Money, Central Banking, and Inflation Chapter 13.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Capital Markets Chapter 24. Nominal and Real Interest Rates Nominal return represents how much money you will receive after 1 year for giving up 1 dollar.
Advertisements

28 Money, Interest, and Inflation
Money and the Banking System
Chapter 4: Money and Inflation
Copyright © 2009 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. Chapter 13 Money and Financial Markets.
25 MONEY, THE PRICE LEVEL, AND INFLATION © 2012 Pearson Addison-Wesley.
1 of 33 PART V The Core of Macroeconomic Theory © 2012 Pearson Education CHAPTER OUTLINE 25 The Money Supply and the Federal Reserve System An Overview.
Money, Central Banking, and Inflation
Money & Central Banks Chapter 2, 15,16. Quantity Theory Simplest monetary theory is the Quantity Theory of Money. –Purchasing power of money is equal.
© The McGraw-Hill Companies, 2008 Chapter 23 Interest rates and monetary transmission David Begg, Stanley Fischer and Rudiger Dornbusch, Economics, 9th.
Monetary Policy and Inflation
Supply and Demand Models of Financial Markets. Two Markets Loanable Funds Market –Determines Interest Rate in Capital Markets Liquidity Market –Determines.
Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education Canada
Macroeconomics (ECON 1211) Lecturer: Mr S. Puran Topic: Central Banking and the Monetary System.
Updates. Demand Functions An algebraic equation representing demand as a function of the price plus consumer income levels and other factors Example:
BlCh41 Financial Markets Financial markets refer to the market and to the market. New variable considered: Goals of the chapter: –To find how in these.
The Asset Market, Money, and Prices
© 2010 Pearson Education Canada. Money has taken many forms. What is money today? What happens when the bank lends the money we’re deposited to someone.
Money and Stabilization Policy KW Chapter 31. Velocity Define the ratio of transactions to the supply of money as ‘Velocity’, the speed with which money.
Money and Stabilization Policy KW Chapter 30. Money Money is a tool for conducting transactions and, like all tools, is subject to technological advance.
Monetary Policy Unit 2.5. What is money?  Money is any object or record that is widely accepted as payment for goods and services.  3 Functions:  Money.
MONEY, BANKS, AND THE FEDERAL RESERVE. Objectives After studying this chapter, you will able to  Explain why fiat money exists and why it is important.
Money, Monetary Policy and Economic Stability
13 CHAPTER Money, the Price Level and Inflation © Pearson Education 2012 After studying this chapter you will be able to:  Define money and describe.
1 Money and the Federal Reserve Bank The objective is to understand the actions of the Central Bank and its impact on the economy.
MONEY AND INFLATION. What is money? Money is a generalized claim on all other assets. It must be acceptable, scarce, desirable, and divisible.
MBA Macroeconomics Lecturer: Jack Wu
13 CHAPTER Money, the Price Level and Inflation © Pearson Education 2012 After studying this chapter you will be able to:  Define money and describe.
MACROECONOMICS BY CURTIS, IRVINE, AND BEGG SECOND CANADIAN EDITION MCGRAW-HILL RYERSON, © 2010 Chapter 8 Money, Banking, and the Money Supply.
Money and Banking ( BE 220 ) The Economics of Money, Banking and Financial Markets. By: Frederic S. Mishkin.
1 of 32 © 2014 Pearson Education, Inc. CHAPTER OUTLINE 10- Part 1 The Money Supply An Overview of Money What Is Money? Commodity and Fiat Monies Measuring.
Chapter 15 Money supply Process.
Money and Money Market Money The Quantity Theory of Money
Chapter 5 Policy Makers and the Money Supply © 2000 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.
Chapter 4 Money and Inflation
CHAPTER OUTLINE An Overview of Money What Is Money? Commodity and Fiat Monies Measuring the Supply of Money The Private Banking System How Banks Create.
MONEY AND INFLATION.
TM 13-1 Copyright © 1998 Addison Wesley Longman, Inc. What is Money? Money is any commodity or token that is generally acceptable as the means of payment.
BuffDaniel Presents Money and Banking Chapter 2 Money.
Money in the Economy Mmmmmmm, money!. The Money Supply M1:Currency + travelers checks + checkable deposits. M2:M1 + small time deposits + overnight repurchase.
What Is Money and Why Do We Need It?
© 2011 Pearson Education Money, Interest, and Inflation 4 When you have completed your study of this chapter, you will be able to 1 Explain what determines.
When you have completed your study of this chapter, you will be able to C H A P T E R C H E C K L I S T Explain what determines the demand for money and.
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.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2011 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Chapter 19: Monetary Policy and the Federal Reserve 1.Describe.
Money, Interest, and Inflation CHAPTER 28 When you have completed your study of this chapter, you will be able to C H A P T E R C H E C K L I S T Explain.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2011 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Chapter 16: Money, Prices, and the Financial System 1.Describe.
Problem Set Jan 14. Question 1  Money Definition (3 Pts ) – a current medium of exchange that is accepted for payment for a good/service  Example (2pts)
Principles of Macroeconomics Lecture 3 MONEY AND COMMERCIAL BANKS CENTRAL BANKING AND MONETARY POLICY.
Financial Markets Chapter 4. © 2013 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved The Demand for Money Suppose the financial markets include only.
Unit 2: Banking Money Supply & Money Multiplier 10/21/2010.
Introduction: Thinking Like an Economist CHAPTER 13 There have been three great inventions since the beginning of time: fire, the wheel and central banking.
Money, Interest, and Inflation CHAPTER 12 C H A P T E R C H E C K L I S T When you have completed your study of this chapter, you will be able to 1 Explain.
MACROECONOMIC MEASURES WHAT THEY ARE & HOW TO USE THEM Chapter 21, 22, 26.
THE BANK'S BALANCE SHEET
How does a change in money supply affect the economy? Relevant reading: Ch 13 Monetary policy.
The Monetary System IMBA Macroeconomics II Lecturer: Jack Wu.
Money and Banking 31,32,33 McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2012 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Rohith Jayakumar. -The unemployment rate is the percentage of those who would like to work who do not have jobs. - The unemployment rate is not a measure.
What Is Money?  Serves ALL the following purposes:  Medium of exchange: accepted as payment for goods and services (and debts).  Store of value: can.
Lecture 4 1. Money and its functions 1. the medium of exchange 2. the unit of account 3. a store of value 4. money as a standard of deferred payment 2.
Macro Review Day 3. The Multiplier Model 28 The Multiplier Equation Multiplier equation is an equation that tells us that income equals the multiplier.
Chapter The Monetary System 16. The Meaning of Money Money – Set of assets in an economy – That people regularly use – To buy goods and services from.
Monetary Policy Problem Set Answers 1. a) Money vs. Stocks vs. Bonds Money is anything that is generally accepted in payment for goods and services 2.
Opportunity Cost of Money - holding money in your wallet earns no interest, but its more convenient than going to the ATM every time you need cash - earn.
When you have completed your study of this chapter, you will be able to C H A P T E R C H E C K L I S T Explain what determines the demand for money and.
Monetary Policy Chap. 31. Central Bank: A special governmental organization or quasi- governmental institution within the financial system that controls.
MONEY AND BANKING.
Module 27 & 28 & The Federal Reserve Monetary Policy
27 The Monetary System For use with Mankiw and Taylor, Economics 4th edition © Cengage EMEA 2017.
Presentation transcript:

