Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

13-1 Money and Banks Chapter 13 Copyright © 2010 by the McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "13-1 Money and Banks Chapter 13 Copyright © 2010 by the McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin."— Presentation transcript:

1 13-1 Money and Banks Chapter 13 Copyright © 2010 by the McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin

2 13-2 Money and Banks Money affects not only morals and ideals but also the way an economy works –What is money? –How is money created? –What role do banks play in the circular flow of income and spending?

3 13-3 What Is Money? Without money, you would have to use barter to get items you want Barter: The direct exchange of one good for another, without the use of money Acquiring goods and services would be much more difficult and time-consuming

4 13-4 The Money Supply Anything that serves the following purposes can be thought of as money: –Medium of exchange: Is accepted as payment for goods and services (and debts) –Store of value: Can be held for future purchases –Standard of value: Serves as a yardstick for measuring the prices of goods and services

5 13-5 Many Types of Money In colonial America, many different things were used as mediums of exchange After independence, it was state-issued paper money and gold, silver, and commodities The National Banking Act of 1863 gave the federal government permanent authority to issue money

6 13-6 Modern Concepts Money: Anything generally accepted as a medium of exchange Checking accounts can and do perform the same market functions as cash Credit cards and online methods are popular mediums of exchange but are not money

7 13-7 Diversity of Bank Accounts There are many forms of bank accounts Some are better substitutes for cash than others –Regular checking accounts are used all the time to pay bills or make purchases –Consumers cant write checks on most savings accounts or use CDs to make purchases

8 13-8 M1: Cash and Transactions Accounts Money supply: (M1) Currency held by the public, plus balances in transactions accounts M1 includes –Currency in circulation –Transactions account balances –Travelers checks

9 13-9 M1: Cash and Transactions Accounts Transactions accounts are the readiest substitutes for cash in market transactions Transactions account: A bank account that permits direct payment to a third party –Do not require a trip to the bank to make a special withdrawal

10 13-10 M2: M1 + Savings Accounts, etc. M2 money supply: M1 plus balances in most savings accounts and money market mutual funds Savings-account balances are almost as good a substitute for cash as transaction-account balances

11 13-11 Composition of the Money Supply Currency in circulation Transactions-account balances Savings account balances Money market mutual funds and deposits Travelers checks ($6 billion) M2 ($8,223 billion) M1 ($1,602 billion) $ 1,098 billion $5,523 billion $776 billion $820 billion Source: Federal Reserve (January 2009 data)

12 13-12 Creation of Money Two basic principles of the money supply: –Transactions-account balances are a large portion of our money supply –Banks can create transactions-account balances by making loans Deposit creation: The creation of transactions deposits by bank lending

13 13-13 T Accounts T accounts are used to keep track of changes in reserves, deposit balances, and loans Assets are things of value the bank possesses –Cash held in a banks vaults –IOUs (loan obligations) from bank customers –Reserve credits at the Federal Reserve –Securities (bonds) purchased by the bank

14 13-14 T Accounts Liabilities are things the bank owes to others –Banks largest liabilities are customers deposits The books of a bank must always balance because all of its assets must belong to someone (its depositors or its owners)

15 13-15 Suppose there is a single bank and you deposit $100 in coins to open a new checking account A Monopoly Bank University BankMoney Supply Assets Liabilities Cash held by the public - $100 + $100 in coins + $100 in deposits Transactions deposits at bank + $100 Change in M0

16 13-16 The Initial Loan Now the bank loans $100 to Campus Radio station by crediting its checking account University BankMoney Supply Assets Liabilities Cash held by the public no change + $100 in coins + $100 your account balance Transactions deposits at bank + $100 + $100 in loans + $100 Campus Radio account Change in M+ $100

17 13-17 The Initial Loan Money has been created because checking accounts are money Total bank reserves have remained unchanged Bank reserves: Assets held by a bank to fulfill its deposit obligations

18 13-18 Secondary Deposits In a one bank system, when Campus Radio uses the loan, the proceeds of the loan are re- deposited in the same bank The bank continues to hold its entire reserves (your coins)

19 13-19 Fractional Reserves Bank reserves are only a fraction of total transaction deposits Reserve ratio: The ratio of a banks reserves to its total transactions deposits

