –d(R) + e(NI) Increase in income increases demand for money
Page 311

28 rate given by intersection of demand and supply
Money market interest rate given by intersection of demand and supply Page 311

29 MS* Expansionary monetary policy lowers interest rates 0.06 Page 311

30 MS* Contractionary monetary policy raises interest rates 0.14 Page 311

31 Page 312 The full effects of this change could take 12 months or more
to register in bank deposits Page 312

32 Page 312 A change in the money supply will alter the
equilibrium interest rate in the money market Page 312

33 Page 312 We know from Chapter 12 that a change in interest
rates will lead to movement along the planned investment function….increasing or decreasing new investment Page 312

34 Page 312 We also know from Chapter 12 that increased investment
expenditures, a component of GDP, increases the demand for labor, lowers unemployment and thus fuels further growth in national income… Page 312

35 Eliminating Recessionary and Inflationary Gaps

36 What is the magnitude of the recessionary gap? Page 313

37 What is the magnitude of the recessionary gap? It is YFE – Y1 Page 313

38 The use of expansionary
monetary policy actions to push aggregate demand from AD1 to AD3 increases real GDP from Y1 to Y3 while only increasing the general price level to P3. Page 313

39 Recessionary gap of YFE – Y1 is partially closed to YFE – Y3 Inflation rate (P3 – P0) ÷P0 Page 313

40 The further use of expansionary monetary policy to push aggregate demand from AD3 to AD4 increases real GDP from Y3 to YFE (full employment GDP), but increases the general price level to P4. Page 313

41 Inflation rate (P4 – P3) ÷P3 Recessionary gap fully closed Page 313

42 The use of expansionary
monetary policy to attain YPOT by shifting aggregate demand to AD5 will increase the general price level to P5. Inflation rate (P5 – P4) ÷P4 Inflationary gap created….. Page 313

43 Microeconomic Interest Rate Implications

44 Interest Rate Impacts on a 10-Year $150K Business Loan
Annual total PI payment Annual interest payment Total interest payment 8 percent $22,354.69 $7,354.69 $73,546.90 14 percent 28,757.67 13,757.67 137,576.88 20 percent 35,782.44 20,782.44 207,824.40 Page 315

45 Interest Rate Impacts on a 20- Year $100K Home Mortgage
Monthly total PI payment interest Total 8 percent $848.78 $432.08 $103,707.46 12 percent 1,115.73 699.06 167,773.46 Page 315

46 What is Fiscal Policy? Taxation by federal, state and local governments Government spending by federal state and local governments Budget deficit and the national debt Page 316

47 States Without Income Tax
Eight states do not have a state income tax

48 State and Local Taxes Alaska, thanks to oil reserves, has the lowest tax burden Maine registering the highest has the highest tax burden Major sources are sales taxes and property taxes

49 Our focus is on fiscal policy at the federal level….

50 Rising spending and tax cuts to spur the economy brought back budget deficits Page 318

51 Individuals and not businesses pay the
Bulk of federal taxes. Page 318

52 The effects of 9/11 and increased spending plus tax cuts to stimulate the economy led to record high deficits… A strong economy and controlled spending led to the first budget surplus in more than 20 years… Page 320

53 Recent Trends in Deficit
Typically the economy runs a budget deficit at the federal level were the exceptions in recent years Fueled by growing economy and falling interest rates

54 Debt and the Deficit National debtT = National debtT-1 + DeficitT

55 The growth in federal spending has grown rapidly over the last 20 years…
Page 321

56

57

58

59 Page 322 While the national debt grew as
deficit spending dominated the 1980s and 1990s, debt as a percent of GDP stayed within post-WW II experience… Page 322

60 Federal government spending on Agriculture programs is the fourth highest on this list of total federal spending.

61 Fiscal Policy Options Automatic fiscal policy instruments: take effect without explicit action by policymakers (e.g., progressive tax rates) Discretionary fiscal policy instruments: require explicit actions by the president or Congress (e.g., passing a law) Page 324

62 Impacts of Policy Tools
Expansionary actions: Effects of action: Cut taxes Increase disposable income Increase government spending Increase aggregate demand Congress & Bush Page 327

63 Impacts of Policy Tools
Expansionary actions: Effects of action: Cut taxes Increase disposable income Increase government spending Increase aggregate demand Contractionary actions: Effects of action: Increase taxes Decrease disposable income Cut government spending Decrease aggregate demand Congress & Bush Page 327

64 A federal budget deficit requires
the U.S. Treasury to issue more government securities to balance sources and uses of funds… Page 324

65 An increase in the sale of
government securities reduces the pool of private capital available to finance investment expenditures, raising interest rates… Page 324

66 We know from Chapter 12 that higher interest rates depresses investment expenditures… Page 324

67 The use of expansionary
fiscal policy actions to push aggregate demand from AD1 to AD3 increases real GDP from Y1 to Y3 while only increasing the general price level to P3. Inflation rate (P3 – P0) ÷P0 Recessionary gap partially closed Page 328

68 The use of expansionary
fiscal policy to push demand from AD3 to AD4 increases real GDP from Y3 to YFE (full employment GDP), But increases the general price level to P4. Inflation rate (P4 – P3) ÷P3 Recessionary gap closed…. Page 328

69 The use of expansionary
fiscal policy to attain YPOT by shifting aggregate demand to AD5 will Increase the general price level to P5. Inflation rate (P5 – P4) ÷P4 Inflationary gap created…. Page 328

70 Monetary Policy Summary
Functions of money and the role of the Federal Reserve System in the economy The money multiplier and the growth of the money supply Tools of monetary policy Demand for money and money market equilibrium Policy linkages and timing of full effects Elimination of recessionary and inflationary gaps.

71 Fiscal Policy Summary Difference between discretionary and automatic fiscal policy tools Expansionary and contractionary fiscal policy actions Application to eliminating recessionary and inflationary gaps Budget deficits, national debt and concept of “crowding out”

72 Chapter 14 focuses on the key consequences of business fluctuations….


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