Money, Central Banking, and Inflation Chapter 13

Money

Aspects of Money 1.Medium of Exchange – Token that can be offered as a payment for goods. 2.Unit of Account – All goods will have a value in money and, thus, can be used to measure all goods 3.Store of Value – If money is to be accepted for goods today it must have durable value. (Money is an Asset).

Evolution of Money: Money is a technology Commodity Money – Metals (ca.1400 B.C.). Minting coins for standardization (ca. 700 B.C.) Paper banknotes backed by precious metals (600 AD in China, 1650 in Sweden) Fiat Money Paper declared legal tender (800 AD in China, 1700 in France/USA)

Evolution of Money In more advanced societies with sophisticated banking systems, broad money may be used for transactions. Checks: Paper promises to pay definitive money on demand. Electronic Transfers: Funds can be transferred from account to account in banking system. Debit Cards and ATM Cards can be used to transfer funds to definitive money or in direct exchange for goods.

Money Supply The stock of the medium of exchange. Types of Financial Assets M1 Currency in Hands of the Public [C] + Demand Deposits [D] M2 M1 + Savings Deposits + “Small” Time Deposits + [Liquid Money Market Instruments inc/ “Small” NCD’s] M3 M2 + LTD [“Large” Time Deposits and NCD’s]

Hong Kong Guide to Money and Banking Terms M1The sum of legal tender notes and coins held by the public plus customers' demand deposits placed with banks.banks M2M1 plus customers' savings and time deposits with banks plus negotiable certificates of deposit (NCDs) issued by banks held outside the banking sector. M3M2 plus customers' deposits with restricted licence banks and deposit-taking companies plus NCDs issued by these institutions held outside the banking sector.restricted licence banksdeposit-taking companies

Monetary Aggregates in HK HKMA Monthly Statistical Bulletin

Real Balances Real balances are the purchasing power of monetary assets, i.e. the money supply divided by the price level. Taking the price level as given, real balances can be shifted by the central bank through changes in money supply. Taking the money supply as given, real balances can change through changes in the price level.

