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International Finance Lecture 2 1 Economics are divided into two most general branches: Microeconomics (from Greek word "mikros-" meaning "small" + "economics") is 'the behaviour of individual consumers and firms in an attempt to understand the decision-making process of firms and households. Microeconomics looks at the smaller picture and focuses more on basic theories of supply and demand and how individual businesses decide. Microeconomics focuses on the tree not in the forest. Macroeconomics (from Greek word "makros-" meaning "large" + "economics") studies the behaviour, structure and decision-making of the economy as whole and not just on particular companies, but entire industries and economies. This includes national and global economies. Macroeconomists study aggregated indicators such as GDP, national income, , consumption, investment, international trade ,unemployment rates, and price indicators to understand how the whole economy functions. Macroeconomics focuses on the forest not in the tree. International Finance is a macroeconomic field 2 Objectives of the Lecture What is the definition of the two markets of an economy? When is equilibrium occur in goods market? When is equilibrium occur in money market? When does equilibrium exist at the same time in the two markets : goods market and money market? The ISLM graphical model illustrating the behavior of the two markets. 3 Aggregate Demand in the Goods and Money Markets Goods market The market in which goods and services are exchanged and in which the equilibrium level of aggregate output (amount produced) is determined. Money market The market in which financial instruments are exchanged and in which the equilibrium level of the interest rate is determined. Issue: Where does these two markets cross/meet so as to create equilibrium/balance in the economy? ISLM model answers this matter. 4 Equilibrium at the same time in the goods market and the money market by combining the IS and LM curves. The IS/LM model (Investment – Saving /Liquidity preference – Money Supply is a macroeconomic tool that demonstrates the relationship between interest rates and real output in the goods and services market and the money market. The intersection of the IS and LM curves is the "general equilibrium" where there is equilibrium at the same time in both markets. IS curve represents the equilibrium in the goods market LM curve represents the equilibrium in the money market 5 A ) Goods Market The value of production of goods and services is the economy’s real GDP. Because the production activity creates income , in the form of wages , profits , other returns to capital and rents to landowners, real GDP is nearly the same thing as real national income (Y). GDP= (Y) In the short run domestic production is determined by aggregate demand (AD) for the country’s products. Therefore if someone demand a product , manufacturers will produce it. Hence equilibrium occurs when domestic production (Y,GDP) equals desired demand for domestically produced goods and services. Y=AD 6 AD has 4 components C household consumption for goods & services I domestic investment in new real assets like machinery, buildings, software , housing and inventories G government spending on goods and services X-M net exports on goods and services X is the foreign demand for our exports M (imports) must be deducted because is the demand for the products of other countries and also these imports are already included in other kinds of spending Y=GDP=AD=C+I+G+(X-M) 7 Interest Rates Interest Rates set the cost of borrowing to finance the purchase of items like automobiles, household wealth and consumer approach of the future. Real domestic Investment I is negatively related to the level of interest rates in the economy. Higher interest rates increase the cost of financing the capital assets, thus reducing the amount of real investment undertaken. The effects of a change in the interest rate therefore include: Planned investment is a part of aggregate demand (AD). Thus, when the interest rate rises, aggregate demand (AD) at every level of income falls. A decrease in aggregate demand (AD) lowers equilibrium output (income) (Y) by a multiple of the initial decrease in planned investment. 8 Aggregate Demand and the Interest Rates r r I I AD AD Y Y Investment has a positive relationship with output and negative relationship with the interest rate. Investments are strongly affected by interest rates because they state the cost of borrowing money. For example, a rise in the interest rate will cause less private investments to be made, causing aggregate demand to decline. If interest rates were rather to decrease, lowering the cost of borrowing, investment would increase. 9 Planned Investment and the Interest Rate FIGURE 1 Planned Investment Schedule Planned investment spending is a negative function of the interest rate. An increase in the interest rate from 3 percent to 6 percent reduces planned investment from I0 to I1. 