Transcript Ch. 27

What is Money?
Set of assets in the economy that people
regularly use to buy goods & services from each
other
Prevents need for bartering
Functions of Money
1. Medium of Exchange: as item that buyers give
to sellers when they purchase goods &
services
2. Unit of Account: What people use to post
prices and record debts
3. Store of Value: Item that people can use to
transfer purchasing power from present to the
future
Liquidity
• Ease with which an asset can be converted
into the economy’s medium of exchange
• What’s liquid? What’s not?
Kinds of Money
1. Commodity Money: Money that takes the
form of a commodity with intrinsic value
(would have value even if it wasn’t money)
• Examples?
2. Fiat Money: Money without intrinsic value
that’s used as money by gov’t decree
• Examples?
Money in the U.S. Economy
• Money Stock: Quantity of money circulating in
the economy
• M1: Currency (paper bills & coins), Demand
Deposits (balance of bank accounts that’s
easily accessible), Traveler’s Checks
• M2: Savings accounts, Money Market Mutual
Funds, Small Time Deposits, all M1
Are Credit Cards Money?
• Why or Why Not?
The Federal Reserve System
• Fed is central bank of the U.S., designed to
oversee the banking system and regulate the
quantity of money in the economy
Federal Reserve and Monetary Policy
1. Amount of money in economy determines
amount of spending
• Too much = inflation
• Too little = recession
Fed manages money supply by…..
• Influence lending among banks and other
financial institutions
2. Monetary Policy
a) Expansionary = expand credit, MS, growth
(easy money)
b) Contractionary = restrict credit, MS, growth
(tight)
3. Three Tools
a) Open Market Operations (Federal Funds
Rate)
b) Discount Rate
c) Reserve Requirement
4. OMO
- Most used
a) Fed buys and sells US government securities
-US Bonds
b) Expansionary- buy bonds
- Fed buys $1000 bond from Joe
- Joe now has $1000 = increase in MS
c) Contractionary – sell bonds
- Fed sells $1000 bond to Joe
- Joe now has a bond but $1000 less in cash =
decrease in MS
• (pg 1 ; last two paragraphs)
Fed’s effect on INTEREST RATES
Intro to Money Market Graphs (text 736,738,741)
a) Expansionary ; buy bonds ; increase MS ; decrease IR
MS 1
MS 2
Int Rate
MD
Q of Money
b) Contractionary ; sell bonds ; decrease MS ;
increase IR
MS 2
MS 1
MD
• (1st page ; last paragraph and 2nd page ; first paragraph)
Federal Funds Rate (What is it?)
a) Federal Funds – reserve balances of financial
institutions held at 12 Regional Fed Banks
b) If a bank can not meet its “reserve
requirement” – it can borrow reserve funds
from other banks
c) FFR – the interest rate banks pay when they
borrow from each other
5. FOMC sets “TARGET” rate for FFR
- Uses OMO to adjust MS to adjust FFR “at or
near target”
a) How does this affect you, me, and the rest of
the economy?
Use of OMO and FFR……. “sets off a chain of
events…..”
• 5 (bottom left column)
a)
i.
ii.
iii.
iv.
v.
Expansionary Monetary Policy
FOMC buys securities
Increase MS
Decrease FFR…….which leads to
Increase banks lending and borrowing….leads to..
Increase willingness of banks to let you borrow at
lower rates ….which leads to
vi. Decrease in other interest rates throughout the
economy
vii. Increase in MS
viii. Increase Consumption, Investment…AD and LRAS
• 6. Discount Rate
• Banks borrow directly from Fed
• Least powerful of 3 tools – but a change in DR
does signal a change and can create a desired
reaction
• Lower DR……..
• Lower other IR….increase MS
`
7. Reserve Requirement
- Most powerful ; least used
- Expansionary = lower RR