Money - Aufinance
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Transcript Money - Aufinance
Chapter 2
Money: Its Nature,
Functions, And Evolution
©Thomson/South-Western 2006
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The Nature And Functions Of
Money
Money is anything that is generally acceptable as payment
for goods and services or for the settlement of debt.
not a legal definition of money- a behavioral one.
Money is anything that we believe others will accept as
payment.
Acceptance is contingent on confidence that it will retain its
value or purchasing power.
Confidence in money’s value relies on it being sufficiently
scarce that its value does not diminish over time.
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Historical Money
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What Economists Include in the
Definition of Money
all currency (coins and paper bills) held by the public
demand deposits and other checking deposits in:
commercial banks,
savings and loan associations,
mutual savings banks, and
credit unions
Practically all U.S. payments are made by the
exchange of currency or by the transfer of deposit
balances via checks or electronic (wire) transfer.
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Why Credit Cards Are Not
Money
Credit cards are essentially a method of postponing
payment for a few days or months.
The cards themselves do not constitute money.
Actual money payment is merely deferred until later.
Credit cards do not influence the supply of money,
but do reduce the demand for money.
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Legal Tender
Legal tender:
cannot lawfully be refused in payment for goods and
services and for discharge of debts.
No merchant or creditor can demand payment in another
form.
Currency and coin are legal tender.
Checking accounts are not legal tender.
Many items have served as money without having
legal tender status.
Legal tender is a sufficient, but not a necessary,
condition for a substance to be considered money.
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Distinctions Among Money,
Wealth, and Income
Though money, income and wealth are all measured
in “dollars;” they differ significantly in their meaning.
People have money if they have large amounts of
currency or big bank accounts at a point in time. (stock
variable)
Someone earns income (not money) from work or
investments over a period of time. (flow variable)
People have wealth if they have assets that can be
converted into more currency than is necessary to pay
their debts at a point in time. (stock variable)
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Functions of Money
Money serves as a
medium of exchange or means of payment
standard of value or unit of account
store of value
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Barter Economy
In a money economy, people use money to sell their
goods or services for money and buy what they
want with money.
A barter economy is one in which goods and
services are traded directly for one another.
In barter systems, people must find producers of what they
want who also want what they have to trade.
This double coincidence of wants is socially inefficient,
and the introduction of money eliminates this problem.
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Money Creates Efficient
Exchange
Just as the division of labor and specialization
allow for efficient production, money allows for
efficient exchange.
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Standard of Value or Unit of
Account
Money serves as a measuring rod or yardstick to assess the
relative value of various goods and services.
Without money, each item brought to market would bear a
certain value relative to each of the other items--e.g. good A,
B, C, and D.
With money, each good has one price (in dollars).
Without money,we must establish the:
A price of B, A price of C, A price of D;
B price of C, B price of D;
C price of D, and
(the reciprocal of the X price of Y is the Y price of X)
In an N good society there are:
N prices when money works.
N(N-1)/2 prices when barter predominates.
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Store of Value
Money acts as a temporary storage of purchasing power.
In a barter economy, the purchase of any item implies a
simultaneous sale of another item.
In a money economy, people can sell something (e.g. their
labor) without buying something simultaneously.
Money is not the only store of value.
Money is not a perfect store of value.
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Liquidity
We store purchasing power as money rather
than as something else because converting it
back into money can be costly.
An asset is liquid if it can be easily converted
into money and illiquid if it is costly to convert.
Cash is perfectly liquid.
Stocks and bonds are somewhat less liquid.
Land is illiquid.
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Inseparability of the Store-of-Value
and Medium-of-Exchange Functions
During hyperinflation, individuals and firms
frantically attempt to rid themselves of money
because its value was deteriorating rapidly—
that is, money failed as a store-of-value.
Merchants may refuse to accept payment in
money, insisting instead on payment in goods
and services—this reflects money’s failure as
a medium-of-exchange.
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Full-bodied or Commodity Money
Early monies were full-bodied, or commodity money.
Commodity money’s value is approximately the same
whether it is used as money or as a commodity.
This equality of value was assured by forces of supply and
demand.
If coins are worth more for their metal than for their
exchange value, then they will be melted down or milled
off.
If metal is worth more as coins than it is as a commodity,
then it will be turned into coins unless regulation prevents
such minting.
