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The Role of Money and Credit

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Much of this is review from what we have been talking about. Fed Policy ... Reserves are assets held as either vault cash or in special accounts with the Fed ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Role of Money and Credit


1
Chapter 3
  • The Role of Money and Credit

2
Chapter 3 overview
  • Much of this is review from what we have been
    talking about
  • Fed Policy and the Economy
  • Money supply and its effects on the economy
  • Demand for money, supply of money
  • interest rates

3
Interest Rate
  • Interest rate
  • The cost to borrowers for obtaining money
  • The return on money for lending money
  • Note the relationship and be able to tie back to
    model of the financial system

4
Interest rates
  • Actually many different interest rates
  • Short-term, long-term, government debt, risky
    debt, etc.
  • For simplicity sake we often merely group them
    and say interest rate, but they do not
    necessarily move together as evidenced by Fed
    rate hikes last week that led to LT rates falling

5
Demand for Money
  • Distinction between demand and quantity demanded
  • Ceteris paribus, for any given demand curve,
    there is an inverse relationship between money
    demand and interest rates.
  • WHY?

6
Demand for money
  • As interest rates increase, there is a higher
    opportunity cost of holding cash. Thus, people
    do not desire as much cash so the quantity of
    demand drops.
  • Note again the difference between demand curves
    (here merely called demand) and quantity
    demanded.)

7
Demand for money
  • The actual demand (demand curve) for money is
    influenced by many things
  • spending plans
  • wealth
  • preferences
  • example as we spend more, or plan on spending
    more, we need more money

8
Demand for money
  • A change in demand is actually a new demand
    curve.
  • A change in the quantity of money demanded is a
    change along the same demand curve

9
Money Supply
  • More complicated than money demand
  • definition the stock of money in the hands of
    the public plus checkable deposits (hence M1)

10
Money Supply
  • To issue checkable deposits a depository
    institution must hold reserves
  • Reserves are assets held as either vault cash or
    in special accounts with the Fed
  • In effect these reserves are out-of
    circulation. Thus by raising the reserve
    requirements, the Fed can reduce the money supply.

11
Money Supply
  • As the supply of money is largely influenced by
    the reserve requirements, the supply of money is
    MUCH less influenced by interest rates than is
    the quantity demanded of money
  • See exhibits 3-2 and 3-3

12
Determination of interest rates
  • Where supply demand
  • Exhibit 3-3
  • if demand for funds is great then the equilibrium
    rate will rise. If demand drops, so too will
    interest rates.

13
Determination of interest rates
  • If money supply increases, the immediate SHORT
    TERM effect will be to have a lower interest
    rate.
  • However, be careful as the Ceteris Paribus
    assumption is probably incorrect here!

14
Interest rates and the Supply of Money
  • As Exhibit 3-7 shows, Money supply growth is
    associated with inflation. Thus we can not
    maintain our ceteris paribus assumption.
  • With inflation comes higher interest rates. So
    the expected immediate effect of an increase in
    interest rates is unclear. Often depends on the
    maturity of loan

15
Credit
  • Simplistic look at how credit influences the
    economy
  • This again is tied back to our original model of
    the financial system. Looking at the SSUs
    willingness (and ability) to lend money to DSUs.

16
Credit
  • To understand this it helps to consider a second
    definition of the money supply DNFD.
  • DNFD domestic non-financial debt
  • Like increases in other money supply measures,
    increases in credit will cause spending (and
    incomes) to go up.

17
All I want is some Credit!
  • Credit can greatly influence spending.
  • Example a mortgage, credit cards etc. In each
    case the presence of credit will lead to spending
    that would otherwise not be possible
  • Due to innovations and non-bank lending, the Fed
    is losing its ability to control credit
    availability

18
Money, credit, and the economy
  • Tying it all together
  • increases in either money or credit will lead to
    increased spending and economic growth.
  • Exhibit 3-6 shows how this is true with respect
    to real GDP

19
Money, credit, and inflation
  • Not only do money supply and credit increases
    lead to an improved economy, they also lead to
    inflation
  • Exhibit 3-7
  • Due to its tighter relationship with inflation,
    the Fed has been focusing more on DNFD than other
    supply measures
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