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Money and the Financial System

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Presentation on theme: "Money and the Financial System"— Presentation transcript:

1 Money and the Financial System
Chapter 14 Money and the Financial System © 2009 South-Western/ Cengage Learning

2 The Evolution of Money No exchange Specialization Barter No money
Exchange: Barter Barter Double coincidence of wants Agree on exchange rate

3 The Evolution of Money The earliest money Functions of money
Good – easily traded later High degree of acceptability Functions of money Medium of exchange Commodity money Unit of account Store of value Retains purchasing power over time

4 The Evolution of Money Properties of the ideal money Durable Portable
Divisible Uniform quality Low opportunity cost Relatively stable in value

5 Exhibit 1 Six properties of ideal money Quality Rationale
Good examples Bad examples 1. Durable 2. Portable 3. Divisible 4. Uniform quality 5. Low opportunity cost 6. Stable value Money should not wear out quickly Money should be easy to carry, even relatively large sums Market exchange is easier if denominations support a range of possible prices If money is not of uniform quality, people will hoard the best and spend the rest, reducing its quality The fewer resources tied up in creating money, the more available for other uses People are more willing to accept and hold money if they believe it will keep its value over time Coins; sea shells Diamonds; paper money Honey; paper money and coins Salt bricks; paper money; coins Iron coins; paper money Anything whose supply can be controlled by issuing authorities, such as paper money Strawberries; seafood Lead bars; potatoes Cattle; diamonds Diamonds Gold; diamonds Farm crops

6 Coins Coinage Problems Token money Amount and quality of the metal
By count Problems Getting clipped Counterfeiting Token money Face value > cost of coinage Seigniorage – profit from coinage

7 The hassle of small change
Pennies Cost: 1.5 cents per coin Nickels Cost: 5.5 cents per coin Rising metal prices Lower cost alloy Abolish the penny Penny = 5 cents; withdraw nickels

8 The hassle of small change
Production of pennies Increased 6.8 billion pennies in 2003 To 8.2 billion pennies in 2006 Demand for pennies Hoarding Sales tax Zinc producers – lobby

9 Money and Banking Banks = Goldsmith Safekeeping Earn interest Checks
Extend loans Create medium of exchange, money Public confidence Fractional reserve banking system

10 Representative Money and Fiat Money
Bank notes IOUs Paper money As good as gold Representative money Fiat money From the power of the state Legal tender

11 The Value of Money Purchasing power of money
Rate of exchange for goods and services Higher price level in economy Smaller purchasing power Purchasing power of $ in a year 100 ÷ Price index in same year Evolution over time Steady decline since 1960

12 Exhibit 2 Purchasing power of $1 measured in constant dollars An increase in the price level over time reduces what $1.00 buys. The price level has risen every year since 1960, so the purchasing power of $1.00 (measured in constant dollars) has fallen from $3.38 in 1960 to $0.48 in 2007

13 When Money Performs Poorly
Hyperinflation in Brazil Prices grow by the hour Not reliable store of value Exchange for stable currency Barter

14 When Monetary Systems Break Down
Too much money in circulation Increase demand for hard currency Hoarding the hard currency Not enough money in circulation Hoarding currency Vouchers; Barter Bank panics Strict price control Barter 14

15 Financial Institutions in the US
Depository institutions Commercial banks Loans to businesses Thrift institutions Savings banks Credit unions Loans to households

16 The Fed Before 1863: State banks National Banking Act of 1863
Chartered by states National Banking Act of 1863 National banks Issue notes Regulated Dual banking system 19th century Panic ‘runs’

17 The Fed 1913 Federal Reserve System National banks State banks
Central bank Monetary authority 12 Federal Reserve districts National banks Had to join the Fed State banks Voluntary membership to the Fed

18 Exhibit 3 The twelve Federal Reserve Districts
The map shows by color the area covered by each of the 12 Federal Reserve districts. Black dots note the locations of the Federal Reserve Bank in each district. Identified with a star is the Board of Governors headquarters in Washington, D.C.

19 The Fed Powers of the Fed Banker’s bank Issue bank notes
Buy and sell government securities Extend loans to member banks Clear checks in the banking system Reserve requirement for member banks Banker’s bank

20 The Fed Board of Governors 7 members Set and implement monetary policy
Appointed by the President Confirmed by the Senate 14-year nonrenewable term Insulated from political pressure 1 chair: 4 years Set and implement monetary policy Oversees the 12 reserve banks

21 The Fed Federal Open Market Committee FOMC Open-market operations
The Fed buys, sells government securities 7 board governors 5 presidents of reserve banks Advise the board

22 Exhibit 4 Organization chart of the Federal Reserve System
Members of the Board of Governors: appointed by the president, confirmed by the Senate. Seven board members also belong to the 12-member Federal Open Market Committee, which advises the board. The Board of Governors controls the Reserve Banks in each of the 12 districts, which in turn control the US banking system.

23 The Fed Regulating the money supply Deposit insurance
Open-market operations Discount rate Reserve requirements Deposit insurance Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, FDIC $100,000 per depositor per bank 90% banks

24 The Fed Goals High level of employment in economy Economic growth
Price stability Interest rate stability Financial market stability Exchange rate stability

25 Banks Before 1930s: Own corporate stock; bonds After 1930s
Banking = heavily regulated Loans, government securities Ceiling on interest rates for deposits 1970s: Inflation Increase interest rates Withdrawals Money market mutual fund Limited check-writing

26 Banking Deregulation Money market deposit accounts Deposit insurance
$8 billion in 1978 $200 billion in 1982 Deposit insurance Unregulated interest rates Wider variety of assets Moral hazard problem

27 Savings Banks on the Ropes
Wild gambles Insolvency Collapse of a growing number of banks 1989 largest financial bailout 3,418 in 1984 1,290 in 2007 Credit unions Declined 34%

28 Exhibit 5 Failures of US savings banks peaked in 1989

29 Commercial Banks Were Failing Too
Demise of commercial banks Risky decisions Unsound loans Failures, mergers, acquisitions 14,496 in 1984 7,410 in 2007

30 Exhibit 6 Failures of US commercial banks peaked in 1988

31 US Banking Structure Today
Large number of US banks Past restrictions on bank branches Branching restrictions Inefficiencies Bank failures (Great Depression) Bank holding company Owns several banks Offers other services Bank mergers Expand geographically

32 Exhibit 7 Number of commercial banks declined over the last two decades, but the number of branches continue to grow

33 Top Banks in America and the World
US banks Domestic deposits Mergers and acquisitions National banks Worldwide assets 2 US banks Citibank 100 countries Bank of America

34 Exhibit 8 (a) Largest US banks based on total domestic deposits

35 Exhibit 8 (b) World’s largest banks based on total assets


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