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Final Exam n Exam Date: May 6, 2006 n Exam Time: 2:00-4:00pm n Room: Terrill Hall 121
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Request to Reschedule Final Exam n Taking both 1100 and 1110 n 3 or more finals scheduled for that day n Religious reasons n Other? (appropriate documentation) n All requests must be submitted to Kari Battaglia, by Monday, May 1 st
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NATURE OF MONEY n widely acceptable in exchange for goods and services n acceptable as payment for debts
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MONEY vs. BARTER n Money is more efficient than barter because it –decreases transaction time –increases the number of transactions Exchange is easier and less time-consuming in a money economy
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PHYSICAL CHARACTERISTICS OF MONEY n portable n divisible n Recognizable Money is any good that is widely accepted for purposes of exchange
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WHAT GIVES MONEY VALUE? n no longer backed by gold n “fiat money” backed by the government n value lies in peoples trust in the government and their willingness to accept it for G & S.
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Three Functions of Money n Medium of exchange money is the medium through which exchange occurs money is the medium through which exchange occurs n Unit of account a common measure in which values are expressed a common measure in which values are expressed n Store of value ability to maintain its value over time ability to maintain its value over time
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Three Functions of Money (cont.) n A pizza maker lists the price of pizza as $10 n A $50 traveler’s check n A $10 food stamp n A vacation home in the Caribbean
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M1 NARROWLY DEFINED MONEY n currency n checkable deposits n traveler’s checks
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CURRENCY n coins and bills n currency in circulation and currency held outside the bank are equivalent
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CHECKABLE DEPOSITS n all checkable deposits whether at a bank, savings and loan, or credit union. n also called transactions accounts and demand deposits n debit cards that draw directly from your account are included
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Exhibit 1The Components of M1 SOURCE: Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System.
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MONEY SUPPLY n checkable deposits are the largest component of M1 (almost 70%) n the term Money Supply refers to M1 unless otherwise noted
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M2 BROADLY DEFINED MONEY n M1 n small time deposits n savings deposits n money market deposit accounts (MMDA) n money market mutual fund (MMMF)
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M3 and L n M3 and L add less liquid assets such as –large time deposits (M3) –bankers acceptances (L)
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Money supply measures, April 2002 _SymbolAssets includedAmount (billions)_ CCurrency$598.7 M1C + demand deposits,1174.0 travelers’ checks, other checkable deposits M2M1 + small time deposits,5480.1 savings deposits, money market mutual funds, money market deposit accounts M3M2 + large time deposits,8054.4 repurchase agreements, institutional money market mutual fund balances
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CREDIT CARDS n Credit cards are NOT money n Credit cards are short term loans - you borrow from the bank and then must repay that loan. n The existing money is shifted around but Ms does not change
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100-PERCENT-RESERVE BANKING n All deposits are held as reserves n Banks accept deposits, place the money in reserve, and leave the money there until the depositor makes a withdrawal
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FRACTIONAL RESERVE BANKING n Banks are not required to keep every dollar that you deposit on reserve. n The Federal Reserve sets the required reserve ratio which determines the percentage of deposits that must be held.
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BANK RESERVES n TOTAL RESERVES - cash in the vault and bank deposits at the Fed. n REQUIRED RESERVES - total deposits X required reserve ratio n EXCESS RESERVES - total reserves - required reserves
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Examples n Calculate required reserves (RR) when total deposits are $80,000 and the required-reserve ratio is r = 20% n What is the required-reserve ratio if banks are required to hold $100 in reserves to support $500 in deposits? n Calculate deposits if required reserves are $150 and the required-reserve ratio is r = 20%
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Examples n What are excess reserves if $40 of the $100 in total reserves held by banks are required reserves? n How much do banks have in excess reserves if total reserves are $400, deposits are $2,000 and the required-reserve ratio is 20%?
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BANK ACTIVITIES n Banks accept deposits and offer checking services n Banks keep a percentage of the deposits on reserve n Excess reserves are available to be loaned out n Banks earn money from loans
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Exhibit 3The Money Supply Expansion and Contraction Processes
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T - Accounts BANK TWO AssetsLiabilities Total ReservesDemand Deposits Loans
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MONEY EXPANSION n When banks make loans they create money n When the loans are spent, it finds its way into other banks. n These banks keep a portion of these deposits on reserve and then loan the rest out.
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BANK TWO r =.10 AssetsLiabilities Reserves100Demand Deposits1,000 Loans900
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BANK TWO r =.10 (fully loaned up) AssetsLiabilities Reserves100Demand Deposits1,000 Loans900 RR 100 ER 0
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BANK TWO r =.10 AssetsLiabilities Reserves200Demand Deposits1,000 Loans800 RR 100 ER 100
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(1) BANK (2) NEW DEPOSITS (new reserves) (3) NEW REQUIRED RESERVES (4) CHECKABLE DEPOSITS CREATED BY EXTENDING NEW LOANS (equal to new excess reserves) $1,000.00 900.00 810.00 729.00 656.10 $100.00 90.00 81.00 72.90 65.61 $900.00 810.00 729.00 656.10 590.49 A B C D E............ TOTALS (rounded)$10,000$1,000 $9,000
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Examples n By how much can the banking system expand deposits if total reserves are $600, deposits are $2,500 and the required-reserve ratio is 20%?
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Money Expansion n When banks make loans they increase the money supply (M1) n The maximum change in checkable deposits is ( 1/r x change in reserves ) n simple deposit creation multiplier = 1/r n Reasons actual creation may be less than the maximum –cash leakages –nonzero excess reserves
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SIMPLE DEPOSIT MULTIPLIER n If r =.10 then the simple deposit multiplier is 10 n If r =.15 then the simple deposit multiplier is 6.67 n If r =.20 then the simple deposit multiplier is 5
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MONEY DESTRUCTION contractionary policy n The FED can also choose to remove money from the economy n When the FED reduces the amount of money in circulation this impacts banks n as bank deposits fall, banks are forced to reduce the amount of loans (call in loans) n The decrease in loans reduces the money supply
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