Transcript Money

Functions and Definitions of
Money
Prof. Yoram Landskroner
Landskroner
Money
slide 1
1. Nature and Functions of Money
• Definition: generally acceptable as payment
for goods or services and discharge of debt.
• Today most common definition: currency
and coins held by the public + checkable
(transaction) accounts of the public (M1).
• US government decreed: currency and coins
are legal tender; checkable accounts are not
but banks are required to redeem them in
legal tender.
Landskroner
Money
slide 2
Functions of Money
Monetary economy Vs. a barter economy
• 1. Standard of value or unit of account – money
is a “numeraire” (common denominator) in
measuring value in exchange
  simplifies exchange: in a barter economy
each good (service) will have an exchange rate
(price) in terms of each of the other goods
  large number of “prices”
Landskroner
Money
slide 3
Consider an economy with N goods how many
prices will we have in a barter economy?
N  N  1
NB 
2
How many prices will be in a monetary economy?
Example
Landskroner
Money
slide 4
 Money
as common denominator greatly
simplifies exchange, reduces information and
transaction costs
• 2. Medium of exchange- means for conducting
transactions. Allows for the separation of
transactions: purchases from sales.
 In a barter economy requirement of “double
coincidence of wants “  high cost of search
 Money increases efficiency in the economy:
reduces cost of exchange (time and resources).
Landskroner
Money
slide 5
• 3. Store of value- related to medium of exchange
function. Allows for separation over time between
flow of income and flow of consumption.
 Money is not unique; other financial assets can
serve as store of value. Money however is the
most liquid: ease (cost) with which an asset can
be converted into a medium of exchange.
 What happens in periods of substantial inflation
to the value of money and its functions?
• Value of money inverse of price level
Landskroner
Money
slide 6
2. Types of Money
Evolution of money (payment system):
commodity money,
credit-fiat money and
electronic money.
1)Commodity Money
• earliest form of money
•Definition: commodity with intrinsic or nonmonetary value close to value in exchange
(monetary) valueeffective floor to the value of
money, enhances its acceptability.
Landskroner
Money
slide 7
•Required properties of commodity money:
scarcity and stability of supply
 durability
 divisibility
•Metallic money fulfilled these requirements: iron
and copper; silver; gold.
Landskroner
Money
slide 8
Special case of commodity money :
•The Gold Standard- full bodied money:
monetary value = non-monetary value
to maintain the system the government must:
(1)fix the value of gold in terms of the monetary
unit ($).
(2) be willing to buy all gold at that price.
(3) legalize melting down of gold coins.
•figure
Landskroner
Money
slide 9
•Characteristics of the gold standard:
 government has no control over the money
supply
 production of money is expensive
•Representative Full Bodied Money
With
economic development coins were
supplemented with fully backed paper money.
The system functioned exactly as a pure
commodity money system.
In the US 1900-1933, later partial backing only,
gold standard abolished in 1968.
Landskroner
Money
slide 10
2)Credit, Fiat Money
•Not convertible into comparable value as commodity
•Value based on faith in government: value in terms of
purchasing power stability.
•Definition: money that has a value in exchange
greater than its value as a commodity.
Landskroner
Money
slide 11
Two types:
•paper currency and coins issued by the
government and decreed as legal tender
•banking money, IOU payable on demand in
the form of checks. (See later: deposit/ money
creation)
 Reduces cost of transactions
(transportation)
Landskroner
Money
slide 12
(3) Electronic Money (Paperless)
•Paper money (checks) shuffling is costly and takes
time to clear.
•Development of computer and information
technology enabled new stage in money:
• e- money- money stored electronically,
Several forms:
debit cards- electronic transfer of funds from
bank account to merchant’s account
Landskroner
Money
slide 13
Stored-value cards- (electronic wallet), contain
fixed amount of funds, the smart card can be
reloaded. Modex smart card transfer of funds
with wireless device also between individuals.
Used in Europe less (trials) in the USA
Electronic cash- funds used on the Internet to
purchase goods and services.
Electronic Checks used to pay bills on the
internet, equivalent of check is sent .
Landskroner
Money
slide 14
•Advantages of e-money: cost saving, more efficient
•Disadvantages:
Large initial investment in system
paper checks provide receipts
paper checks give the benefit of the “float”
security and privacy concerns of e-money
•Slow rate of adoption
Landskroner
Money
slide 15
3. Measures of Money
•Need precise definition of what assets to be
included: theoretical and empirical approaches.
•Theoretical approach: focus on medium of
exchange aspect, not clear-cut.
•Empirical approach: objective in defining money
(supply) is to control that variable that can be used to
stabilize/affect economic activity- monetary
aggregate, which can be managed by the government
and is closely correlated with economic activity,
findings are mixed.
Landskroner
Money
slide 16
A number of measures are used by the Federal
Reserve, from narrow to broad definition in
decreasing order of liquidity:
M1= currency + demand deposits and other
checkable deposits
M2= M1+ small time deposits + savings and
money market deposits + money market mutual
funds (non-institutional)
M3= M2 + large TD, MMMF (institutional)
+repurchase agreements+Eurodollars
L = M3+ highly liquid assets (securities)
Landskroner
Money
slide 17
Measures of Monetary Aggregates
Value as of May 2004 ($billions)
•M1=Currency
671.7
7.8
315.8
323.8
1319.1
+Traveler’s checks
+Demand deposits
+Other checkable deposits
•Total M1
•M2=M1
+Small denomination time deposits
798.8
+Saving deposits and MMDA
3406.4
+ Retail Money Market Mutual Funds
742.5
•Non M1 M2
4949.7
•M3=M2
+Large denomination Time deposits
986.8
+ Institutional Money Market Mutual Funds
1119.1
+Term repurchase agreements
517.8
+Term Eurodollars
299.8
•Non M2 M3
2923.5
• Source: Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, Statistical Release
H.6, Tables 4-6.
Landskroner
Money
slide 18