Title: Money and Banking
1Money and Banking
- Spring 2007
- Martin Andreas Wurm
- University of Wisconsin - Milwaukee
2What is Money?
- Required Reading Mishkin, Chapter 3
32. Defining Money
- 0. A new wizard?
- Much attention has been paid
- to Ben Bernanke taking over
- as Chairman of the Fed on
- February 1st 2006 after Alan
- Greenspan has been the highest
- keeper of the Worlds most
- important currency for almost
- 20 years.
- He started his career in times of
- concerns about ongoing inflation
- an the burst of a housing bubble in
- U.S.
Source CBS News
42. Defining Money
- 1. Clarifying a misunderstanding
- In our everyday lives we often refer to money
as one of three things - Coins and paper money (currency)
- (Hand over your money or Ill shoot you)
- A persons wealth
- (Bill Gates has a lot of money)
- A persons income
- (Working in finance is a fantastic job and you
earn a lot of money)
52. Defining Money
- 1. Clarifying a misunderstanding
- When economists refer to money, they have a
different connotation in mind - Money is anything that is generally accepted
in payments for goods or services or in the
repayment of debts. - - Mishkin, F. The Economics of Money, Banking
and Financial Markets, p. 44
62. Defining Money
- 1. Clarifying a misunderstanding
- This definition deviates from the above mentioned
colloquial definitions of money - Ad 1. Currency fits the economic definition of
money, but it is only part of it. There are
other forms of media of exchange, such as e.g.
checks. Even money holdings in savings
accounts affect the money stock of an economy.
Currency, therefore, is too narrow for a good
definition - Ad 2. A persons wealth, on the contrary,
consists of many items which do not fit the
definition of money provided above, such as
stocks, bonds, houses, etc, which cannot be
transferred into media of exchange easily.
Wealth, therefore, is too broad for a good
definition - Ad 3. Income often is transferred in form of
money. However, money is defined as a stock,
while income is a flow. Moreover, part of a
persons income can be non-monetary, such as
health benefits, etc.
72. Defining Money
- 2. Functions of Money
- Commonly, individuals hold money for three
reasons. - Money acts as a medium of exchange
- Money is used as unit of account
- Money is a store of value
- What mainly distinguishes money from other assets
such as bonds or stock is its use as a medium of
exchange
82. Defining Money
- 2. 1. Money as a medium of exchange
- Imagine an economy without money a barter
economy. - In such an economy all goods and services have to
be exchanged directly for each other. - Exchange in such an economy requires what is
known as the dual coincidence of wants - Both trading partners have to mutually offer a
good or service that their counterpart demands.
Otherwise no trade occurs. - This method of exchange complicates trade
immensely and creates high transaction costs.
92. Defining Money
- 2. 1. Money as a medium of exchange
Individual A Offers bread Demands soda
Individual C Offers bananas Demands bread
An example of a barter economy Trade in this
barter economy only takes place, if individual A
decides to trade its bread against individual Cs
bananas, which in turn A can exchange against Bs
bananas. Individual D cannot trade in this
economy since within this group nobody is
offering anything D wants. D, however,
potentially has bananas to offer, which remain
unused.
Individual D Offers bananas Demands education
Individual B Offers soda Demands bananas
102. Defining Money
- 2. 1. Money as a medium of exchange
- In most of the transactions in modern economies
money, therefore, is used as a medium of exchange
reducing transaction costs involved with barter
(mainly in form of time). - Any commodity used as a medium of exchange must
show certain features - 1. It must be easily standardized
- 2. It must be widely accepted
- 3. It must be divisible
- 4. It must be portable
- 5. It must not deteriorate in value quickly
112. Defining Money
- 2. 2. Money as a unit of account
- Money is the most common measure of economic
value in an economy - Prices of goods and services are typically not
indicated relative to all other goods and
services, but are usually referenced to a single
numeraire good, namely money. - Again this creates a huge informational and
therefore cost advantage over a barter economy,
since we do not have to worry whether 5 eggs at
the supermarket are worth 0.05 economics
lectures, 6 bananas, 2 ounces of titanium, 0.01
gallon of gas, etc.
122. Defining Money
- 2. 3. Money as a store of value
- The third function of money reflects its capacity
to maintain part of its value over time - Individuals use part of their income for
consumption and part of their income for saving. - There are numerous assets that can be used for
saving. Bonds, stock, houses, even consumption
goods are often mainly held for purposes of
postponing consumption. Money is merely one of
them.
132. Defining Money
- 2. 3. Money as a store of value
- Many of these assets have clear advantages over
money. Bonds for example pay coupons or gain in
price, houses produce housing services, etc. - The only rent money provides is inflation, which
is (usually) negative. - So why do people hold money for saving purposes
in the first place? - The answer to that question is liquidity.
142. Defining Money
- 2. 3. Money as a store of value
- Liquidity indicates how easily and quickly an
asset can be transformed into a means of payment.
