Chapter 18: Money Supply & Money Demand

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Chapter 18: Money Supply & Money Demand

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Title: Chapter 18: Money Supply & Money Demand


1
Chapter 18 Money Supply Money Demand
2
Federal Reserve System, FED
  • The central bank of the U.S.
  • Independent decision making unit with regional
    banks
  • In charge of money supply management and economic
    stabilization

3
Money Supply
  • M C D
  • C Currency coins bills (25)
  • D Demand Deposits checking account deposits
    (75)

4
Money Supply Line
  • The quantity of money in circulation is
    controlled by the central bank in real value

Interest Rate ()
(M/P)s
10
5
80
Quantity of Money
5
Fractional Banking System
  • Banks are required by law to hold a percentage of
    all deposits with the FED to be able to return
    the deposits
  • R reserves deposits
  • RR required reserves reserves held by the FED
  • rr reserve-deposit ratio percentage
    determined by the FED (rr R/D)
  • ER excess reserves reserves used by banks to
    lend or investment

6
Fractional Banking System
  • R RR ER
  • RR rr R
  • ER (1 rr)R
  • Banks lending and investing ER will create money
    through a multiplier effect

7
A Model of Money Supply
  • The monetary base (B) is money held by the public
    in currency and by banks as reserves R
  • B C R
  • The currency-deposit ratio (cr) is the amount of
    currency people hold as a fraction of their
    demand deposits
  • cr C / D

8
A Model of Money Supply
  • Divide M C D by B C R
  • M/B (C D) / (C R)
  • Divide the numerator and denominator by D
  • M/B (C/D 1) / (C/D R/D)
  • M/B (cr 1) / (cr rr)
  • M (cr 1) / (cr rr)B m ? B
  • Define money multiplier m (cr 1) / (cr
    rr),so far any 1 increase in the monetary base,
    money supply increases by m.

9
A Model of Money Supply
  • Example B 500 billion, cr 0.6 and rr 0.1
  • m(0.6 1) / (0.6 0.1) 2.3
  • M 2.3(500) 1,150 billion

10
Change in Money Supply
  • The money supply is proportional to the monetary
    base. So, an increase in B increases M m-fold.
  • The lower the reserve-deposit ratio, the more
    loans banks make and the higher is the money
    multiplier
  • The lower the currency deposit ratio, the fewer
    dollars of the monetary base the public holds as
    currency and the lower is the money multiplier

11
Tools of Monetary Policy
  • Reserve-deposit ratio ratio of cash reserves to
    deposits that banks are required to maintain
  • By lowering the ratio, banks will have more
    reserves to lend and invest, increasing the money
    supply

12
Tools of Monetary Policy
  • Discount rate rate of interest the FED charges
    on loans to banks
  • By lowering the rate, banks encourage borrowing
    from the FED and lending to the public,
    increasing the money supply

13
Tools of Monetary Policy
  • Open Market Operations FEDs purchases and sales
    of government bonds
  • By purchasing bonds and paying the sellers, the
    FED increases the money supply

14
Expansionary Monetary Policy
  • Increase the money supply by any one or
    combination of the above tools
  • Reduce the interest rate to encourage investment
  • Increase employment income

15
Money Demand
  • The amount of money demanded for transaction and
    speculative purposes depends personal income and
    interest rate
  • At any level of personal income, quantity
    demanded of money is a negative function of
    interest rate (M/P)d L(i, Y)

16
Money Demand Line
M/P L(Y, i) Y income i interest rate
Interest Rate ()
10
5
(M/P)d
100
80
Quantity of Money
17
Money Market Equilibrium
Interest Rate ()
(M/P)s
5
(M/P)d
80
Quantity of Money
18
Expansionary Monetary Policy
Interest Rate ()
(M2/P)s
(M1/P)s
5
4
(M/P)d
85
80
Quantity of Money
19
Portfolio Theory of Money Demand
  • (M/P)d L(rs, rb, pe, W)
  • M/P real money balances
  • rs expected real rate of return on stocks
  • rb expected real rate of return on bonds
  • pe expected rate of inflation
  • W real wealth
  • (M/P)d is positively related to W and
    negatively
  • affected by rs, rb, pe

20
The Baumol-Tobin Model
  • Define
  • Y transactionary money an individual holds in
    bank
  • N annual number of trips to bank an individual
    makes to withdraw money
  • F cost of a trip to the bank
  • i nominal interest rate

21
Optimal Conditions
  • Total cost of money withdrawal Foregone
    interest Cost of trips
  • TC iY/2N FN
  • The annual number of trips that minimizes the
    total cost of bank trips is
  • N (iY/2F)1/2
  • Average transactionary money holding is
  • MH Y /2N (YF/2i)1/2

22
Optimal Conditions
Cost
Total cost of bank withdrawal
Cost of bank trips FN
Foregone interest iY/2N
Number of trip to bank, N
N
23
Speculative Demand for Money
  • Money individuals hold for investment in the
    financial market
  • Near money consists of non-monetary,
    interest-bearing assets such as stocks and bonds

24
The Federal Funds Rate
  • The short-term interest rate at which banks make
    loans to each other
  • The FED uses this rate as the basis for its
    interest rate policy
  • Taylors rule for the determination of the
    nominal federal funds rate
  • Inflation rate 2 0.5(Inflation rate 2)
    0.5(GDP gap)

25
Actual vs. Taylors Rule
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