1 Learning Objectives 1. Describe the properties of money. 2. Describe the functions of money. 3. Explain the definitions of money used today. 4. Explain.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Test Your Knowledge What Is Money
Advertisements

Money and Banking.
Explorations in Economics
Nature and Function of Money.
Fundamentals of Finance – Lecture 1
Money & Financial Institutions
1 Chapter 24 Money and the Federal Reserve System Key Concepts Key Concepts Summary Summary Practice Quiz Internet Exercises Internet Exercises ©2002 South-Western.
Module 23-Functions of Money and the Money Supply
Chapter 3: What is Money? ALOMAR_212_2.
Money and Banking Chapter Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. “Money is whatever is generally accepted in exchange for goods.
CHAPTER 10.1 MONEY Three uses of $ 6 Characteristics of $ Source of $’s value MONEY Three uses of $ 6 Characteristics of $ Source of $’s value.
Money, Banking, and the Federal Reserve System
Banking. Standards Standard 10 – Students will understand that: institutions evolve in market economies to help individuals and groups accomplish their.
Economics: Principles in Action
Copyright © 2010 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. Chapter 3 What Is Money?
13 CHAPTER Money, the Price Level and Inflation © Pearson Education 2012 After studying this chapter you will be able to:  Define money and describe.
Money and Banking Lecture 03. Review of the Previous Lecture Five Core Principles of Money and Banking Time has Value Risk Requires Compensation Information.
MONEY. One of the important function of a financial system is the monetary function. This is where the introduction of money into the economy enables.
FrontPage: Consider what money is used for. Could anything else be used in its place? The Last Word: No homework; quiz next week; business presentation.
Money, Banking and Financial System
Chapter 14: Money and Banking
13 CHAPTER Money, the Price Level and Inflation © Pearson Education 2012 After studying this chapter you will be able to:  Define money and describe.
Section 1: The Functions and Characteristics of Money.
AP Macroeconomics Unit 3 The Financial Sector Vocab: Ch. 31/32 Exam Dates: 3/27 and 3/28.
13 C H A P T E R Examples of Money Cattle, cigarettes, shells, stones, gold, pepper, wampum, and even beer as money So what is Money? Money is anything.
1 of 32 © 2014 Pearson Education, Inc. CHAPTER OUTLINE 10- Part 1 The Money Supply An Overview of Money What Is Money? Commodity and Fiat Monies Measuring.
1 Money Lecture 1. 2 Presentation Objectives The importance of money in a sound economy The main functions, qualities and development of money The concept.
Chapter three What is Money?. Chapter three Meaning of Money Functions of Money Evolution of payments system Measuring Money.
Money makes the world go around
IGCSE®/O Level Economics
CHAPTER OUTLINE An Overview of Money What Is Money? Commodity and Fiat Monies Measuring the Supply of Money The Private Banking System How Banks Create.
Chapter 10 Money and Banking.
“Money is what money does.”. “ Money is a belief that has to be shared with other people….Otherwise money’s useless: you can’t eat or wear it, buy love.
Money, Banking, and the Federal Reserve
FrontPage: Consider what money is used for. Could anything else be used in its place? The Last Word: Quiz next week.
1 Chapter 24 Money and the Federal Reserve System Key Concepts Key Concepts Summary Summary Practice Quiz Internet Exercises Internet Exercises ©2000 South-Western.
Money Objectives Describe the three uses for money
1 Lecture 5: What’s Money? Mishkin chapter 3 – part A Page
Chapter 10SectionMain Menu Money What is money? What are the three uses of money? What are the six characteristics of money? What are the sources of money’s.
Chapter 10, Section 1 Money and Banking Three Uses of money. Six characteristics of money. Kinds of money.
1 Chapter 24 Money and the Federal Reserve System Key Concepts Key Concepts Summary Summary Practice Quiz Internet Exercises Internet Exercises ©2002 South-Western.
Lecture notes Prepared by Anton Ljutic. © 2004 McGraw–Hill Ryerson Limited Money and Banking CHAPTER SEVEN.
SSEMI1 THE STUDENT WILL DESCRIBE HOW HOUSEHOLDS, BUSINESSES, AND GOVERNMENTS ARE INTERDEPENDENT AND INTERACT THROUGH FLOWS OF GOODS, SERVICES, AND MONEY.
Money 10.1 money video money video money video “He who loses money, loses much; He who loses a friend, loses much more; He who loses faith, loses all”
Chapter 14 Money & Banking Money is usually exchanged for a good or service. Money can be something other than bills, coins and checks (Disney dollars,
The Evolution of Money 1. Some examples of money before there was money? Problems with barter The birth of money S1S1.
Money and Banking Chapter 10. Three Uses of Money Medium of Exchange – anything used to determine value during the exchange of goods and services. Unit.
Money, Banking, Saving and Investing
Simplifying Global Economics, Business, and Finance edunomics.club
 What is Money?  Why do we need it?. Money = 1. Purchase of goods and services 2. Personal worth: measurement of wealth and assets.
SSEMI1 THE STUDENT WILL DESCRIBE HOW HOUSEHOLDS, BUSINESSES, AND GOVERNMENTS ARE INTERDEPENDENT AND INTERACT THROUGH FLOWS OF GOODS, SERVICES, AND MONEY.
MONEY. Define Money? Coins and Bills? Economists define money in terms of its three uses 1) Medium of Exchange 2) Unit of Account 3) Store of Value.
Chapter 10 Money and Banking. Section 1: Money Objective: Describe the three uses of money. List the 6 characteristics of money. Analyze the sources of.
Chapter 14. Chapter 14, Section 1  Money: Anything customarily used as a medium of exchange, a unit of accounting and a store of value.  Without money,
MONEY Rajinder Prasad PGT (Economics) K.V Dungarpur.
EPF 1 st Quarter-Unit 4 The Role of Money Framework 6a, 6b, & 12a.
Do now: Take a new guided notes packet. Think…What do you already know about money? Agenda: Do now Guided notes  What is money? Video You create! HAPPY.
PRINCIPLES OF ECONOMICS Chapter 27 Money and Banking PowerPoint Image Slideshow.
ECF 320 – MONEY, BANKING AND FINANCIAL MARKETS
Unit IV The Financial Sector
Chapter 12 Money and banking Economics, 8th Edition Boyes/Melvin.
Econ 202 Lecture 4 The monetary system.
Money Chapter 10.
Understanding Money and Banking Asst. Prof. Dr. Serdar AYAN
10 C H A P T E R Money and Banking.
MONEY AND THE FINANCIALSYSTEM
Money and monetary policy
Economics: Principles in Action
Meaning of Money What is it?
Unit IV The Financial Sector
Presentation transcript:

