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Chapter 9 The Nature and Creation of Money Hossain: MSMC
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Definition Money is anything that serves as a medium of exchange This means it is accepted as a means of payment Therefore, Cash Coin Credit card Checks All can be considered as Money Hossain: MSMC2
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Functions Three functions of money are: Medium of Exchange: Purchasing goods and services Unit of Account: A consistent means of measuring value of goods and services Storage of Value: An item that holds value over time and therefore, expands the consumption horizon. Hossain: MSMC3
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Exchange without Money Without money goods and services can be exchanged for other goods and services If you have Oranges and want Apples you must know the Price of Apples in terms of Oranges Say 1 pound of Apple = 2 pounds of Oranges = 1 gallon of Milk This is known as Barter In a Barter economy, there will be millions of price for one pound of Apple We will also need double coincidence of wants Hossain: MSMC4
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Types of Money Two types of money are: Commodity Money: Money that has its value or use apart from its use as money Gold or Silver coins Cigarettes in WWII prisons Fiat Money: Fiat money has no intrinsic value It has value because government stands behind its value as a medium of exchange This note is legal tender for all debts public or private Hossain: MSMC5
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Measuring Money Money Supply: Total quantity of money in an economy at any given time Liquidity: Not all assets are equal in terms of how quickly and easily they can be converted to currency Liquidity is the ease with which an asset can be converted into currency Clearly, currencies are most liquid A U.S. treasury bond will be a little less liquid Your home will be even less liquid Hossain: MSMC6
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Measuring Money Based on liquidity, money supply is measured in two forms. M1 Money Supply: The most narrowest definition of money supply by Federal Reserve or the U.S. Central Bank It is also more liquid than M2 definition It includes: Currency: Cash and Coins Checkable Deposits Traveler’s Check Hossain: MSMC7
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Measuring Money M2 Money Supply: A more broader definition of money supply It includes M1 plus several other types of deposits including All of M1 Savings account deposit Small denomination time deposit Money market mutual fund Hossain: MSMC8
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M1 and M2 in December 2008
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Financial Intermediary Financial Intermediary An institution that accepts funds from one group (the savers) and provides funds to another group (the borrowers) who has a better and more productive use of funds In doing so intermediaries Allocates resources to its best use Reduce risks through diversification Reduce transaction cost through specialization Examples include Banks, Insurance company, Mutual funds, Pension funds, Investment banks. Hossain: MSMC10
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Financial Intermediary Banks A financial intermediary that accepts deposits, offer checking account services and make loans. Balance Sheet A financial statement that shows an institution’s assets, liabilities and net worth. Asset: Anything of value. For banks, loans, mortgages, cash, reserves are assets Liability: Obligations to other parties. For banks, deposits, loans from other banks are liabilities Hossain: MSMC11
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Financial Intermediary Balance Sheet Net worth: Refers to assets less liabilities Hossain: MSMC12 AssetsLiabilities and Net Worth Reserves$300.0Checkable deposits$604.5 Other assets1,357.8Other deposits6,306.7 Loans6,903.4Borrowings2,322.1 Securities2,466.9Other liabilities6,576.6 Total assets$11,928.1Total Liabilities9,890.9 Net worth1,137.2
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Financial Intermediary Reserves Bank’s assets in the form of vault cash and deposits with Federal Reserve in called reserve. Reserve = Cash + Deposit with Fed Hossain: MSMC13
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Financial Intermediary Required Reserve Quantity of reserve banks are required to hold. Required reserves cannot be loaned out. It is usually a certain percentage of banks’ primary liability (checkable deposits) Hossain: MSMC14
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Financial Intermediary Required Reserve Ratio Ratio of reserve to checkable deposits that all bank must maintain For example, required reserve ratio is.10 or 10% If Bank of America has 500 m checkable deposits, it must hold 50m worth of reserve (cash or deposit with Federal Reserve Bank) Since reserve earns no interest, most banks maintains just the required reserve Keep assets in the form of loans and securities. Hossain: MSMC15
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Required Reserve Ratio (rrr) Ratio of reserve to checkable deposits that all bank must maintain Mathematically, rrr = R / D For Bank of America rrr = 50m/500m =.10 or 10% If rrr rises to 12%, compute the required reserve for the Bank of America. Hossain: MSMC16 Here, R= Required Reserve D = checkable deposits
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Financial Intermediary Excess Reserve Reserve that are in excess of the required reserve For example, required reserve ratio is.10 or 10% If Bank of America has 500 m checkable deposits, it must hold 50m worth of reserve However, if it has 60m reserve at hand, then what is the excess reserve. Excess Reserve=Actual Reserve – Required Reserve 60m – 50m = 10m Hossain: MSMC17
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