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Macroeconomics Econ 2301 Dr. Jacobson Coach Stuckey Today Begin Chapter 14 Chapter 14 Money, Banking, and The Federal Reserve System Money Facilitates Transactions Without It People Would Probably Use The Barter System. Barter The Exchange of One Good Or Service For Another. Trade Depends Upon a Double Coincidence of Wants. Coincidence of Wants The Unlikely Occurrence That Two People Have a Good or Service That The Other Wants. Problem With The Barter System Is People Have To Arrive At A Value For Goods or Services and They Don’t Always Come Out To A Even Number. i.e. A Pig Might Be Worth 3 or 3½ Chickens. The Meaning of Money Some Definitions Money Is The Set Of Assets In The Economy That People Regularly Use To Buy Goods and Services From Other People. Another Definition For Money: The Means of Payment or Medium of Exchange Medium of Exchange An Item That Buyers Give To Sellers When They Want To Purchase Goods and Services. When Everyone Trusts and Accepts Money As Payment For Goods, Services, And Debt; Trade Is Facilitated. Unit of Account The Yardstick People Use To Post Prices and Record Debts. The Unit By Which We Measure The Value of Things. Store of Value An Item That People Can Use To Transfer Purchasing Power From The Present To The Future. It Allows The Value to Be Held Over Time. In Comparison To Stocks, Real Estate Or Gold; Money Is Relatively Risk Free. Money Allows Easy and Quick Transactions, Unambiguous Determination of Price, Plus Easy Storage of Value Over Time. The Benefits of Money Are Not Free. If Wealth Is Held In Interest-Paying Assets Rather Than Money, It Would Yield A Higher Interest Rate. Liquidity The Ease With Which An Asset Can Be Converted Into The Economy’s Medium of Exchange. Kinds of Money Commodity Money Money That Takes The Form Of a Commodity With Intrinsic Value. Intrinsic Value Means That The Item Would Have Value Even If It Were Not Used As Money. (Cattle, Beads) Intrinsic Value of Money The Commodity Value Of a Piece Of Money (e.g. The Market Value of Copper in a Copper Coin). Legal Tender Money That By Law Must Be Accepted As Payment For Debts. All U.S. Coins and Currency Are Legal Tender, But Checks Are Not. Gold Standard When An Economy Uses Gold As Money (Or Uses Paper Money That Is Convertible Into Gold On Demand), It Is Said To Be Operating Under The Gold Standard. The Gold Standard Was Used From 1717 Until 1933. Each Country During That Time Fixed Its Currency In Terms Of A Fixed Amount Of Gold. Therefore All Countries (On The Gold Standard) Had A Fixed Exchange Rate Between Their Currencies. In 1944 Nations Gathered At Bretton Woods, NH To Form The Bretton Woods Agreement. It Pegged The Currency of Nations To The U.S. Dollar and Gold. In 1971, President Nixon Severed The Link Between Gold and The U.S. Dollar Thus Ending The Bretton Woods Agreement. The U.S. Had Pegged The Currency At $35 an Ounce. Money Without Intrinsic Value is Called Fiat Money Fiat Money Is Money Without Intrinsic Value That Is Used As Money Because of Government Decree. Money In The U.S. Economy; The Quantity of Money Circulating In The Economy Is Called The Money Stock. We Have Seen Where The Federal Reserve Recently Increased The Amount of Currency By $100 Billion So The Total Figure Now Stands At Approximately $800 Billion. Currency The Paper Bills and Coins In The Hands of The Public. Demand Deposits Balances In Bank Accounts That Depositors Can Access On Demand By Writing a Check. Two Measures of The Money Stock For The United States Economy M1 and M2. M1 Money (2004) $1,363 Billion Demand Deposits Traveler’s Checks Other Checkable Deposits ($664 Billion) Currency ($699 Billion) M2 Money (2004) $5,035 Billion Savings Deposits Small time Deposits Money Market and Mutual Funds A Few Minor Categories M1 and M2 (2004) $6,398 Billion Important Note: Credit Cards Are Not Considered Either M1 or M2 Money. They Really Defer Payment On a Debt. Much Of The U.S. Currency Is Either Held By Foreigners or By People Dealing in Illegal Trade (Drugs, etc.) Federal Reserve System We Have Talked A Lot About The