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Lecture 6: Measuring Money

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Presentation on theme: "Lecture 6: Measuring Money"— Presentation transcript:

1 Lecture 6: Measuring Money
Mishkin chapter 3 – part B Page 57-63

2 Review def. of money 3 functions – lower transaction cost
evolution of money quiz

3 Why do we care about measuring money – in the society
Monetary policy: policy about money supply and interest rate. Money supply in the short-run affects interest rate and in the long-run affect macro-econ variables such as GDP, price level, etc. The Fed has some ability to manipulate and control the money supply, but the first step to measure it.

4 Money measurement Theoretical approaches:
focuses the degree to which assets function as mediums of exchange "weighted aggregate" approach Empirical approach: base on which measure of money works best in helping to predict the movements of key macro variables.

5 Actual practice in the U.S.

6 Actual practice in the U.S. – cont’d
M1 contains highly liquid assets that are directly usable as mediums of exchange (theoretical approach 1). As new forms of money-like instruments emerge, the Feb adopts broader measures of M2 and M3. M1 and M2 sometimes move together, sometimes don’t.

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8 How reliable is the money data?
There is difference between initially published data and revisions. Difference is because: small depository institutions report infrequently seasonal adjustments Differences average out to zero  pay more attention with longer-run movements.

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10 Recap Measuring the Money Supply: Actual Practice in the U.S.
Reliability of U.S. Monetary Data Quiz


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