20 13-20 Fractional Reserves The Federal Reserve System requires banks to maintain some minimum reserve ratio, which limits deposit-creation lending possibilities Required reserves: The minimum amount of reserves a bank is required to hold

21 13-21 A Multibank World The ability of banks to make loans depends on access to excess reserves Excess reserves: Bank reserves in excess of required reserves

22 13-22 Excess Reserves So long as a bank has excess reserves, it can make loans –Example: If a bank has $100 in reserves and is required to hold $20, it can lend out excess reserves of $80

23 13-23 Changes in the Money Supply In making a loan, the bank automatically increases the total money supply Money effectively appears out of thin air The creation of transaction deposits via new loans is the same as creating money

24 13-24 AssetsLiabilities University Bank Required Reserves$20 Excess Reserves$80 Your account $100 Total Assets $100 Total Liabilities $100 AssetsLiabilities Eternal Savings Total AssetsTotal Liabilities Deposit Creation

25 13-25 Deposit Creation AssetsLiabilities University Bank Required Reserves$36 Excess Reserves$64 Loans$80 Your account $100 Campus Radio account$ 80 Total Assets $180 Total Liabilities $180 AssetsLiabilities Eternal Savings Total AssetsTotal Liabilities

26 13-26 Deposit Creation AssetsLiabilities University Bank Required Reserves$20 Excess Reserves$ 0 Loans$80 Your account $100 Campus Radio account$ 0 Total Assets $100 Total Liabilities $100 AssetsLiabilities Eternal Savings Required Reserves$16 Required Reserves$64 Atlas Antenna account $80 Total Assets $80 Total Liabilities $90

27 13-27 Deposit Creation AssetsLiabilities University Bank Required Reserves$20 Excess Reserves$ 0 Loans$80 Your account $100 Campus Radio account$ 0 Total Assets $100 Total Liabilities $100 AssetsLiabilities Eternal Savings Required Reserves$29 Required Reserves$51 Loans$64 Atlas Antenna account$80 Hermans Hardware account$64 Total Assets $144 Total Liabilities $144

28 13-28 The Money Multiplier In a multi-bank system, loans created by one bank invariably end up as reserves in another bank, which can then lend their excess reserves This process can theoretically continue until all banks have zero excess reserves (no more loans can be made)

29 13-29 The Money Multiplier Money multiplier: The number of deposit (loan) dollars that the banking system can create from $1 of excess reserves

30 13-30 The Money Multiplier Required reserves represent leakage from the flow of money, since they cannot be used to create new loans Excess reserves can be used for new loans

31 13-31 The Money Multiplier Process Required reserves Excess reserves Leakage into The public

32 13-32 Excess Reserves as Lending Power Each bank may lend an amount equal to its excess reserves and no more The banking system can increase the volume of loans by the amount of excess reserves multiplied by the money multiplier

33 13-33 The Money Multiplier at Work

34 13-34 Banks and the Circular Flow Banks perform two essential functions for the macro economy: –Banks transfer money from savers to spenders by lending funds (reserves) held on deposit –The banking system creates additional money by making loans in excess of total reserves

35 13-35 Banks in the Circular Flow Loans Factor markets Product markets Business firms Consumers BANKS Saving Investment expenditures Sales receipts Wages, dividends, etc. Income Domestic consumption

36 13-36 Financing Injections Consumer saving is a leakage, but a substantial portion is deposited in banks Bank deposits can be used to make loans, returning purchasing power to the circular flow The banking system can create any desired level of money supply if allowed to expand or reduce loan activity at will

37 13-37 Constraints on Deposit Creation Four major constraints on deposit creation: –Deposits –Willingness to Lend –Willingness to Borrow –Regulation

38 13-38 When Banks Fail In the past, runs of depositors rushing to withdraw their funds created panics Banks closed, wiping out customer deposits, curtailing lending, and often pushing the economy into recession In the early part of the Great Depression over 9,000 banks failed

39 13-39 When Banks Fail FDIC and FSLIC were created by Congress to ensure depositors their money was safe and eliminate motivation for bank runs In 2008, the U.S. was hit with another banking crisis Hundreds of billions of government dollars were pumped into the banking system

40 13-40 Money and Banks End of Chapter 13 Copyright © 2010 by the McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin


Download ppt "13-1 Money and Banks Chapter 13 Copyright © 2010 by the McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google