Real Balances and HK Deflation

Liquidity Theory Money is part of the liquid end of the asset portfolio. We consider a theory of how this liquidity is divided up. 1.Liquid Assets (Currency, Checking Accounts, Savings Accounts) that are useful for transactions which pay zero or below market interest rates. 2.Money market assets (Government bills, commercial paper, jumbo CD’s) that pay a market rate, i, but which cannot be used for transactions.

Determinants of Holding Money Trade-off: The benefit of holding real balances is that doing so will make transactions more convenient. The cost is that you will earn interest income. The greater is the quantity of real transactions, Y, the more attractive is real balances. The greater is the real interest rate, i, the less attractive are real balances.

Money Demand i i*i* The greater is the market interest rate, the greater is the opportunity cost of holding money.

What shifts the money demand curve? 1.An increase in real spending (GDP) will increase the need for money for transactions shifting the demand curve out. A reduction in GDP will shift the demand curve in. 2.There are also large shifts in money demand due to liquidity preference (possibly related to risk level of financial assets).

Central Banks

What is a central bank? Central banks have two main roles: –Banker to the government Manage many financial assets of the government. Monopoly on the issue of banknotes/currency (true almost everywhere, but not HK) Arm of government policymaking –Banker to commercial banks. Operate the Payment System Regulate Banking System Lender of Last Resort during a crisis

Central Bank: A special governmental organization or quasi- governmental institution within the financial system that controls the medium of exchange. EconomyCentral Bank HK ? USA? Eurozone? PRC? UK, Canada, Japan, Korea ?

The Monetary Base The monetary base, also called “high powered money” consists of: CCurrency in the Hands of the Public + R+ Reserves of the Banking System =MB= Monetary Base Monetary base is typically the monetary liabilities of the central bank.

A part of the monetary liabilities of a central bank. The Monetary Base is defined, at the minimum, as the sum of the currency in circulation (banknotes and coins) and the balance of the banking system held with the central bank (the reserve balance or the clearing balance). In Hong Kong, the Monetary Base comprises Certificates of Indebtedness (for backing the banknotes issued by the note-issuing banks), government-issued currency in circulation, the balance of the clearing accounts of banks kept with the HKMA (the Aggregate Balance), and Exchange Fund Bills and Notes.banknotesCertificates of Indebtednessnote-issuing banksgovernment-issued currency in circulationclearing accountsbanksHKMAAggregate BalanceExchange Fund Bills and Notes Hong Kong Guide to Money and Banking Terms

Interbank Payment Systems Commercial banks keep accounts at the central bank for interbank payments. referred to generally as reserves, specifically as clearing balances in Hong Kong. These accounts, along with cash, constitute the monetary base. Hong Kong Interbank Clearing Limited

Interbank Market Individual banks will face a short-fall in reserves if they have too many outflows and borrow funds from other banks facing a surplus. Banks will keep an inventory of reserves to meet their own liquidity needs but the interest rate is the opportunity cost of holding reserves. Desire to hold reserves is a declining function of the interest rate. Central bank controls the total supply of reserves available to banks.

Interbank Market S D i IBR Reserves i*i*

Equilibrium in the Interbank Market If interest rates are too low, banks will want to hold more reserves than available. Banks facing a shortfall of reserves will be willing to bid up interest rates until all banks are content with reserves available. If interest rates are too high, banks will want to lend out their excess reserves. To do so in a liquid market, they must lower interest rates.

Equilibrium S D i IBR Reserves i

Monetary Base and Money Supply

Money Supply vs. Monetary Base Monetary Base Money Multiplier Money Supply * =

Fractional Reserve Banking Banks keep only a fraction of any deposits they receive on hand in the form of vault. The rest is used to acquire other assets, especially loans. Reserves- Deposit Ratio: The fraction of deposits kept as reserves is the Reserves-Deposit Ratio. –D = Deposits (for M1 this is Demand Deposits; for M2 this is a broader category of deposits).

Liquidity Portfolio Savers keep some of their asset portfolio in liquid assets. We can divide up liquid assets into currency and deposits Currency-Deposit Ratio: –Bank deposits and currency are both assets which will be part of the portfolios of savers.

Money Supply Multiplier The money multiplier can be derived by the ratio of aggregate money to the monetary base. As long as the reserve ratio is less than 1, the money multiplier is greater than 1. Multiplier is decreasing in reserve-deposit ratio and decreasing in cash-deposit ratio.

Determinants of Reserve Ratio 1.Regulatory Requirements – Some regulatory regimes have minimum reserve levels. Reserve Ratio = Required Reserves Ratio + Excess Reserves Ratio (R/D) = rr + ER/D 2.Volatility of Deposit Outflows – If deposit outflows are likely to be large, banks hold more reserves.

