Meaning of Money Money (money supply)—a generally accepted means of payment for goods, services or debts  Money is a stock …the stock of dollars in our.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
1 Chapter 3 What Is Money?. 2 Meaning of Money Money (money supply)anything that is generally accepted in payment for goods or services or in the repayment.
Advertisements

Chapter 3 What Is Money?.
What is Money Ch 13.
Money and the Banking System
Fundamentals of Finance – Lecture 1
Money and Monetary Policy
Lecture What Is Money? Chapters 3. Meaning of Money Money – anything that is generally accepted in payment for goods or services, taxes or in the repayment.
13.1 WHAT IS MONEY? ● money Any items that are regularly used in economic transactions or exchanges and accepted by buyers and sellers.
Chapter 3: What is Money? ALOMAR_212_2.
Money Module 23.
Unit 2 What Is Money?.
Chapter 3 What is Money?.
LandskronerMoney slide 1 Prof. Yoram Landskroner Functions and Definitions of Money.
Meaning of Money Money (money supply)—a generally accepted means of payment for goods, services or debts  Money is a stock …the stock of dollars in our.
Chapter 3 What Is Money?. Copyright © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. 3-2 Meaning of Money Money (money supply)—anything that is generally.
CHAPTERS 1-4 REVIEW CHAPTER 3 WHAT IS MONEY? SUMMARY
© 2008 Pearson Education Canada3.1 Chapter 3 What Is Money?
Chapter 3 What Is Money?. Copyright © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. 3-2 Meaning of Money Money (money supply)—anything that is generally.
Copyright © 2010 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. Chapter 3 What Is Money?
MONEY AND INFLATION. What is money? Money is a generalized claim on all other assets. It must be acceptable, scarce, desirable, and divisible.
Money and Banking ( BE 220 ) The Economics of Money, Banking and Financial Markets. By: Frederic S. Mishkin.
Today’s Objectives Hand back and Review Tests Test Corrections in Groups (Assigned already) Begin Notes on Chapter 8 – Banking You will… – Understand your.
Chapter 3 WHAT IS MONEY?. MEANING OF MONEY In ordinary conversation, we commonly use the word money to mean income ("he makes a lot of money") or wealth.
BuffDaniel Presents Money and Banking Chapter 2 Money.
Copyright © 2010 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. 3-1 Meaning of Money What is it? Money (or the “money supply”): anything that is generally.
Anything that commonly accepted as a payment for goods and services.
Chapter 3 What Is Money?. © 2013 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved.3-2 Meaning of Money What is it? Money (or the “money supply”): anything.
Chapter 3 What Is Money?. © 2016 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved.3-2 Preview In this chapter, we develop precise definitions by exploring.
Chapter 3 What Is Money?. © 2013 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved.3-2 Meaning of Money money (also referred to as the money supply) as anything.
Ch. 01: Money and Banking. Money Money, also referred to as the money supply, is defined as anything that is generally accepted in payment for goods or.
Money Objectives Describe the three uses for money
1 Lecture 5: What’s Money? Mishkin chapter 3 – part A Page
Summarize: Present Value/ Future Value/ Compounding
Copyright  2011 Pearson Canada Inc Chapter 3 What Is Money?
WHAT IS MONEY?. Money and Monetary Systems Money is everywhere in the world. All economic activity is linked to money. What is Money? How did it develop.
Copyright © 2014 Pearson Canada Inc. Chapter 3 WHAT IS MONEY? Mishkin/Serletis The Economics of Money, Banking, and Financial Markets Fifth Canadian Edition.
Money and Banking $665 billion There is $665 billion in currency [notes & coins]. $37 million $37 million in notes is printed each day.
Introduction to Money What exactly is money?. MONEY Money- anything used to facilitate the exchange of goods & services between buyers and sellers.
Money, Measurement, and Time Cost. What is Money? Any asset that can easily be used to purchase goods and services Two monetary aggregates define this.
Lecture What Is Money? Chapters 3. Learning Objectives Describe what money is List and summarize the functions of money Identify different types of payment.
Money and Banking Winter Day 1 Dr. Andrew L. H. Parkes “A Practical Understanding for use in Business” 卜安吉.
Money and Banking— Monetary Policy Section 5 Modules
Copyright  2011 Pearson Canada Inc Chapter 3 What Is Money?
Chapter 14 Money 3 Functions of Money Medium of Exchange - Barter System Unit of Accounting - Yardstick for comparison - Enables accurate financial records.
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,
Why Study Money, Banking, and Financial Markets?
Unit 4-1: Money, Banking, and Monetary Policy 1. Why do we use money? What would happen if we didn’t have money? The Barter System- goods and services.
Lecture 2 What Is Money?  1.Meaning of Money  Money - anything that is generally accepted in payment for goods or services or in the repayment of debts;
Chapter 14 Money and Banking.
Chapter 3 What Is Money?. 3-2 Meaning of Money What is it? Money (or the “money supply”): anything that is generally accepted in payment for goods or.
ECF 320 – MONEY, BANKING AND FINANCIAL MARKETS
Unit IV The Financial Sector
Chapter 3 What Is Money?.
Chapter 3 What Is Money?.
Chapter 3 What Is Money?.
The Economics of Money, Banking and Financial Markets.
Chapter 3 What Is Money?.
Chapter 3 What Is Money?.
AP/IB Economics Spring 2006 Mr. Elliott
Chapter 3 What Is Money?.
Meaning of Money Money (money supply)—anything that is generally accepted in payment for goods or services or in the repayment of debts; a stock concept.
Chapter 3 What Is Money?.
Chapter 2 - Money, Money Supply, and Interest
Chapter 3 What Is Money?.
Chapter 3 What Is Money?.
Chapter 3 What Is Money?.
13.1 WHAT IS MONEY? ● money Any items that are regularly used in economic transactions or exchanges and accepted by buyers and sellers.
Chapter 3 What Is Money?.
Meaning of Money What is it?
Unit IV The Financial Sector
Presentation transcript:

