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Money and Banking— Monetary Policy Chapter 13. Functions of Money  1. Medium of exchange—used for buying and selling g & s  2. Unit of account—prices.

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Presentation on theme: "Money and Banking— Monetary Policy Chapter 13. Functions of Money  1. Medium of exchange—used for buying and selling g & s  2. Unit of account—prices."— Presentation transcript:

1 Money and Banking— Monetary Policy Chapter 13

2 Functions of Money  1. Medium of exchange—used for buying and selling g & s  2. Unit of account—prices are quoted in dollars & cents  3. Store of value: allows purchasing power to be stored until needed (liquid)

3 Characteristics of Money  1. portability—easily transferred  2. durability—should not deteriorate when being used as a store of value  3. divisibility—easily broken down into smaller units  4. limited availability--$ decreases in value when there is too much

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13 How is money made?

14 Supply of Money—M1  Includes currency and checkable deposits  1. currency (coins & paper) held by public  A. Is “token” money “fiat”  Ex: The metal in a dime is worth less then 10 cents.  B. All paper currency consists of Federal Reserve Notes issued by the FED

15 Supply of Money—M1  2. Checkable deposits are included since they can be spent almost as readily as currency & can be changed into currency  A. Commercial banks are a main source of checkable deposits for households and businesses  B. Thrift institutions also have checkable deposits (savings and loans, credit unions, etc.)

16 Supply of Money—M1  3. Currency and checkable deposits held by the federal gov’t or FED are not included in M1

17 M2  M2 = M1 + 1.Savings deposits & money market deposit accounts 2.Certificates of deposit < $100,000 3. Mutual Funds

18 M3  M3 = M2 + large CDs > $100,000

19 Importance  M2 is watched closely by the FED to determine monetary policy

20 Credit Cards  Are they money?  No, they are short term loans  Allow the owner to keep M1 levels low since they need less for daily purchases

21 What “backs” the money supply?  1. consumer confidence in the gov’t ability to keep its value stable  2. the value of money is the exchange of g & s  Is a medium of exchange  Legal tender  Relatively scarce so maintains purchasing power

22  3. Money’s purchasing power determines its value. Higher prices means less purchasing power  4. Excessive inflation may make money worthless.  5. Maintaining the value of money  Congress through fiscal policy (G &T)  FED through monetary policy (interest rates)

23 Study Questions  Page 262  Numbers 1, 2, 3 (pick any 3 statements to explain) and 4 (first 3 questions only)

24 In Plain English Video  Take notes  Focus on the  Board of Governors (BoG)  Federal Reserve Banks  Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC)

25 The Money Market: Interaction of Money Supply and Demand  Key Graph # 10 illustrates the money market. If combines demand with supply of money.

26  If the quantity demanded exceeds the quantity supplied, people sell assets like bonds to get money. This causes bond supply to rise, bond prices to fall and a higher market rate of interest.  If the quantity of supplied exceeds the quantity demanded, people reduce money holdings by buying other assets like bonds. Bond prices rise and lower market rates of interest result.

27  Monetary authorities can shift supply to affect interest rate, which in turn affect Ig and C and AD and ultimately output, employment and prices.  Key Graphs 11 and 12


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