Actions of The Federal Reserve Board Now Let Us Examine Just Who They Are and What They Do. Federal Reserve (Fed) The Central Bank of The United States. Central Bank An Institution Designated To Oversee the Banking System and Regulate The Quantity Of Money In The United States Economy. Money Supply The Quantity of Money Available In The Economy. Monetary Policy The Setting of The Money Supply By Policymakers In The Central Bank. Federal Reserve Board Made Up of Federal Reserve Board 7 Members- 14 Year Terms Appointed By President Confirmed By Senate. Chairman- 4 Year Term, Appointed by President. Federal Reserve System Federal Reserve Board of Governors- 7 Members 12 Regional BanksPresidents Are Chosen By The Board of Directors of Each Bank. The Fed Has Two Jobs: 1. To Regulate Banks and Ensure The Health of The Banking System. 2. Control the Quantity of Money That is Made Available in The Economy. Monetary Policy is Made By the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) 7 Members of The Board of Governors. 12 Presidents of Each of the 12 Regional Banks (Only 5 Vote, NY and Rotating 4, However, All 12 Attend). Meets About Every 6 Weeks. In Washington, D.C. To Discuss The Condition of The Economy and Consider Changes In Monetary Policy. The Federal Reserve System Consists of 12 Regional Banks New York Richmond Cleveland San Francisco Dallas St. Louis Chicago Philadelphia Atlanta Boston Minneapolis Kansas City Note: There is Only One Bank in The West That Services Washington, Oregon, Idaho, Utah, Nevada, Arizona and California (Located in San Francisco). The Primary Tool of The FED is The Purchase and Sale of Government Bonds If The FED Decides To Increase The Money Supply, The FED Creates Dollars and Uses Them To Buy Government Bonds From The Public In The Nation’s Bond Market. After The Purchase These Dollars Are In The Hands of The Public. Thus Increasing The Money Supply. Likewise, If The FED Decides To Decrease The Money Supply, The FED Sells Government Bonds From Its Portfolio To The Public In The Nation’s Bond Markets. After The Sale, The Dollars It Receives For The Bonds Are Out Of The Hands Of The Public. Remember: When The Government Prints Too Much Money Prices Rise. Now Let Us Look At Banks and The Money Supply. Recall That Banks Take Individual’s Deposits (Demand Deposits) Either For Checking Accounts or Savings. First Let Us Assume That Banks Take in Deposits But Never Loan Any Out. For Safety Sake, They Keep The Money, In the Vault, In Case People Come in and Want Their Money (Demand Deposits). These Funds The Bank Keeps In Case The Depositors Want Them Are Called Reserves. Reserves Deposits That Banks Have Received But Have Not Loaned Out. In This Instance Where Banks Are Not Loaning Any Money Out, We Say They Have 100% Reserve Banking. Looking At This As An Accountant We Would Have: Bank Assets Reserves $ 100.00 Liabilities Deposits $100.00 Because The Banks Are Holding All (100%) of The Money In Their Vault, They Have No Influence on The Money Supply (The Total Money Available In the System). We Know That Banks Must Loan Out Money At A Higher Interest, Then They Are Paying to Depositors, To Stay In Business. Yet, They Must Maintain Some Reserve For People Who Want Their Money, So Lets Look At What Actually Happens. The Banks Need To Keep Only a Fractional Amount of The Total Amount On Reserve And This Fractional-Reserve Or Reserve Ratio is Set By The FED. Fractional-Reserve Banking A Banking System In Which Banks Hold Only A Fraction Of Deposits As Reserves. Reserve Ratio The Fraction of Deposits That Banks Hold As Reserves. Reserve Requirement The Minimum Amount of Reserves, Set By The Federal Reserve, That A Bank Must Hold. Excess Reserves An Amount Held By Banks Above The Legal Minimum. Now Let Us Say That The Federal Reserve (FED) Requires A 10% Reserve An The Banks Loan Out The Balance. What Will Our T-Account Look Like? Bank Assets Reserves Loans Liabilities $ 10.00 90.00 Deposits $100.00 But What Now Happened To The Money Supply? The Depositors Still Have Demands Totaling $100, But Now Borrowers Have $90 in Currency. The Money Supply