Title: Chapter 6 Determining Interest Rates
1Chapter 6Determining Interest Rates
2Abstractions
- Economists abstract from inessentials to focus on
key aspects - In reality, there are a great many interest rates
- Key abstraction a single interest rate i
- i should be thought of as the average level of
nominal interest rates - Given only one interest rate, there can be only
one type of bond
3Market for Loanable Funds
- This bond is traded in a competitive market
- Savers in this market are said to supply loanable
funds - Borrowers in this market are said to demand
loanable funds - And the bond market itself is said to be the
market for loanable funds
4Supply of Loanable Funds
- Savers make choices about how much wealth to hold
as bonds - The most important determinant of this choice is
the expected rate of return on bonds i.e. the
interest rate i - The higher i is, the more bonds they wish to hold
and thus the more loanable funds they supply
5Result Upward SlopingSupply for Loanable Funds
i
S
i2
i1
l
l1
l2
6Demand for Loanable Funds
- Borrowers make choices about how much capital to
have and how to finance it - The most important determinant of this choice is
the expected rate of return on bonds i.e. the
interest rate i - The higher i is, the less capital they wish to
hold, the fewer bonds they wish to issue, and the
less loanable funds they demand
7Result Downward SlopingDemand for Loanable Funds
i
i3
i4
D
l
l3
l4
8Conditions for Equilibrium
- Savers are supplying as much loanable funds as
they wish - Borrowers are demanding as much loanable funds as
they wish - The interest rate is at the level that equates
the amount of loanable funds supplied to the
amount demanded, thereby making savers and
borrowers choices consistent with each other
9Equilibrium
i
S
i
D
l
l
10Why Equilibrium?
i
i
S
S
i?
i
i
i?
D
D
l
l
l?
l
l?
l
l??
l??
11Explaining Interest-Rate Changes
- The model is useful largely because it tells how
the rest of the economy affects the average level
of the nominal interest rate - It lets us distinguish influences operating
through supply from those operating through demand
12Influences on Supply
- Wealth As savers become wealthier, more bonds
are held S shifts outward - Expected return on other assets The higher
expected returns are elsewhere, the fewer bonds
are held S shifts inward - Risk The riskier bonds are, the fewer are held
S shifts inward
13More Influences on Supply
- Liquidity The more liquid bonds are, the more
are held S shifts outward - Information costs The greater are the bonds
information costs, the fewer are held S shifts
inward - Expected inflation rate To keep the real
interest rate received constant, the nominal
interest rate must rise one-for-one with the
expected inflation rate S shifts upward
one-for-one
14Summary for Supply
i
i
S
S
S
Exp Ret Elsewhere up
Risk, Info Cost up
X
Wealth, Liquidity up
Exp Inf up x
l
l
15Influences on Demand
- Expected pretax profitability of capital The
higher it is, the more capital businesses wish to
have and the more bonds they issue D shifts
outward - Business taxation The lower it is, the more
capital businesses wish to have and the more
bonds they issue D shifts outward - Expected inflation rate To keep the real
interest rate paid constant, the nominal interest
rate must increase one-for-one with the expected
inflation rate D shifts upward one-for-one
16Summary for Demand
i
i
Exp Inf up x
Exp Pretax Prof of K up
Bus Tax down
X
D
D
D
l
l
171. Effects on i of Changes
- Wealth or liquidity rises or expected return on
other assets falls - S shifts outward
- D doesnt shift
- i decreases, l increases
i
S0
S1
D
l
182. Effects on i of Changes
- Expected pretax profitability increases or
business taxation decreases - S doesnt shift
- D shifts outward
- i increases, l increases
i
S
D1
D0
b
193. Effects of Changes on i
- Expected inflation rate increases by 5
- S shifts upward 5
- D shifts upward 5
- i increases 5
- r and l constant
i
i1 i0 5
S1
i1
S0
D1
i0
D0
l
l0
20Application Effect of Recession
- D shifts inward and downward because
- Expected profitability of K falls
- Expected inflation falls
- S shifts outward and downward because
- Expected inflation falls
- Flight to quality
- Result i falls
i
i1 i0 5
Sboom
iboom
Srecess
Dboom
irecess
Drecess
l
21International Capital Markets
- In internationally open capital markets
- Borrowers are free to borrow wherever they wish.
- savers are free to lend wherever they wish.
- Interest rates are equated across nations.
22Two-Country Model
- We can obtain some additional insight from the
case in which the world consists of only two
countries A and B - A and B have financial markets of comparable size
- We compare two situations
- Their financial markets are completely isolated
from each other - Capital flows completely freely between them
23i
i
B
A
S
iA
D
S
v
u
y
z
i
x
w
D
iB
lA
lB
l
l
- With isolated financial markets, interest rates
are iA and iB, lending and borrowing in A are lA,
and lending and borrowing in B are lB - With freely flowing capital, the interest rate is
at the level i in both countries so that world
lending world borrowing i.e., uw xz (See
the next slide)
24i
i
B
A
S
iA
D
S
v
u
y
z
i
x
w
D
iB
lA
lB
l
l
- quantity demanded quantity supplied
- (lA vw) (lB xy) (lA uv) (lB yz)
- vw xy uv yz
- uv vw xy yz
- uw xz
25i
i
B
A
S
iA
D
S
v
u
y
z
i
x
w
D
iB
lA
lB
l
l
- savers in B lend yz more and are better off
- Borrowers in B borrow xy less and are worse off
- Borrowers in A borrow vw more and are better off
- Savers in A lend uv less and are worse off
- Lending of xz ( uw) flows from B to A
- Gainers gain more than losers lose national
income is higher.
26Effects Demand Shift in One Country
i
i
A
B
S
D
u'w' x'y'
i1
S
u'
w'
x'
z'
i0
u
w
x
z
uw xz
D0
D1
l
l
- Effects on i are reduced
- Example above D shifts outward in A
- Effects smaller because B savers supply more
loanable funds and B borrowers demand less.
27An Almost Small Country
Almost Small Country
Rest of World
i
- The smaller a country is relative to the world,
the less its interest rate is affected by its own
conditions. - In the limit of a small country, its interest
rate is independent of its own conditions.
281. Small-Country Model
- The interest rate i is given by conditions in
the rest of the world, independent of conditions
in the small country. - Real world examples Canada, Belgium, etc.
i
S
i
D
l
292. Small-Country Model
- Shifts in D (yellow) or S (purple) do not affect
i ( i). Instead, they affect how much capital
flows out of (or into) the country.
i
S
i
D
S
D
l