Mankiw10e Lecture Slides Ch04
Mankiw10e Lecture Slides Ch04
N. Gregory Mankiw
The Monetary
System: What it Is
and How It Works
Presentation Slides
3 The
CHAPTER 4
1 National
Science
Monetary
Income
of System
Macroeconomics
Money: Definition
• Medium of exchange
we use it to buy stuff
• Store of value
transfers purchasing power from the present to the future
• Unit of account
the common unit by which everyone measures prices and
values
Money: Types
1. Fiat money
• has no intrinsic value
• example: the paper currency we use
2. Commodity money
• has intrinsic value
• examples:
gold coins,
cigarettes in POW camps
NOW YOU TRY Discussion question
M=C+D
With no banks,
D = 0 and M = C = $1,000.
Scenario 2: 100-percent-reserve banking
Assets Liabilities
Reserves $128 Deposits $640
Loans $512
Finding the total amount of money
Capital requirement:
• minimum amount of capital mandated by regulators
• intended to ensure that banks will be able to pay off
depositors
• higher for banks that hold more risky assets
2008–2009 financial crisis:
• Losses on mortgages shrank bank capital, slowed
lending, exacerbated the recession.
• Govt injected billions of dollars of capital into banks to
ease the crisis and encourage more lending.
A model of the money supply
Exogenous variables
• Monetary base, B = C + R
controlled by the central bank
• Reserve-deposit ratio, rr = R/D
depends on regulations and bank policies
• Currency-deposit ratio, cr = C/D
depends on households’ preferences
Solving for the money supply (1 of 2)
C +D
M =C +D = ×B = m×B
B
where :
C +D
m=
B
C + D C D + D D cr + 1
= = =
C + R C D + R D cr + r r
Solving for the money supply (2 of 2)
cr + 1
M = m × B, where m =
cr + r r
cr + 1
M = m × B, where m =
cr + r r
cr + 1
M = m × B, where m =
cr + r r
Monetary base
From 8/2008 to 8/2011,
the monetary base tripled,
but M1 grew only about 40%.
CASE STUDY: Quantitative easing (2 of 2)
cr + 1
M = m × B, where m =
cr + rr
3 The
CHAPTER 4
1 National
Science
Monetary
Income
of System
Macroeconomics
CHAPTER SUMMARY (2 of 3)
Fractional reserve banking creates money because each
dollar of reserves generates many dollars of demand
deposits.
The money supply depends on the:
• monetary base
• currency–deposit ratio
• reserve ratio
The Fed can control the money supply with:
open market operations
the reserve requirement
the discount rate
interest on reserves
3 The
CHAPTER 4
1 National
Science
Monetary
Income
of System
Macroeconomics
CHAPTER SUMMARY (3 of 3)
Bank capital, leverage, and capital requirements
• Bank capital is the owners’ equity in the bank.
• Because banks are highly leveraged, a small decline in
the value of bank assets can have a huge impact on bank
capital.
• Bank regulators require that banks hold sufficient capital
to ensure that depositors can be repaid.
3 The
CHAPTER 4
1 National
Science
Monetary
Income
of System
Macroeconomics