Chapter 4 Money & Monetary Policy
Chapter 4 Money & Monetary Policy
• Money
• Banks and the money supply
• Money market
• Monetary policy
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1. Money
1.1 Definition of Money
– Set of ... in an economy
– That people regularly use
– To buy ... from other people
1.2 Functions of money
– Medium of exchange
– Unit of account
– Store of value
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1. Money
• Medium of exchange
– Item that buyers give to sellers
• When they want to purchase goods and services
• Unit of account
– Yardstick people use to post prices and record
debts
• Store of value
– Item that people can use to transfer
purchasing power
• From the present to the future
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2. Banks and the money supply
2.1 Basic concepts
• The money supply (MS): the quantity of money
available in the economy
• The money supply equals ...
MS =
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2. Banks and the money supply
• Reserves : Deposits that banks have .... But have
not ..
• Reserve ratio (rr): Fraction of deposits that banks
hold as ... It includes ...
- minimum set by the central bank and ...
- above the legal minimum.
• T-account which is a simplified accounting
statement that shows changes in a bank’s ... and
...
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2. Banks and the money supply
• 100-Percent-Reserve Banking: a system in
which banks hold all deposits as ...
• Fractional-Reserve Banking: a system in
which banks hold a fraction of their deposits
as...
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2. Banks and the money supply
2.2 How Banks affect money supply
SCENARIO 1: 100 – Percent - Reserve Banking
▪ Initially C = $100, D = $0, MS =
▪ Now suppose households deposit the $100 at “First
National Bank.”
▪ After the deposit,
FIRST NATIONAL BANK C = $0,
Assets Liabilities D = $100,
MS =
Reserves Deposits
▪ 100% Reserve
Banking has ..
on size of
money supply.
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2. Banks and the Money Supply
• SCENARIO 2: Fractional - Reserve Banking
– Reserve ratio = 1/10 (10 percent)
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2. Banks and the Money Supply
FIRST NATIONAL BANK
Assets Liabilities
Reserves Deposits $100
Loans
SECOND NATIONAL BANK
Assets Liabilities
Reserves Deposits $90
Loans
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2. Banks and the Money Supply
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2. Banks and the Money Supply
2.3 A model of the money supply
• Monetary base, B = C + R controlled by the
central bank
• Reserve ratio, rr = R/D
depends on regulations & bank policies
• Currency-deposit ratio, cr = C/D
depends on households’ preferences
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2. Banks and the Money Supply
2.3 A model of the money supply
• Solving for money multiplier (m)
• B=
• MS =
• MS / B =
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2. Banks and the Money Supply
• rr < 1, then m > ...
• If monetary base changes by ΔB,
then ΔMS =
• m is the money multiplier:
the increase in the ...
resulting from a one-dollar increase
in the ...
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Question 1
Suppose households decide to hold more of
their money as currency and less in the form
of demand deposits.
1.
2.
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2. Banks and the Money Supply
2.4 Central bank and tools of monetary control
• A central bank : an institution designed to
oversee the banking system and regulate the
quantity of money in the economy
• The Federal Reserve System (“the Fed”) serves
as the central bank for the United States.
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2. Banks and the Money Supply
• Tools of monetary control
a. Open-market operations
– Purchase and sale of government bonds by
the central bank
– To increase the money supply
• The central bank … government bonds
– To reduce the money supply
• The central bank … government bonds
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2. Banks and the Money Supply
• Tools of monetary control
b. Reserve requirements
– Regulations on minimum amount of reserves
• That banks must hold against deposits
– An increase in reserve requirement
•… the money supply
– A decrease in reserve requirement
•… the money supply
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2. Banks and the Money Supply
• Tools of monetary control
c. The discount rate
– Interest rate on the loans that the central
bank makes to banks
– Higher discount rate
•… the money supply
– Smaller discount rate
•… the money supply
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2. Banks and the Money Supply
2.5 Problems in controlling the money supply
• The central bank
– Does not control
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Bank runs and the money supply
• Bank runs
– Depositors suspect that a bank may go bankrupt
• “Run” to the bank to withdraw their deposits
– Problem for banks under fractional-reserve banking
• Cannot satisfy withdrawal requests from all depositors
– When a bank run occurs
• The bank - is forced to close its doors
• Until some bank loans are repaid
• Or until some lender of last resort provides it with the
currency it needs to satisfy depositors
– Complicate the control of the money supply
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• Homework: What is a bank run? Analyze causes
and consequences of bank runs. Give an
example.
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3. Money market
❖ The theory of liquidity preference
• Interest rate (denoted r) adjusts to balance supply and
demand for money
– The ... is the interest rate as
usually reported
– The ... is the interest rate corrected for
the effects of inflation
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3.1 Money supply
• Money supply: assume fixed by central
bank, does not depend on ...
Interest
rate
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3.2 Money demand
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3.2 Money demand
Interest
rate
Money
Demand (MD)
Quantity of Money
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3.3 Equilibrium in the money market
Interest
rate
r1
Equilibrium
Interest rate
r2
Money
Demand (MD)
Md1 Quantity Md2 Quantity of Money
Fixed by the central bank
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4. Monetary Policy
• Monetary policy: the supply of money set by the
central bank
• The central bank increases the money supply -
Expansionary monetary policy
– Money-supply curve shifts ...
– Interest rate ® ...
– A ... In r increases ....
– At any given price level, AD ....
– Thus, aggregate-demand curve shifts ...
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The central bank increases the money
supply
(a) The Money Market (b) The Aggregate-Demand Curve
Interest Price
rate level
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4. Monetary Policy
• The central bank decreases the money supply –
Contractionary monetary policy
– Money-supply curve shifts ...
– Interest rate ...
– A ... in r decreases...
– At any given price level, AD ...
– - Thus, aggregate-demand curve shifts ...
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The central bank decreases the money
supply
(a) The Money Market (b) The Aggregate-Demand Curve
Interest Price
rate level
MS2 MS1
1 .
r2
P
r1
AD1
MD , AD2
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