Has Now Increased To $190. Therefore, When Banks Hold Only a Fraction of The Deposits In Reserve, Banks Create Money. Now Let Us Look Closer At The Multiplier Effect Or The Money Multiplier. Money Multiplier The Amount Of Money The Banking System Generates With Each Dollar Of Reserves. Book Example: Uses Three Banks Where Each Person Who Makes a Loan With The Bank Gives The Money To Someone Who Deposits It In Another Bank and So On For Three Banks. Bank #1 Assets Reserves Loans Liabilities $ 10.00 90.00 Deposits $100.00 Bank #2 Assets Reserves Loans $ 9.00 81.00 Liabilities Deposits $90.00 Bank #3 Assets Reserves Loans $ 8.10 72.90 Liabilities Deposits $81.00 Total Multiplier Original Deposit 1st Bank 2nd Bank 3rd Bank 4th – 10th Bank = = = = $100.00 90.00 = .9 X $100.00 81.00 = .9 X $90.00 72.90 = .9 X $81.00 Total Money Supply = $1,000 The Higher The Reserve Ratio, The Less of Each Deposit Banks Loan Out, and The Smaller The Money Multiplier. The FED Has 3 Tools to Use For Monetary Control 1. Open-Market Operations. 2. Reserve Requirements. 3. The Discount Rate. #1 Open-Market Operations The Purchase and Sale Of U.S. Government Bonds By The FED. To Increase The Money Supply The FED Instructs The N.Y. FED To Buy Bonds From The Public In The Nations Bond Markets. The Dollars Paid By The FED, Pays For The Bonds and Increases The Number of Dollars in The Economy. Some of These New Dollars Are Held as Currency and Some Are Deposited In Banks. Those Deposited in Banks Go Through The Multiplier Effect. To Reduce The Money Supply The Fed Does Just The Opposite: It Sells Bonds To The Public in The Nations Bond Markets. The Public Pays For These With Currency and Bank Deposits. This Reduces The Amount of Money in Circulation. #2 Reserve Requirements Regulations On The Minimum Amount of Reserves That Banks Must Hold Against Deposits. Reserve Ratios Influence How Much Money The Banking System Can Create With Each Dollar of Reserves. An Increase In Reserve Requirements Means Banks Must Hold More In Reserve and Therefore Can Loan Out Less, Reducing The Multiplier Effect and Reducing The Money Supply. A Decrease In Reserve Requirements Lowers The Reserve Ratio and Therefore Banks Can Loan Out More, Increasing The Multiplier Effect and Increasing The Money Supply. Because of The Severe and Immediate Effect This Has On Banks and The Entire System, Changes In The Reserve Requirement Are Rare. #3 The Discount Rate The Interest Rate On The Loans That The FED Makes To Banks. If A Bank Has Too Few Reserves, It Must Then Borrow From The FED In Order To Maintain The Reserve Requirement. This Means That The Banking System Has Additional Reserves and Allows The Banking System To Create More Money. By Changing The Discount Rate The FED Can Either Increase of Decrease The Money Supply. A Higher Discount Rate: Discourages Banks From Borrowing Reserves. Thereby, Reducing The Quantity Of Reserves In The Banking System, Which In Turn Reduces The Money Supply. A Lower Discount Rate: Encourages Banks To Borrow From The FED, Which Increases The Reserves and Leads To An Increase In The Money Supply. Note: The FED Can Also Use Discount Lending To Either Bail Out or To Shore Up The Banking System. Through This Mechanism It Can Also Assist Foreign Countries and Foreign Banks. In The Fractional-Reserve Banking System, The Amount of Money In The Economy and The Money Supply Depend On Two Items: The Behavior of Depositors (People Saving) and The Amount of Reserves The Banks Choose To Keep. Problems For The FED If People Choose To Save (Deposit Funds With The Banking System) Then The Banks Have More Money To Loan Out and The Money Supply Increases. However, If People Choose Not To Save Then The Banks Don’t Have The Deposits From Which To Make Loans and The Money Supply Is Decreased. Remember Our National Savings Rate and What It Has Been Doing? If Banks Choose To Keep a Higher or Lower Reserve On Hand Than is Required Then The Money Supply Is Either Reduced or Expanded. Questions ? Quick Write Because of The Recent Actions By The FED, Would You Expect To Happen To The U.S. Economy Long and Short Term and Why?