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Ch. 15: Money, Interest Rates, and Exchange Rates Udayan Roy ECO41 International Economics
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What is Money? Money is any asset that is widely used and accepted as a means of payment. So, a countrys quantity of money (M s ) includes – All currency with the public and – The value of all checking accounts bank deposits in a foreign currency are excluded from this definition. M1 and M2 are two well-known periodically published measures of the quantity of money M1M2
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Properties of Money: No Return We can classify all assets into: – Money, which earns no return Currency with the public, checking accounts – Assets that earn a return Stocks, bonds, real estate, etc.
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Properties of Money: Liquid Money is very liquid: – that is, it can easily and quickly be used to purchase goods and services. Assets that earn a return are less liquid
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Money Supply The quantity of money is also called the money supply Who controls the money supply? Central banks determine the money supply. – In the US, the central bank is the Federal Reserve. – The Federal Reserve directly regulates the amount of currency in circulation. – It indirectly controls the amount of checking deposits issued by private banks.
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Money Demand Money demand is the amount of their wealth that people are willing to hold in the form of money … – (… instead of other assets that are less liquid but earn a higher return).
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Money Demand: Individual 1.Interest rate (on interest-earning assets): this is the cost (or, downside) of holding money. 2.Risk: the risk of holding money principally comes from unexpected inflation, thereby unexpectedly reducing the purchasing power of money. – but many other assets have this risk too, so this risk is not very important in money demand 3.Liquidity: A need for greater liquidity occurs when either the price of transactions increases or the quantity of goods bought in transactions increases.
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Money Demand: Aggregate Interest rate Average level of prices Income
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Money Demand: Aggregate Money pays little or no interest. So, the interest rate on interest-earning assets (such as bonds) is the opportunity cost of holding money (instead of non-money assets). A higher interest rate means a higher opportunity cost of holding money lower money demand Therefore, aggregate money demand (M d ) is inversely related to the interest rate (R)
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Money Demand: Aggregate The overall level of prices of goods and services bought in transactions will influence the willingness to hold money to conduct those transactions. A higher overall price level means a greater need for liquidity to buy the same amount of goods and services higher money demand Therefore, aggregate money demand (M d ) is directly related to the overall level of prices (P)
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Money Demand: Aggregate Higher income implies more goods and services are being produced and bought So, more money would be needed to conduct transactions. A higher real national income (GNP) means more goods and services are being produced and bought in transactions, increasing the need for liquidity higher money demand Therefore, aggregate money demand (M d ) is directly related to GNP (Y)
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Money Demand: Aggregate
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Equilibrium
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THE AA CURVE This topic is actually in Chapter 17. But lets do it now anyway.
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Two Markets: Foreign Exchange and Money So far, we have seen the equilibrium conditions for the two asset markets – The foreign exchange market (Ch. 14), and – The money market (this chapter)
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Equilibrium in Asset Markets
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This gives us the AA Schedule (or the AA Curve) of Chapter 17.
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Fig. 17-7: The AA Schedule
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Shifting the AA Curve AA 2 3
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Shifting the AA Curve The AA curve shifts right if: – M s increases – P decreases – E e rises – R* rises – L decreases for some unknown reason Y E E0E0 Y0Y0 Y1Y1 E1E1
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