Money and Banking Chapter 21. 2 Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. “Money...

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Money and Banking Money and Banking Chapter 21

Transcript of Money and Banking Chapter 21. 2 Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. “Money...

Money and BankingMoney and Banking

Chapter 21Chapter 21

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Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.

““Money is whatever is generally accepted in Money is whatever is generally accepted in exchange for goods and servicesexchange for goods and services——accepted accepted not as an object to be consumed but as an not as an object to be consumed but as an object that represents a temporary abode of object that represents a temporary abode of purchasing power to be used for buying still purchasing power to be used for buying still other goods and services.”other goods and services.”

-- Milton Friedman -- Milton Friedman

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What is Money?What is Money?

Money is anything that is generally acceptable to sellers in exchange for goods and services.

A liquid asset is an asset that can easily (i.e., quickly, cheaply, conveniently) be exchanged for goods and services.

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What is Money?What is Money?

Functions of Money

1) Medium of exchange

2) Unit of account

3) Store of value

4) Standard of Deferred Payment

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Medium of Exchange (1)Medium of Exchange (1)

The use of money as a medium of exchange lowers transactions costs.

Trade without money, directly exchanging goods for goods, is called barter.– Barter requires a double coincidence of wants—

each party to the exchange has to want what the other has to trade.

– Finding someone else who wants what you have to trade and who has what you want is time-consuming and costly.

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Medium of Exchange (2)Medium of Exchange (2)

A medium of exchange must be:– Widely accepted for payment– Portable: easy to transport and transfer

to the seller– Divisible: measurable in both small and

large units

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Unit of AccountUnit of Account

Money acts as a common unit of measurement.

This allows us to compare the values of very dissimilar things.

It makes accounting possible.As a result of these things, it lowers

information costs.

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Store of ValueStore of Value

Money makes it possible to carry buying power forward into the future.

Therefore, for money to be a store of value, it must be durable.– Durability is the ability to retain value over time.– Inflation can reduce the effectiveness of money as a

store of value.– This can lead to currency substitution—the use of

foreign money as a substitute for domestic money when the domestic economy has a high rate of inflation.

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Standard of Deferred PaymentStandard of Deferred Payment

Debt is denominated in money terms. The standard for repayment is money. There is a difference between money and

credit:– Money is what you use to pay for goods and

services.– Credit is available savings that are lent to

borrowers to spend.– Credit is debt, something you owe.

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M1 Money SupplyM1 Money Supply

Money in the United States Today consists of:– Currency is the bills and coins that we

use.– Deposits are also money because they

can be converted into currency and are used to settle debts.

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What is Money?—M1What is Money?—M1

M1 is the narrowest and most liquid measure of the money supply.– It includes financial assets that are immediately available for

spending on goods and services. M1 includes:

– Currency– Travelers’ Checks– Demand Deposits (checking accounts)– Other Checkable Deposits (interest-bearing checking)

Demand Deposits and Checkable Deposits are called transactions accounts—these are checking accounts that can be drawn upon to make payments.

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U.S. Money Supply: M1U.S. Money Supply: M1

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About CurrencyAbout Currency

In 2003, currency was 52% of M1.U.S. currency today is not backed by

gold or silver.– It is backed only by the confidence and

trust of the public. – It is a fiduciary monetary system.

(“Fiducia” means “trust” in Latin.)– Also called “fiat money”

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About CurrencyAbout Currency

Money backed by gold or silver (or something else of value) is called commodity money.– the commodity itself may be used as

money• Gold, silver, shells, beads, chocolate,

cigarettes, diamonds, etc.

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Problems with Commodity MoneyProblems with Commodity Money

At times, the precious metal in gold or silver coins may be worth more than the face value of the coins.– In such situations, the public will begin to

hoard the coins.– According to Gresham’s Law, if two coins have

the same face value but different intrinsic (commodity) values, the cheaper coin will be used to make transactions and the other coin will be hoarded. “Bad money drives out good.”

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What is Money?—M2What is Money?—M2

M2 adds to M1 less liquid assets that can be converted to M1 assets quickly and at low cost.

