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Module 22 Financial Sector Saving, Investment, and the Financial System • Objectives: • The relationship between savings and investment spending. • The purpose of the five principal types of financial assets: • • • • • Stocks Bonds Loans Real Estate Bank Deposits • How Financial intermediaries help investors achieve diversification. Key Concepts: • The savings investment identity tells us that, in a simple economy without government or foreign trade, private dollars saved must equal private dollars invested. • When the government is included, we discover that the government can also contribute to national savings if there is a budget surplus • The government can detract from national savings if there is a budget deficit. • Money can also flow into the U. S. from foreign citizens and money can flow from the U.S. into foreign economies. • This inflow or outflow affects domestic saving and investment. • If Americans save more in other nations than foreign citizens save in the U.S., there exists a negative capital inflow of money into the U.S. Key Concepts: • The financial system facilitates transactions between savers and investors and provides three key roles in the process: • Reducing transaction costs (expenses of actually putting together and executing a deal) • Reducing risk (Uncertainty about future outcomes that involve financial losses or gains) • Increasing Liquidity Matching Up Savings and Investment Spending • When a firm invests in physical capital (factories, shopping malls, large pieces of machinery, etc.), the firm usually pays for these big projects by borrowing. • Those funds have to come from somewhere. The Savings-Investment spending Identity • Savings = Investment • Remember: the very simple circular flow diagram: • All money spent by consumers and firms end up in another person’s pocket as income (including profit) • Simple Economy – No Government, No Trade (0 imports and exports) • Total Income = Consumption (C) + Investment (I) • People can either spend (consume) or save (S) income • Total Spending = C + I What if the economy isn’t so simple? • Add the government (public sector) to the private sector. • The government spends on goods and services (G) and pays transfers to some. • The government collects tax revenue = results in government spending + Transfer payments. The Financial Sector • Financial markets are where households invest their current savings and their accumulated savings, or wealth, by purchasing financial assets. • A financial asset is a paper claim that entitles the buyer to future income from the seller. The Role the Financial System Plays in exchanging the assets from the seller to the buyer. • Three Tasks of a Financial System • Reducing Transaction Costs • Reducing Risk • Providing Liquidity (The ease by which an asset can be converted to cash) Diversification: Investing in several assets with unrelated or independent risks – allows a business owner to lower his/her total risk of loss The desire of individuals to reduce their total risk by engaging in diversification is why we have stocks and a stock market. Types of Financial Assets • Loans: • A loan is a lending agreement between an individual lender and an individual borrower. • Bonds: • The seller of a bond promises to pay a fixed sum of interest each year and to repay the principal – the value stated on the face of the bond – to the owner of the bond on a particular date. • Loan-Backed Securities: • Loan-backed securities are assets created by pooling individual loans and selling shares in that pool (a process called securitization) Types of Financial Assets • Stocks: • A stock is a share in the ownership of a company. • Financial Intermediaries • An institution that transforms funds gathered from many individuals into financial assets. • The most important types of financial intermediaries are • Mutual Funds • Pension Funds • Life Insurance Companies • Banks. Financial Intermediaries • Mutual Funds: • A mutual fund is a financial intermediary that creates a stock portfolio by buying and holding shares in companies and then selling shares of the stock portfolio to individual investors. • Pension Funds and Life Insurance Companies: • Pension funds are nonprofit institutions that collect the savings of their members and invest those funds in a wide variety of assets, providing their members with income when they retire. • Life insurance companies sell policies which guarantee a payment the policyholder’s beneficiaries (typically the family) when the policy holder dies. • A bank is a financial intermediary that provides liquid financial assets in the form of deposits to lenders and uses their funds to finance the illiquid investment spending needs of borrowers