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Chapter 20 Money Growth, Money Demand, and Modern Monetary Policy
Chapter Twenty Chapter 20 Money Growth, Money Demand, and Modern Monetary Policy
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In This Chapter The quantity theory of money.
The velocity of, and demand for, money. Money targeting.
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Money Growth and Inflation
Probably the single most important fact in monetary economics: The relationship between money growth and inflation rates.
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Average Inflation Rate Versus Average Rate of Money Growth for Selected Countries, 1997–2007
Source: International Financial Statistics. 4
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Compare Panels A and B which show the average annual inflation and money growth in 160 countries over the 3 decades, from 1980 to 2009.
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Money Growth and Inflation
Countries with very high inflation tend to lie above the line and countries with moderate to low inflation tend to fall below it. When currency people are holding loses value rapidly, they will spend what they have as quickly as possible. Spending money more quickly has the same effect on inflation as an increase in money growth. The rate at which money is spent is the velocity of money
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Velocity of Money and the Equation of Exchange
Nominal gross domestic product NGDP = P x Y where, Y = RGDP and P is the price level. Every purchase counted in nominal GDP requires the use of money - M is the quantity of money, V is the velocity and nominal GDP can be divided into two parts: M x V = P x Y
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Velocity of Money and the Equation of Exchange
M x V = P x Y This is called the equation of exchange, and tells us that the quantity of money multiplied by its velocity equals the level of nominal GDP. Velocity is:
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Velocity of Money and the Equation of Exchange
M x V = P x Y Also, we can derive a formula for a demand for money The demand for money is proportional to the level of economic activity
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Velocity and the Equation of Exchange
We care about inflation and money growth. We can rewrite the equation of exchange to allow for the percentage change in each factor. Money growth plus velocity growth equals inflation plus real growth.
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The Quantity Theory of Money
Irving Fisher He assumed that no important changes occur in payment methods or the cost of holding money. If the interest rate is fixed and there is no financial innovation, then velocity will be constant. He also assumed that real output is determined solely by economic resources and production technology, so it too is considered to be fixed in the short run.
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The Quantity Theory of Money
Assuming V and Y are relatively constant, money growth translates directly into inflation, an assertion that is called the quantity theory of money.
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The Quantity Theory of Money
The quantity theory of money equation explains the patterns shown in Figure 20.1. Inflation and real GDP growth are not constant over long periods of time. High inflation, changing velocity and high money growth go together – Panel A. For moderate- and low-inflation countries fall below the 45-degree line - Panel B.
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The Facts about Velocity
If the velocity of money is constant, and the trend in real growth is determined by the structure of the economy and the rate of technological process. countries could control inflation directly by limiting money growth: This logic led Milton Freidman to conclude that central banks should simply set money growth at a constant rate. M1 and M2 should grow at a rate equal to the rate of real growth plus the desired level of inflation.
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The Facts about Velocity
To make the rule viable, Friedman suggested changes in regulations that would: Limit banks’ discretion in creating money, and Tighten the relationship between the monetary aggregates and the monetary base, reducing fluctuations in the money multiplier. For example, an increase in the reserve requirement or restrictions on the number and types of loans banks could make.
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The Facts about Velocity
But Friedman’s recommendation to keep money growth constant to stabilize inflation works only if velocity is constant. Is the Velocity of Money constant?
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Over the long run (1959 – 2013), velocity of M2 looks stable; net effect about a 0.2% decline in velocity. Seems to confirm Fisher’s conclusion that in the long run, the velocity of money is stable, so that controlling inflation means controlling the growth of the money aggregates.
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The Facts about Velocity
But central bankers are concerned about inflation over months and quarters, not just years. The next chart shows the four-quarter (short-run) percentage change in M2 velocity. In the short run, velocity fluctuates quite a bit. The scale of the figure runs from -12 to +8 percent.
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The Facts about Velocity
Notice the increase in velocity in the late 1970s and early 1980s. A period of both high nominal interest rates and significant financial innovations. introduction of stock and bond mutual funds that allow investors checking privileges. High interest rates and financial innovation reduced the amount of money individuals held (money demand) for a given level of transactions, raising the velocity of money. The data suggest that fluctuation in the velocity of money is tied to changes in people’s desire to hold money.
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When it was first started, the ECB looked at money growth closely.
Velocity appeared relatively stable. It created a reference value for money growth: Inflation = 1 to 2% Real Growth = 2 to 2½ % Velocity Growth = ½ to -1% Money growth = Money growth = 1½ % + 2¼ % - (-¾ %) = 4½ %. In 2003 the reference value was downgraded and today it is a long-run guide.
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The Demand for Money: Transactions Demand And Portfolio Demand
The quantity of money people hold for transactions purposes depends on Nominal income (remember that’s PxY) The opportunity cost of holding money, and The availability of substitutes. The higher people’s nominal income, the more they will spend – The higher nominal income is, the higher nominal money demand (Md) will be.