Since the world we live in is uncertain,
liquidity is desirable - Money, apparently, is the most liquid asset. It
does not need to be transformed into anything
else for purposes of transaction, being the
medium of exchange itself. - Other assets such as checking, saving or time
deposits also have a high degree of liquidity and
are, therefore, often considered part of the
money stock (see 2.4.).
152. Defining Money
- 2. 3. Money as a store of value
- Is money a good store of value?
- The answer to this question depends as already
indicated on inflation, since the value of
money is fixed in the price level. - During normal phases of inflation, money is a
relatively good store of value - During phases of high inflation or hyperinflation
(inflation rates above 50), however, money can
loose its value very quickly.
162. Defining Money
- 3. A brief history of the payment system
- The payment system is the method of conducting
transactions in an economy. - Historical forms of means of payment are the
following - Commodity money
- Fiat money
- Checks
- Electronic payment
- E-Money
172. Defining Money
- 3.1. Commodity money
- Commodity money is a means of payment made out of
precious metals such as gold or silver or other
valuable commodities. - It has been the prevailing medium of exchange in
most societies since classical times up to around
two hundred years ago.
Roman circus coin (Hadrianus)
1878 Brasher doubloon
182. Defining Money
- 3.1. Commodity money
- Commodity money fulfills the criterion of general
acceptance, because it consists of materials
which are already high in demand. - It comes with a number of problems, however
- Its value is not necessarily easily to prove for
everyone. Problems of forgery or debasing have
been common in history. - Commodity money is generally heavy and hard to
transport. - The value of commodity money varies with the
value of the underlying commodity and, therefore,
is subject to fluctuations of supply and demands
for these goods.
192. Defining Money
- 3.2. Fiat Money
- The development of bank notes originally backed
by a convertibility guarantee succeeded
commodity money. - Paper money quickly converted into fiat money
money issued by governments as legal tender, but
without any right of convertibility
US Dollar
10.000 Reichsmark (during the German
hyperinflation)
202. Defining Money
- 3.2. Fiat Money
- Fiat money is easier to transport and it is not
subject to demand and supply fluctuations like
commodity money - However, it can only be used as a medium of
exchange as long as it is generally accepted,
which is not always a safe bet - Individuals expectations on the value of paper
money and the integrity of the monetary authority
build the main pillar on which a fiat money
system is based upon. Once people stop believing
in the value of fiat money, the system falls
apart. - Fiat money, moreover, has similar problems as
commodity money. It is easily stolen and often
subject to counterfeit
212. Defining Money
- 3.3. Checks
- Checks are an instruction to a bank to transfer
money from on persons account to the bank
account of the recipient once he or she deposits
the check.
A check
222. Defining Money
- 3.3. Checks
- Checks, thus, solve the problem of transport for
large amounts of money and facilitate
transactions in a number of other ways. - However, two problems are connected to the use of
checks - Moving checks from one point to another takes
time - The processing of checks does not come for free
and imposes a transaction cost by itself to
society
232. Defining Money
- 3.3. Electronic payment
- Increasingly common forms of means of transaction
are electronic payment services offered online by
banks. - Instead of mailing out a check for every single
payment, you simply log on to the banks web site
or have your money automatically deducted on a
regular basis - Electronic payment is a very common means of
transaction in Europe and increasingly popular in
the U.S.
242. Defining Money
- 3.3. E-Money
- Not only checks get increasingly substituted by
electronic forms of payment, cash has also been
partly replaced by other instruments - Common forms of E-money include
- Debit and credit cards
- Money cards or smart cards
- E-cash
252. Defining Money
- 4. Measuring money
- We defined money as anything generally accepted
in payment for goods and services - Since many commodities have had this function in
history, we need a closer definition of money to
measure the actual stock of money in an economy
at a specific point in time
262. Defining Money
- 4. Measuring money
- The common measures of the money stock are given
in the definition of the monetary aggregates
issued by the Fed. - Due to the large number of financial innovations
of the last decades the definition of these
aggregates have been frequently revised. - There are three common aggregates of money very
imaginatively labeled M1, M2 and M3 (M3 has
been discontinued in 2006).
272. Defining Money
Value as of December 2002 (billions) M1
Currency 626.5 Travelers checks
7.7 Demand deposits
290.7 Other checkable deposits
281.2 Sum 1,206.1
282. Defining Money
Value as of December 2002 (billions) M2
M1 1,206.1 Small denomination time
deposits and repurchase agreements
1,332.3 Savings deposits and money
market deposit accounts 2,340.4 Money
market mutual fund shares (non-institutional)
923.7 Sum 5,802.5
292. Defining Money
Value as of December 2002 (billions) M3
M2 5,802.5 Large denomination time
deposits and repurchase agreements
1,105.2 Money market mutual fund
shares (institutional)
767.7 Repurchase agreements
511.7 Eurodollars 341.1 Sum
8,528.2