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MONEY AND THE BANKING SYSTEM
What is money?
Although we commonly think of “money” as being paper bills and metal coins, these are by no means the only items that can act as “money.”
Money must fulfill three functions: Medium of exchange Store of value Unit of account
Medium of exchange
Problem with barter system: “Coincidence of wants.”
In a barter system, both people must have exactly what the other person wants, exactly when and where it’s wanted.
Medium of exchange eliminates this problem.
Definition: Anything used to facilitate trade and avoid a straight barter system.
Anything can serve as money so long as people are willing to accept it.
Store of value
US dollars are what is called fiat money: They have no intrinsic value. Rather, their value is a function of the US government saying they have value.
This is true for most nations’ currencies: They are backed only by the faith and credit of the given country’s government.
“This note is legal tender for all debts, public and private.”
Money need not be convertible into something with intrinsic value (e.g., gold).
Unit of account
Standard unit of measurement of the value/cost of goods, services, or assets.
Analogy: you go to WeShop and pay $5 for a gallon of milk. Gallon : size :: dollar : price Take away the price units: A gallon of milk
simply costs “5.” 5 what? Another example: “GM incurred losses of
700 million in the second quarter.” The dollar sign lends meaning to the phrase.
Mildly amusing examples
Yap (island in the Pacific Ocean) uses stones ranging from 1.4 inches to 10 feet in diameter
Mildly amusing examples (contd.)
Ithaca, NY, has its own currency, the Ithaca HOUR. One Ithaca HOUR is valued at $10 Ithaca HOURs cannot be converted to US
dollars Businesses that receive HOURs must spend
them on local goods and services Ithaca inspired similar systems in Madison, WI,
and Corvallis, OR
Mildly amusing examples (contd.)
Here is the Swedish 10-daler coin ca. 1720, which was made of copper and weighed 43 pounds (and facilitated the introduction of paper money)
Mildly amusing examples (contd.)
And last but not least, the currently available Canadian $1 million gold coin, which weighs 100kg and has a diameter of 50 cm.
What determines money demand?
Needed for transactionstransactions demand: Money demand in its most simple form
Asset-holding motives: Precautionary demand (i.e., money people
want in case of emergency or if they are worried how long they will live)
Speculative demand (need for cash to take advantage of investment opportunities that may arise in the future)
Measures of money
M1, M2 M1: Physical currency + demand deposits
(i.e., checking accounts) M2: M1 + savings accounts + money
market accounts + small-denomination time deposits (CDs under $100,000)
Balance sheet
A balance sheet indicates a bank’s assets and liabilities. Assets = reserves + loans Liabilities = deposits + capital (stockholders’ equity)
The two sides of the balance sheet must be equal! The accounting identity was developed in the 15th
century as a means for identifying accounting errors Sometimes the right side (Liabilities) is broken into
liabilities (=deposits) & net worth (=equity/capital)
Example of balance sheet
Money creation
Banks are required to keep a certain percentage of their deposits in reserve. The percentage they must keep is called the reserve
ratio (rr) and is set by the Fed. Banks can choose to keep additional reserves
beyond the requirement. Banks are free to lend out the rest of their
deposits. These loans make their way to other banks, which in turn loan them out, and so on.
Fractional banking can lead to damaging “bank runs,” such as what partially precipitated the Great Depression (remember in Mary Poppins?)
Creation of money$100,000 deposit, rr = 20%
Now the bank loans outits excess reserves…
Those loans become anotherbank’s deposits…
That bank’s loans becomeanother bank’s deposits…
…and so on.
Money creation
This cycle shows how banks can create money. The money multiplier (mm) describes the total
increase in money resulting from a $1 initial increase in reserves.
mm = 1/rr So, for example, if rr = 20%, a $1 initial
increase will increase the money supply in total by $5.
Note that the effect of the money multiplier is diminished if individuals increase their cash holdings.
What determines money supply?
Policymakers at the Fed determine the US money supply.
The Fed has three tools to change Ms: Reserve ratio Discount rate (interest rate charged to banks
that borrow from the Fed) Open-market operations (buying and selling
bonds)
Open-market operations
When the Fed wishes to lower the money supply, it sells bonds (government securities) to the public. The money it receives from these transactions is retired (removed from circulation), so the net effect is to lower Ms.
Similarly, when the Fed wants to increase the money supply, it buys bonds from the public. The money multiplier acts to further increase Ms as well. (Money multiplier also works backwards when Fed sells bonds.)
Money supply, demand
Let’s bring money supply and money demand together on one graph
Why is Md downward-sloping? Think of interest rate as the cost of holding
money Money sitting in your wallet does not earn
interest; the higher the interest rate, the more interest is foregone by holding onto money—so the opportunity cost of holding money is higher.
As output (Y) increases, Md shifts/increases (more money demanded for transactions)