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The Transactions Demand for Money
Deciding how much money to hold depends on the costs and benefits. Benefits: Holding money allows people to make payments. The cost is based on opportunity cost. The interest that people lose in not buying an interest-bearing bond is the opportunity cost of holding money. The decision to hold money depends on how high the bond yield is and how costly it is to switch bank and forth.
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The Transactions Demand for Money
For a given cost of switching, as the nominal interest rate rises, people reduce their checking account balance, shifting funds into and out of higher-yield investments. The higher the nominal interest rate, the higher the opportunity cost of holding money, the less money individuals will hold for a given level of transactions, and the higher the velocity of money. Money demand and velocity move in opposite directions.
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Money demand i Money Demand interest rate
As we learned in chapter 4, the nominal interest rate is the opportunity cost of holding money (instead of bonds), so money demand depends negatively on the nominal interest rate. Here, we are assuming the price level is fixed, so = 0 and r = i. Money Demand
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The Transactions Demand for Money
This relationship explains why inflation exceeds money growth in the high-inflation countries. (look back at Figure 20.1) At high levels of inflation, money is losing value very quickly. People respond to the high cost of holding money by keeping as little of it as possible. They purchase durable goods that have zero real return - better than negative return on currency.
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The Transactions Demand for Money
Frantic spending drives up the velocity of money. Because high inflation brings an increase in velocity, inflation must be higher than money growth in those countries. This places countries above the 45-degree line in Panel A of Figure 20.1.
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The Transactions Demand for Money
The transactions demand for money is affected by technology - Financial Innovation It reduces the cost of shifting funds from an interest-bearing bond to a checking account. This lowers the money holdings at a given level of income. This increases the velocity of your money.
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The Transactions Demand for Money
There is also a precautionary demand for money included as part of transactions demand. individuals and business firms hold money to insure against unexpected expenses. The precautionary demand rises with risk and the desire for liquidity. The higher the level of uncertainty about the future, the higher the demand for money and the lower the velocity of money will be.
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The Portfolio Demand for Money
As a store of value, money provides diversification when held along with a wide variety of other assets. The demand for bonds depends on several factors including: Wealth, The return relative to alternative investments, Expected future interest rates on bonds, Risk relative to alternative investments, and Liquidity relative to alternative investments.
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The Portfolio Demand for Money
As wealth rises, the quantity of all these investments, including money, rises with it. A decline in bond yields will increase the portfolio demand for money. When interest rates rise, bond prices drop and bondholders suffer a capital loss. If you think interest rates are likely to rise, bonds will become less attractive and money more attractive. When interest rates are expected to rise, money demand goes up.
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The Portfolio Demand for Money
Finally, if a sudden decrease in liquidity of stocks, bonds, or other assets occurs, there will be an increase in the demand for money.
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The Demand for Money
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Targeting Money Growth Money Growth as a Policy Instrument
The quantity theory of money tells us that our ability to use money growth as a policy instrument depends on the stability of the velocity of money. Velocity is stable in the long-run but not in the short-run.
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Targeting Money Growth Money Growth as a Policy Instrument
There are two criteria for the use of money growth as a direct monetary policy instrument: A stable link between the monetary base and the quantity of money and A predictable relationship between the quantity of money and inflation. - MB x m = M - M x V = P x Y - (MB x m) x V = P x Y
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Sable link Between the Monetary Base and the Quantity of Money
Needs a stable money multiplier (m). We showed in Chapter 17 this is not the case.
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The Instability of Money Demand and Velocity
Is there a stable relationship between the velocity of money and the opportunity cost of holding it?
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Targeting Money Growth: The Fed and the ECB
Today virtually no central bank targets money growth, the practice was common in the 1970s. In the U.S., the Federal Reserve Board had to make quarterly appearances to testify to the Fed’s money growth targets for the coming year. The FOMC rarely hit its money growth targets.
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Targeting Money Growth: The Fed and the ECB
The ECB’s Governing Council periodically announces a money growth rate that is intended to serve as a long-run reference value. The difference of opinion between the Fed and the ECB on this matter can be traced to their divergent views on the stability of money demand. Researchers who study the demand for money in the euro-area have concluded that it is stable, which implies that changes in velocity are predictable.
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Targeting Money Growth: The Fed and the ECB
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Targeting Money Growth: The Fed and the ECB
While short-run fluctuations in velocity were significant, European policymakers point to the tendency of velocity to return to its long-run downward trend over periods of a few years.
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Targeting Money Growth: The Fed and the ECB
Bottom Line: While inflation is tied to money growth in the long run, interest rates are the instrument policymakers use to stabilize inflation in the short-run.
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