Monetary Feedback Borrower Depositor Banks Central Bank Reserves rd Cash

Monetary Feedback Borrower Depositor Banks Central Bank Reserves rd Cash

Monetary Feedback Borrower Depositor Banks Central Bank Reserves rd Cash

Central Bank and Money Supply The central bank can adjust the stock of reserves through transactions with commercial banks. An increase in reserves will increase the deposits that banks can accept and will have a multiple impact on overall money supply.

Money Demand i i*i*

Equilibrium in the Money Market If interest rates are too high, excess supply of money: –people will want to buy interest paying assets like bank accounts or treasury bills. –Bond dealers and banks can reduce the interest rates they are willing to offer If interest rates are too low, excess demand for money: –people will want to sell interest paying assets like bank accounts or treasury bills to get more liquidity. –Bond dealers and banks must raise interest rates.

Open Market Operations In an Open Market PURCHASE, the central bank purchases government securities from banks and credits their reserve accounts. This increases the aggregate supply of reserves. In an Open Market SALE, the central bank sells government securities from banks and debits their reserve accounts. This increases the aggregate supply of reserves.

Money Supply and Interest Rates If the central bank engages in an open market PURCHASE, they will increase the reserve holdings of counter-party commercial banks. This will increase liquidity in the reserve funds market. Banks with excess reserves can lend them out creating more liquid bank deposits. Increase in liquid bank deposits will increase money supply. More liquid money market reduces interest rates.

Reserve Market/Money Market i Money Market i*i* i IBR i*i* i ** SS'S' D Reserves Reserve Market

Fed Funds & Money Market Rates

Money Markets and Interest Rate Policy

Money Market: GDP Rises i i*i* M i ** 1 2 Y↑Y↑

Money Demand and Reserve Markets If demand for money rises, households will want to hold more money. They will pull funds from non-liquid instruments (like jumbo CD’s) and convert them into cash or liquid deposits. Banks will need to hold more reserves to backup the liquid deposits. This will increase the demand for reserves.

Inflation

Quantity Theory Simplest monetary theory is the Quantity Theory of Money. –Purchasing power of money is equal to the quantity of money (M t ) times the speed of circulation (V, # of transactions) –Purchasing power means # of goods (Y t ) multiplied by price per good (P t ) Money t * Velocity = P t * Y t

Rule of Thumb Rule of Thumb The growth rate of product is approximately equal to the sum of the growth rates of the elements of a product.

Money and Inflation Assuming stable velocity Inflation occurs when money growth speeds ahead of output growth. The unbounded creation of fiat money leads to inflation which ultimately will make the money worthless.

Money & Inflation:

Ex Ante Rate and the Fisher Effect Savings and investment decisions must be made before future inflation is known so they must be made on the basis of an ex ante (predicted) real interest rate. Fisher Hypothesis: Ex ante real interest rate is determined by forces in the financial market. Money interest rate is just the real ex ante rate plus the market’s consensus forecast of inflation.

Great Inflation of the 1970’s Source: St. Louis Federal Reserve Great Inflation DownloadDownload

Fisher Effect: OECD Economies Great Inflation of 1970’s

Loanable Funds Market Fisher Effect S D LF r* LF* i*

Ex Ante vs. Ex post We can also examine the ex post real return on a loan as the money interest rate less the actual outcome for inflation. The gap between actual and forecast inflation determines the gap between the ex post (actual) and ex ante (forecast) return.

Unexpected Inflation Winners and Losers –Higher than expected inflation means ex post real rates are lower than ex ante. Borrowers are winners/lenders are losers. –Lower than expected inflation means ex post real rates are higher than ex ante. Lenders are winners/borrowers are losers.

Inflation Risk When inflation is variable, lenders will demand some premium for inflation risk. This will put cost on borrowers. High inflation rates tend to be associated with unpredictable inflation.

Costs of Anticipated Inflation Shoe Leather Costs – Money is a technology for engaging in transactions. The greater is inflation, the greater the cost for individuals of holding money. Individuals must make efforts as a substitute for the convenience of holding money. Menu Costs – Firms must engage in costs of changing posted prices. More generally, when prices change rapidly over time, more time and effort must be put into calculating relative prices.

The Inflation Tax Banknotes do not pay interest. The real interest rate on banknotes is If inflation is high, currency has sharply negative returns. People will avoid holding money leading to society losing the convenience of money transactions. Zimbabwe Inflation DownloadDownload

Causes of Extremely Rapid Inflation Government generates revenues by printing new money (referred to as seignorage). Government facing borrowing constraints may be forced to rely on inflation tax for deficit financing and real returns to owning money. Explain the link between deficits and inflation.

Israel

Money Market at ZIRP 0 r -π t+1 When nominal interest rate reaches zero, demand for money turns infinite since money pays just as good an interest rate as bonds.

Learning Outcomes Students should be able Calculate the relationship between expected inflation, real and nominal interest rate. Calculate the relationship between the money supply, multiplier and base. Use the model of money market to describe the impact of events on equilibrium outcomes.