Meaning of Money Money (money supply)—a generally accepted means of payment for goods, services or debts  Money is a stock …the stock of dollars in our wallets …the stock of credits in our bank accounts Wealth—the total of assets that store value  Money is one component of our wealth Income—the flow of earnings per unit time  We earn income.. we don’t “make money” (unless we’re counterfeiters)

Functions of Money … the usual suspects Medium of Exchange — promotes economic efficiency by minimizing the time spent buying things  Must be easily standardized … widely accepted … divisible … easy to carry … durable Unit of Account — measures value  Prices set / records kept / contracts made in money terms Store of Value —stores purchasing power  Most liquid of all assets  Yields no or minimal interest  Keeps its nominal value: $1 is a $1  Loses value during inflation

Evolution of the Payments System Commodity Money Fiat Money Checks Electronic Payment E-Money Measures of Money Stock Revisions are issued because:  Small depository institutions report infrequently Be concerned only with longer-run movements of money supply measures

Growth Rates of the M1 and M2 Aggregates, 1960–2008 Sources: Federal Reserve Bulletin, p. A4, Table 1.10, various issues; Citibase databank;

Growth Rate of M2: Initial and Revised Series, 2008 (percent, compounded annual rate)

2.2 If I can buy a car today for $5,000 and it is worth $10,000 in extra income next year to me because it enables me to get a job as a traveling anvil seller, should I take a loan from Larry the Loan Shark at a 90% interest rate if no one else will give me a loan? 2.7 How can the adverse selection problem explain why you are more likely to make a loan to family member than to a stranger? 3.8 Rank the following assets from most liquid to least liquid: a)Checking account deposits; b) Houses; c) Currency; d) Washing machines; e) Savings deposits; f) Commons stock In Brazil, a country that underwent a rapid inflation before 1994, many transactions were conducted in dollars rather than reals. Why? 3.14 For each of the following, indicate the monetary aggregate (M1, M2) that includes them: Currency; b) Money market mutual funds; c) Small-denomination CDs; d) Checkable deposits.