Includes everything in M1Adds:

– Savings deposits– Small denomination time deposits (CDs)– Retail money market mutual funds

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U.S. Money Supply: M2U.S. Money Supply: M2

The Equation of ExchangeThe Equation of Exchange M = money stock (M1 or M2) V = velocity of circulation of

money (how many times per year each unit of the money stock is used to purchase final goods)

P = price level (e.g., consumer price index)

Q = real GDP

MV = PQ

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U.S. Money Supply: M3U.S. Money Supply: M3

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Financial IntermediariesFinancial Intermediaries

Four Types of Financial Intermediaries

1) Commercial banks2) Savings and loan associations3) Savings banks and credit unions4) Money market mutual funds

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Financial IntermediariesFinancial Intermediaries

Commercial Banks– Financial institutions that offer deposits on which checks

can be written. They make loans to households and businesses. They are corporations.

– Originally only commercial banks could offer (non-interest-bearing) checking accounts.

Thrift Institutions– Savings and Loan Associations, Credit Unions, Mutual

Savings Banks.– Created to encourage saving, hence “thrift”.– Until 1980, these institutions could offer higher interest rates

on savings accounts than banks.– Now “thrifts” can offer many of the same services as

commercial banks.

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Deposit InsuranceDeposit Insurance

A bank panic occurs when depositors, fearing a bank’s closing, rush to withdraw their funds.

To reduce the likelihood of bank panics, in 1933 the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) was created.– This is a federal agency that insures bank

deposits so that depositors do not lose their deposits if a bank fails.

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Bank FailuresBank Failures

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International Banking (1)International Banking (1)

Eurocurrency market or “offshore banking”: the market for deposits and loans generally denominated in a currency other than the currency of the country in which the transaction occurs.– For example, a U.S. firm may borrow U.S. dollars

from a bank in London.– Because foreign banks do not operate under U.S.

legal restrictions, they may offer better interest rates on deposits and loans.

– On the other hand, foreign banking laws do apply and may cause other problems.

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International Banking (2)International Banking (2)

International Banking Facilities (IBFs) were legalized by the Federal Reserve Board in December 1981.

An IBF is a division of a U.S. bank that is allowed to receive deposits from and make loans to nonresidents of the U.S. without the restrictions that apply to domestic U.S. banks.

This allows domestic banks to compete more fairly with offshore banks.

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Informal Markets Informal Markets in Developing Countriesin Developing Countries

ROSCAs—Rotating Savings and Credit Associations– Operate like savings clubs– Example: 12 members contribute every

month, and then every 12th month each member receives the full amount contributed by everyone.

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Fractional Reserve BankingFractional Reserve Banking

A system in which banks keep less than 100 percent of the deposits available for withdrawal.– Regulated by Federal Reserve Board

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How Banks Create MoneyHow Banks Create Money

Reserves: Actual and Required– The reserve ratio is the fraction of a bank’s

total deposits that are held in reserves.– The required reserves ratio is the ratio of

reserves to deposits that banks are required, by regulation, to hold. Required reserves are those reserves which must be kept on hand or on deposit with the Federal Reserve in order to comply with the reserve requirements.

– Excess reserves are the cash reserves beyond those required, which can be loaned.

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How Banks Create MoneyHow Banks Create Money

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How Banks Create MoneyHow Banks Create Money

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How Banks How Banks Create Create MoneyMoney

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How Banks Create MoneyHow Banks Create Money

NOTE: Cash leakage or excess reserves held in banks will reduce the multiplier effect

Deposit Expansion Multiplier =1

Reserve Requirement (ratio)

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The The Multiple Creation of Bank DepositsMultiple Creation of Bank Deposits

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Required Reserve RatioRequired Reserve RatioFrom the Federal Reserve web site From the Federal Reserve web site (5/1/07)(5/1/07)

Liability Type RRR in %

Transaction accounts

$8.5 million 0%

$8.5 to $45.8 million 3%

$45.8 million + 10%

Non-personal time deposits 0%

Eurocurrency liabilities 0%

Dolan, Economics Combined Version 4e, Ch. 21

Instruments of Monetary PolicyInstruments of Monetary Policy Open market operations are purchases and sales of government

securities by the Fed. They are the most frequently used instrument of monetary policy.

Changes in interest rates– Discount rate charged by the Fed on reserves it loans to commercial

banks– Deposit rate paid by the Fed on reserve deposits of commercial banks

Changes in required reserve ratios can also be used to affect the money supply. The Fed does not use this instrument of monetary policy, but it is used by some other central banks around the world.

Purchases and sales of foreign assets are used by many central banks as an instrument of monetary policy, but not by the Fed in recent years.