The forces of supply and demand ensure that the value of
the coin will not deviate markedly from its value as a
commodity.
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Representative Full-Bodied
Money
During the industrial revolution, the exclusive
use of coins as medium of exchange became
increasingly inconvenient.
Coins were supplemented with paper
currency that was backed by the valuable
metals.
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Fiat or Credit Money
Does money need to be backed by a commodity at
all?
The logical answer to this question is no.
If the monetary system is stable and functions effectively,
“backing” is expensive, inconvenient, and unnecessary.
Today, money is only backed by confidence that
government will responsibly limit the quantity of money to
ensure that money in circulation will hold its value.
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Advantages and Disadvantages
of Fiat Money
Advantages
Fewer resources are used to produce money.
The quantity of money in circulation can be determined by
rational human judgment rather than by discovering
further mineral deposits—like gold or diamonds.
Disadvantage:
A corrupt or pressured government might issue excessive
amounts of money, thereby unleashing severe inflation.
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Checking Accounts
Checking accounts first became popular after the Civil War
because the Federal government placed a 10 percent tax on
banknotes issued by state-chartered banks.
Advantages:
People are not forced to carry around large amounts of paper
currency.
You can pay bills without worrying about the cash being stolen in
transit.
Accounts are insured up to $100,000.
Checks provide records for accounting and tax purposes.
Disadvantages
Check clearing costs $5 billion per year.
Checks must “clear”—introducing “float” costs. Float costs are in the
process of being eliminated by more rapid check clearing.
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Electronic Money
Electronic money systems can increase payments
system efficiency.
Innovations in data processing, information retrieval,
and communications systems make electronic
money systems possible.
Advantages
Reduced cost of processing checks
Reduced costs from billing credit cards
Employers can reduce their payroll costs by paying with
direct deposit.
People can reduce their costs by paying bills electronically
(either automatically or manually online.)
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Electronic Money and Financial
Institutions
Electronic Money and Financial Institutions
Fedwire and Swift are electronic money
transfers that have been around for 30 years.
These transfers account for:
1% of the number of transfers.
85% of the dollar volume of transactions.
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Newer Electronic Money
Debit cards
Stored-value cards
Electronic checks
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Factors Slowing the Transition to
Electronic Money
High fixed technology costs
Checks provide physical receipts and transaction
records.
People often use the “float,” though such
advantages to payers are quickly disappearing
because of rapid (electronic) check clearing.
Legal and security concerns regarding theft and loss
of privacy
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Measures of Money Supply
Money supply influences output, income, and prices.
Accurate measures of money supply must be
tabulated and published regularly.
Industrial nations employ fairly standard measures
of money.
The U.S. Federal Reserve currently publishes data
on several “monetary aggregates” (M1, M2, and
M3).
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M1, M2 and M3
M1 = Currency + Demand Deposits + Other Checkable Accounts +
Travelers’ Checks (these are small and will be ignored later)
M2 = M1 + Savings Accounts + Money Market Deposit Accounts +
Money Market Mutual Fund Shares (held by individuals) + Small
(<$100K) Time Deposits
M3 = M2 + Large (>$100K) Time Deposits + Repurchase Agreements +
Money Market Mutual Fund Shares (held by institutions)
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Deciding What is in Each
Aggregate
M1 includes highly liquid accounts that are
typically used primarily as a medium of
exchange rather than primarily as a store of
value.
M2 includes M1 and accounts (MMDA,
MMMFs and small CDs) that are highly liquid.
M3 includes M2 and all other forms of
deposits.
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Which Measure Is Most Useful?
Arguments for narrower measures
The measure of money should be based on the economic
principles of liquidity and primary use.
The choice of money to monitor should remain constant.
Arguments for broader measures
The purpose of measuring money is to monitor and control
its magnitude in order to stabilize economic activity.
Which measure is best is an empirical question.
The measures do not move together--and often move
in different directions.
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Divisia Aggregates : Weighted
Measures of Money
M1, M2, and M3 give equal weight to each of
the items they include.
A divisia aggregate is a weighted aggregate
such as:
M = DDO + Cp + .50 (MMMF) + .25 (SD + TD)
Economists are researching the best “weights.”
No generally accepted set of weights so the
Federal Reserve equally weights all
components.
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