1 Learning Objectives 1. Describe the properties of money. 2. Describe the functions of money. 3. Explain the definitions of money used today. 4. Explain the concept of near monies.

2 Money Money has existed for a long time, and a wide range of commodities have served as money in different countries and at different times.

3 Examples of money Throughout history, a wide variety of items have served as money. These include salt, shells, gold, silver, large stone wheels, tobacco, beer, dog teeth, porpoise teeth, elephant tusks, cattle, metal coins, paper bills and cheques.

4 Money All of these types of money should be judged on how well they accomplish the functions of money. ‘Money is what money does’.

5 The barter system Before money, economies used barter system. The principal problem with a barter system is the double coincidence of wants required for success.

6 Double coincidence of wants Double coincidence of wants means that you must find someone who wants what you want to trade and has what you want. This search could be extremely time- consuming and limiting to the development of an economy.

7 The functions of money The functions of money are to serve as: (a) a medium of exchange, (b) a standard of value and (c) a store of value. (d) a standard for deferred payment

8 A. Medium of exchange To be a good medium of exchange-, money must be: 1.Accepted 2.Portable 3.Divisible, 4.Durable, and 5.uniform

9 Accepted Money must be accepted by people when they buy and sell goods and services.

10 Portable It should be portable or easily carried from place to place.

11 Divisible It must also be divisible so that large and small transactions can be made.

12 Durable To function as money an asset must be durable. During its working life any unit of currency changes hands many times and an asset which deteriorated quickly would not be acceptable in settlement of a debt.

13 Uniform It must also be uniform so that a particular unit such as a quarter represents the same value as every other quarter.

14 B. Standard of Value To be a good standard of value, or unit of account, money must be useful for quoting prices. To accomplish this, money must be familiar, divisible and accepted. This can also be expressed as ‘a unit of account’.

15 C. Store of value To be a good store of value, money must be durable so it can be kept for future use. It also should have a stable value so people do not lose purchasing power if they use the money at a later time.

16 A Standard for deferred payment In the modern world, goods are often purchased on credit, with the amount to be repaid being fixed in money terms.

17 Money defined Money is any item or commodity that is generally accepted in payment for goods and services or in repayment of debts, and serves as an asset to its holder.

18 Liquidity One term frequently used in connection with money is liquidity. An asset is more liquid the more swiftly and less costly it can be converted into the means of payment. It follows that money is the most liquid asset of all.

19 Forms of money In modern economies money takes two forms: cash (i.e. notes and coin) and bank deposits. There are several kinds of bank deposit with varying degrees of liquidity.

20 Examples of bank deposits Sight deposits are immediately spendable. Time deposits can only be withdrawn after a period of notice has been given to the institution holding the deposit.

21 Bank Deposits vs Cheques Care must be taken to distinguish between the role of the bank deposits and the role of the cheques. Cheques are simply the means of transferring a bank deposit from one person to another. It is the bank deposit which is accepted in settlement of a debt, not the cheque. A cheque that cannot be honoured against a bank deposit is worthless.

22 Bank deposits Creating bank deposits increases the money supply

23 What are bank deposits and how are they created? Bank deposits come into being in one of three ways: when a bank receives a deposit of cash when a bank buys a security when a bank makes a loan

24 Bank Deposits Whichever way bank deposits are created, a bank must always ensure that its liabilities and assets are equal.

25 Bank Deposits – Liabilities Deposits are the liabilities of a bank, since they are bound to honour alt demands for cash from individual depositors up to the full amount deposited in each individual's account. In other words, deposits are claims against a bank. The assets which banks hold, however, can take a variety of forms, but they always give the bank a claim against someone else. Notes and coin, for example, give commercial banks a claim against the central bank (the Bank of England in the UK) whereas securities and advances give the bank a claim against the borrower.

26 Money : Exercise 1

27 Exercise 1: Functions of money

28 Exercise 2

29 The Functions of Money End of Lesson