Transcript Money
Money
What is money?
Anything people will accept in place of the goods
and services they seek to obtain.
Money is a stock of assets that can be readily
used to make transactions.
Examples from history: salt in Egypt; rice in Japan;
dried fish in Iceland; cigarettes in Romania in the
1970s; liquor in Germany after World War II; rocks
such as gold and silver.
Fiat money—paper currency from government.
Commodity money—gold and other things of value
In the U.S.
M1 = Currency (cash) + Demand Deposits (checking accounts)
+ other checkable deposits
M2 = M1 + savings accounts, time deposits, money market
mutual funds
How much money?
M1 = $2.4 trillion 11/12
M2 = $10.3 trillion 11/12
Roles of Money
Account keeping
The way we keep track of prices and values
Store of Value
Transfer purchasing power through time
Medium of Exchange
Use money to buy things—better than barter.
If people do not trust official money, they use
other things when possible
Money Creation
Governments create money
Role of central banks (Federal Reserve in U.S.)
Independence from politics important? Ask
the central bank of Argentina (and the U.S.?)
Many views on how the banks should
manage money creation — fixed rules versus
flexibility — most use flexibility
Inflation
What is inflation? It is a general rise in prices.
Not all prices rise the same percent, but in
general prices are rising.
Usually it is caused by more money in the
hands of people who are trying to buy the
same quantity of goods in an economy.
Inflation Is Not an
Increase in One Price
If the price of one good rises, it does not cause
inflation. It is a change in relative prices.
People have no more money to spend than
before, they change spending mix.
Example: Price of gasoline up in U.S. 2007: 4.6%
of personal expenditures on gas; in 1997: 2.6%
Where does the extra money spent on gas (2% of
personal income) come from? Less spending on
other goods, especially nice things.
MV = PT
The quantity theory of money is:
MV = PT
M = money in circulation
V = velocity (# of times money spent per year)
P = average price level
T = number of transactions
Note: this (MV or PT) is national income.
Suppose Price of Gas Rises Because Price of
Oil Has Gone Up (Globally)
MV = PT
Assume M and V constant.
P of gasoline rises; assume T constant
If quantity demanded of gasoline constant (T not
changing), since more spent on gas due to higher oil
prices, other transactions must fall. People cut back
on spending on nice things. It hurts, but is not
inflation.
M1 jumped 40% in three years
So why no inflation? Velocity (and
economy) falling. Called deleveraging—
people borrow less, government more
M1 velocity down from about 10 to 6.7
M2 money up 25% in three years
M2 velocity also falling in the recession
People (and banks) holding on to money
Monetary base (currency plus bank reserves
held by Federal Reserve) up 300% in 4 years.
Banks not lending, people not borrowing.
Monetary Base (currency plus reserves) have
exploded. No inflation (yet) as bank reserves
way up. What will happen of money comes out?
Excess reserves in banks—amount greater
than required to hold—up from zero to $1.6T
Federal reserve books show $2 Trillion
new assets & liabilities
So What Causes Inflation?
In general, inflation is caused by more money
(M) chasing the same quantity of goods.
If M rises and V constant then PT must rise to
balance equation.
People have more money so willing to make
more transactions (T rises). That means more
demand for same level of goods in existence,
so prices (P) bid higher.
Origins of Inflation
1.
2.
So why do we get inflation?
The government creates more money.
Why? Not stupidity. It is deficit spending.
Print money.
Borrow money from Central Bank or from
citizens or from foreigners.
[Ex.: If U.S. government budget is $3.8 trillion and
revenue is $2.4 trillion—need to get $1.4 trillion
more money for the government to spend.]
Deficit Spending
1. Government (Treasury) sells bonds to get cash—
sell to foreigners (China and Japan especially)—or
to U.S. citizens (thereby “crowding out” private
sector borrowing (investment), which hurts growth).
2. If cannot sell enough bonds to the public—Treasury
sells bonds to Federal Reserve which gives the
Treasury new money—cash (via checking accounts)
that is injected into the economy by the
government—more cash can pushes prices up
(sooner or later).
Why Do We Care About Inflation?
Destructive Effects
When inflation rising (and is expected to
continue to rise):
▲ spending and borrowing
▼ savings and investment
▲ incentive to inflate currency even more,
depending on political forces
Real vs. Nominal
Interest Rate
Suppose inflation averages 10% per year (the
value of the currency falls by 10% each year).
If interest rate paid is 12%, that is the nominal
interest rate.
What is real (after inflation) interest rate?
12% – 10% = 2%
Long run real interest rate near 2% but negative
today—savings are punished.
Inflation Hurts People,
Business, and Society
Businesses have a difficult time planning for
future — which means less investment.
How do you time payments?
Do you accept currency?
There are winners and losers in every
transaction just due to changes in the value of
the currency — up or down.
Real World Example
Assume a person in the U.S. invested $10,000 in
1971 for their retirement in 1991 when the
investment is worth $35,000 — a normal rate of
return.
What is the gain? Due to inflation, $10,000 in 1971 =
$34,000 in 1991. So gain is only $1,000. But the
entire “gain” of $25,000 is subject to taxes of about
$7,000, leaving $28,000 in 1991 — less than the
original investment in real spending power.
So if people think there will be inflation—what
actions do they rationally take?
Rational Decision Makers
People try to avoid losses imposed by inflation:
● invest in hard assets
● invest in other countries
● avoid currency of own country
Due to international flows of currency, inflation is
punished in the market. Local people with few
options suffer the most. Political instability more
likely if currency unstable.