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Functions of Money  Medium of Exchange – accepted for goods/services  Measure of Value – single standard used to compare value  Store of Value – provides.

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Presentation on theme: "Functions of Money  Medium of Exchange – accepted for goods/services  Measure of Value – single standard used to compare value  Store of Value – provides."— Presentation transcript:

1 Functions of Money  Medium of Exchange – accepted for goods/services  Measure of Value – single standard used to compare value  Store of Value – provides a way to retain or accumulate wealth

2 Supply of Money  Demand deposit – amount on deposit in a checking account  Time deposit – amount on deposit in an interest- bearing savings account.  Near monies – accounts that can be converted to cash in a short amount of time  Liquidity – the ability to turn an asset into cash. (More liquid assets can be converted to cash in a shorter amount of time.)

3 Measures of the Money Supply  M1 = currency and demand deposits  M2 = M1 + certain securities and small time deposits  M3 = M1 + M2 + large time deposits

4 The Federal Reserve (the Fed)  Central bank of the U.S. responsible for regulating the banking industry and controlling the money supply.  President (with approval of Senate) appoints the governors of the Fed for 14 year terms.  The long terms “insulate” the governors from political pressure.

5 Tools of the Fed for controlling $ supply  Discount rate  Reserve requirements  Open Market operations  (note that all of these “tools” work two ways. See table 19-1 p.576

6 Discount Rate  Interest rate the Fed charges for loans to member banks. (inter-bank lending rate)  Decrease in the discount rate increases the amount of loanable funds and increases the amount of $ money supply.  Since the discount rate is the wholesale rate for money all interest rates should decrease thus stimulating business and individual to borrow. Econ. activity increases.

7 Reserve Requirement  % of deposits a bank must retain, either in its vault or on deposit with the Fed.  Increase in the r.r. decreases the amount of loanable funds, increasing the interest rate and slowing down econ activity as businesses and consumers are less likely to borrow.

8 Open market operations  Most used tool  Buying and selling of government securities (Treasury Notes, Bonds and Bills)  When the Fed sells securities (assuming people buy them) $ is taken out of circulation thus decreasing econ activity.  Even today the Fed has always been able to easily sell Treasury instruments.

9 Other Fed functions  Serving as the government bank  Clearing checks and electronic transfers  Inspection of currency  Regulating and inspecting banks

10 What doesn’t the Fed control?  Insurance companies  Brokerage firms  Pension funds  Investment banking firms  Finance companies  Mutual funds  These and others perform limited banking functions but operate outside the sphere of regulation. (trouble-makers! )


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