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What Is Money and Why Do We Need It?

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Presentation on theme: "What Is Money and Why Do We Need It?"— Presentation transcript:

1 What Is Money and Why Do We Need It?
Money Assets that people are generally willing to accept in exchange for goods and services or for payment of debts. Asset Anything of value owned by a person or a firm. The Functions of Money • Medium of exchange: buy stuff with money No need to barter • Unit of account: post prices/keep books in money terms • Standard of deferred payment: need money to pay debts Store of value Hold money on chance prices of other assets fall

2 Precious metals serve when confidence falters.
What Can Serve as Money? Criteria for an asset to be a medium of exchange: 1 It must be acceptable to most people. 2 It should be of standardized quality. 3 It should be durable. 4 It should be valuable relative to its weight. 5 It should be divisible. Currency is fine… “fiat money” Checking account balances are just as good. Electronic “money” is even better. Precious metals serve when confidence falters. Commodity money.

3 How Is Money Measured in the United States Today?
M1: The Narrowest Definition of the Money Supply M1 includes means of payment: Currency: paper money and coins in circulation. “in circulation” means not held by banks or the government 2 The value of all checking account deposits at banks 3 The value of traveler’s checks 1 Because balances in checking accounts are in the money supply, banks play an important role in the way money supply increases and decreases. What about Credit Cards and Debit Cards? You haven’t paid until you write a check to your bank.

4 How Is Money Measured in the United States Today?
M1: The Narrowest Definition of the Money Supply Figure 25-1 Measuring the Money Supply, July 2009 The Federal Reserve uses two different measures of the money supply: M1 and M2.M2 includes all the assets in M1, as well as the additional assets shown in panel (b).

5 How Do Banks Create Money in a Fractional Reserve Banking System?
Reserves Deposits that a bank keeps as cash in its vault or on deposit with the Federal Reserve. Required reserves Reserves that a bank is legally required to hold, based on its checking account deposits. Required reserve ratio The minimum fraction of deposits banks are required by law to keep as reserves. Excess reserves Reserves that banks hold over and above the legal requirement. Banks buy interest yielding assets with deposits they don’t keep in reserves: Gov’t securities, loans to households and firms

6 How Do Banks Create Money? A Bank’s Balance Sheet

7 How Do Banks Create Money?

8 How Do Banks Create Money?

9 How Do Banks Create Money?
Bank Balance Sheets Balance Sheet for Bank of America, December 31, 2008 The items on a bank’s balance sheet of greatest economic importance are its reserves, loans, and deposits. The difference between the value of Bank of America’s total assets and its total liabilities is equal to its stockholders’ equity. As a consequence, the left side of the balance sheet always equals the right side.

10 How Do Banks Create Money?
INCREASE IN CHECKING DEPOSITS Wachovia $1,000 PNC + 900 (= 0.9 x $1,000) Third Bank + 810 (= 0.9 x $900) Fourth Bank + 729 (= 0.9 x $810) . + • + Total Change in Checking Account Deposits =$10,000

11 How Do Banks Create Money?
Simple deposit multiplier The ratio of the amount of deposits created by banks to the amount of new reserves. Change in bank reserves = RR x Change in deposits The Simple Deposit Multiplier versus the Real-World Deposit Multiplier: Not everything that one bank lends gets deposited in other banks. Much leaks out as currency holdings rather than deposits. And banks may not lend to full extent the can…they hold excess reserves. Real world deposit multiplier is less than the simple multiplier.

12 The Functions of a Modern Central Bank
The Banker’s Bank: Lender of last resort in crises Bank run: When many depositors rush to withdraw money at the same time...They “run” to get to the cashier. Silent run: Major creditors don’t turn over their loans to a bank. Bank panic: Many banks experience runs at the same time. Operates clearing system for interbank payments. Oversees financial intermediaries - ensure their soundness. - ensure public confidence The Government's Bank: Manages government transactions. Controls availability of money and credit.

13 The Federal Reserve System
The Organization of the Federal Reserve System Federal Reserve Districts

14 How the Federal Reserve Manages the Money Supply
Monetary policy The actions the Federal Reserve takes to manage the money supply and interest rates in pursuit of economic objectives. To manage the money supply, the Fed uses three monetary policy tools: 1 Open market operations: Fed buys and sells gov’t securities Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) sets target federal funds rate. “Federal funds” are reserves that banks borrow and lend to each other. Fed buys bonds to increase the supply of reserves and lower the fed funds rate. 2 Discount policy: Fed lends to discount rate  injects reserves into banking system directly 3 Reserve requirements: lowering reserve requirement converts required reserves to excess reserves that banks can lend Two other actors—the nonbank public and banks—also influence the money supply.

15 Multiple Creation of Money and Credit
The Fed’s Balance Sheet Owns Owes Gold, Forex Federal Reserve Notes Currency in Circulation Vault Cash Reserves Bank IOUs Bank Fed (Discount loans) Bank A Bank B : Securities Gov’t Deposits Gov’t Bonds MBSs Miscellaneous Monetary Base High Powered = MB Money = H = MB Note: MB = Currency + Bank Reserves = Cu + R Ms = Currency + Demand Deposits = Cu + D Fed buys something … MB up A bond A bank IOU Seller deposits proceed in Bank A Money supply increases Bank A’s Fed up Bank A now has more reserves Bank A holds reserves against its new deposit (required + excess) Bank A makes loan to customer Borrower now has more deposits Money has just been created Borrower buys something Seller holds onto currency and deposits the rest in its Bank B Bank B’s Fed up :

16 M × V = P × Y The Quantity Theory of Money
Connecting Money and Prices: The Quantity Equation M × V = P × Y Velocity of money The average number of times each dollar in the money supply is used to purchase goods and services included in GDP.

17 The Quantity Theory Explanation of Inflation
We can transform the quantity equation from: to: Growth rate of the money supply + Growth rate of velocity = Growth rate of the price level (or inflation rate) + Growth rate of real output or Inflation rate = Growth rate of the money supply + Growth rate of velocity − Growth rate of real output If velocity is constant, then the growth rate of velocity is zero. This allows us to rewrite the equation one last time: Inflation rate = Growth rate of the money supply − Growth rate of real output

18 High Rates of Inflation
Very high rates of inflation—in excess of hundreds or thousands of percentage points per year—are known as hyperinflation. Economies suffering from high inflation usually also suffer from very slow growth, if not severe recession.

19 The Quantity Theory of Money
High Inflation in Argentina Money Growth and Inflation in Argentina

20 Making the Connection The German Hyperinflation of the Early 1920s
During the hyperinflation of the 1920s, people in Germany used paper currency to light their stoves.

21 K e y T e r m s Asset M1 Bank panic M2 Bank run Monetary policy
Commodity money Discount loans Discount rate Excess reserves Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) Federal Reserve System Fiat money Fractional reserve banking system M1 M2 Monetary policy Money Open market operations Quantity theory of money Required reserve ratio Required reserves Reserves Simple deposit multiplier Velocity of money


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