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Lecture 3 The Microfoundations of Money Part 2 • Dissatisfaction with ad hoc formulation and MIUF approach • OLG - a theory of monetary exchange under Laissez Faire • Critical evaluation of OLG - purely a store of value • Intergenerational contracts • Legal restrictions • Another look at MIUF and CIA Fiat money economy • • • • Must satisfy two conditions 1) Inconvertibility 2) Intrinsic uselessness According to Wallace if the 2 conditions are taken seriously, then for a monetary theory to develop there are 3 options Fiat Money Theory • 1. Abandon the conditions of inconvertibility and intrinsic uselessness • 2. Impose legal restrictions to give money value • 3. Model the notion that fiat money facilitates exchange Overlapping Generations Model (OLG) The Young have endowment of 1 unit of labour and consumption preference of c~t and ct*1 when old. The old has no endowment but have consumption of ct* Output is storable but depreciates at the rate , so 1 1 Let kt = the amount of output stored in period t mt = the quantity of real money held by the young at end period t y = f(n) = f(1) The young maximise u u( c~t , ct*1 ) The old have no endowments but receive a lump sum real value money transfer of vt, so that output can be purchased to the amount; Pt 1 Pt vt + mt-1 per capita consumption of the old at time t is; Pt 1 ct* = kt-1 + vt + mt-1 Pt The young chooses,c~t , ct*1 , kt, and mt that maximises; u u( c~t , ct*1 ) c~ k m y t t t t P ct*1 k t vt 1 mt t Pt 1 Let M t (1 ) M t 1 1 The interior solution for a monetary equilibrium occurs when kt = 0 A condition of equilibrium is < which demonstrates the ‘tenuousness of equilibrium’. An example ~ * U U (Ct , Ct 1 ) ~ M Ct yt Pt C * t 1 M ~ ( yt Ct ) Pt 1 1 1 Consumption of the existing old M ~ C ( yt 1 Ct 1 ) Pt * t Autarky-no trade (M=0) C*t+1 Y Y Ct Monetary equilibrium (M0 but no saving) ~ M Ct yt Pt Ct*1 M ~ y t Ct Pt 1 Pt ~ Ct*1 yt Ct Pt 1 P P ~ ~ Ct Ct*1 t 1 t 1 yt Ct yt Pt Pt ~ max Ct yt Ct*1 0 M Pt P ~ max Ct*1 yt t Ct 0 yt Pt 1 Monetary equilibrium (M0) C*t+1 Y(P/Pt+1) Y Y Ct • Notice that with no inflation Pt+1 = Pt and Y > γY • If inflation increases Pt+1 > Pt then the upper budget line swings down. • When Pt/Pt+1 = γ, the young are indifferent between storing their output and receiving money from the old. Critique • Ignores medium of exchange function • does not explain, why store of value function is not dominated by contracts • But Wallace says that medium of exchange occurs inter-generationally • McCallum says that an economy with a medium of exchange is more efficient than one without Store of Value • Any monetary model must face the following problems • 1. Possible dominance of money by contracts • 2. Segniorage • 3. Terminal value of money Money in the Indirect Utility Function (MIIUF) Utility function c = consumption, l = leisure u = u(ct, lt, ct+1, lt+1) lt = 1-nt-st nt = amount of labour time expended in work st = amount of labour time expended in search say st = (mt) ‘ < 0 this leads to the composite function u = u~ (ct, nt, mt, ct+1, nt+1,mt+1) which resembles the MIUF approach. Note that unlike the simple MIUF approach where, u as m 0 m In the indirect utility approach if m = 0, this simply implies that the holding costs of money are too high. Similarly it allows satiation to be reached with finite m if 0 . Giving money a framework such as this does not imply that money is ‘intrinsically useless’. Cash - in - Advance • The cash in advance constraint is intended as a formal representation of the transactions demand for money. Baumol (1952) for example makes the implicit assumption that money is required for transactions and add a cost of ‘going to the bank’. C-I-A continued Households are assumed to maximise a discounted expected utility function; E t 1 U(c t ) t 1 where 0 < < 1 subject to m m t 1 ct t b t b t 1 y t rt b t 1 Pt where {yt}, is an endowment of income, {Pt}is the price of goods in terms of money, {bt} is a vector of the real value of other assets, {rt}is the vector of returns paid on the other assets, {ct} is consumption at time t. The cash-in-advance constraint is m c t t 1 Pt C-I-A • One of the criticisms of this model is that it implies a demand for money that is insensitive to the rate of interest and also has a unit income elasticity of demand for money. Townsend’s Spatial Separation Model • There are an infinity of infinitely lived agents • In each period household ‘i’ has an endowment ‘m’ but because of spatial separation is physically able to contact only adjacent households {i-1} and {i+1}. • Tastes of household {I} are such that it desires goods from {i} and {i+1}. Turnpike Model • Household {i+1} desires goods from itself {i+1} and {i+2}. • Households cannot make bilateral IOU arrangements because there is nothing that household {i-1} can offer {i} and nothing that {i} can offer {i+1} • So barter is impossible Monetary existence Goods 0 M 1 2 Why is it that money and default-free interest bearing securities co-exist • Suppose government issues risk-free small denomination bearer bills. • If the bills co-existed with cash, would they sell at a discount or at par? • If sold at a discount, consider at a date close to maturity everyone would prefer bills to cash. • By repeated argument that means no one will ever hold cash. Co-existence • If bills co-exist then they must always sell at par - i.e. no interest. • But since we know that bills sell at a discount, co-existence occurs because: • bills are non-negotiable • large denominations • represents a legal restriction • The different yields on cash and bills is a LR Legal Restrictions Theory of Money • Prediction of legal restrictions theory: • non-interest bearing paper currency should not co-exist with risk-free small denomination interest-bearing securities in the absence of legal restrictions. Historical evidence • Makinen & Woodward - JPE (1986) provide evidence to show that small denomination French government issued bearer bonds in pre-revolution France, failed to circulate as a medium of exchange • White JMCB (1987) - free banking period 1716-1844 (Scotland) paper money circulated with interest-bearing promissory notes, redeemable on demand. Question? • Economists continue to ask the question: • A monetary economy clearly works ‘in practice’ • But does it work ‘in theory’ • The answers are not entirely satisfactory