10 Other Determinants of Planned Investment The assumption that planned investment depends only on the interest rate is obviously a simplification, just as is the assumption that consumption depends only on income. In practice, the decision of a firm on how much to invest depends on, among other things, its expectation of future sales. The optimism or pessimism of entrepreneurs about the future course of the economy can have an important effect on current planned investment. Keynes used the phrase animal spirits to describe the feelings of entrepreneurs, and he argued that these feelings affect investment decisions. 11 Planned Aggregate Demand and the Interest Rate graph Equilibrium occurs initially at point 1 and then at point 2 FIGURE 2 : An increase in the interest rate from 3 percent to 6 percent lowers the investment and consequently the planned aggregate demand and as a result also reduces equilibrium income from Y0 to Y1. Aggregate Demand AD/ Investment I AD=Y 1 AD=Yo=Co+ Io +Go+(X-M) Rate3% AD=Y1=C1+I1+G1+(X-M) Rate 6% Io 2 Io-I1 I1 ) 45° Y1 Y0 Output / Income 12 Observation points in the graph: Line of 45° is a supporting (secondary in order to help) line which is equidistant from the two axes. This means that for every level of income/output Y the aggregate demand AD equals the income/output Y. The above graph is also labeled as Keynesian cross diagram : A desired total demand curve is drawn as a rising line since consumers will have a larger demand with a rise in Income which increases with total national output. This increase is due to the positive relationship between consumption and consumers' disposable income. The most important use of the 45-degree is the Keynesian model, which identifies equilibrium equality between aggregate demand and aggregate production. In particular, the intersection (meeting point) between the 45-degree line and the aggregate demand line indicates the equilibrium level of aggregate production. Thus the 45 decree line is also called AD=Y. 13 How IS curve created FIGURE 3 An IS curve illustrates the negative relationship between the equilibrium value of aggregate output (income) (Y) and the interest rate in the goods market. Interest Rates (r) Each point on the IS curve corresponds to the equilibrium point in the goods market for the given interest rate. r2 r1 IS Output / Income (Y) Y2 Y1 14 B ) Money Market According to macroeconomic theory money market is in balance when money supply equals money demand. What is “the Supply of Money”? M s is the quantity of money that the Central Bank of a nation set as available to the consumers. What is “the Demand for Money”? How much money would you like to have? A billion or two? Of course, that is not what we mean by your demand for money! What we do mean by your demand for money is this: how much of your wealth do you wish to keep in the form of money, that is, currency and bank deposits? For example, suppose that family F have € 50,000 in financial assets which they divide between investment in bonds and holding money. How are they going to decide how much of their € 50,000 to invest in bonds and how much to hold in the form of money? 15 1 Money is held to carry out transactions and the value of transactions should be similar with the value of income or output (Y). The largest the domestic product is the greater the amount of money that firms and households will want to keep on hand to carry out their larger spending. 2 However there is a cost of holding money to finance your transactions, the opportunity cost. The opportunity cost is the interest that the holder of money could earn if his money were instead in other financial assets such as bonds. This cost leads us to attempt to save our money and especially when the interest rate available on other financial assets rises! A higher interest rate makes people want to hold bonds rather than money and thus the money demand lowers. Conclusion form points 1 & 2 : The demand for money is positively related to GDP and negatively to the level of interest rates available on other financial assets. 16 Economists have identified three primary motives for holding money: • To settle transactions, since money is the medium of exchange. • As a protective store of liquidity, in the event of unexpected need. • To reduce the riskiness of a portfolio of assets by including some money in the portfolio, since the value of money is very stable compared with that of stocks, bonds, or real estate. These three motives for holding money are often referred to as the transactions motive, the protective motive, and the portfolio motive respectively. Together they provide good reasons for the family F to hold some money in their portfolio in spite of the opportunity cost of foregone interest. 17 Aggregate Money Demand M d It is determined by 3 main factors: Interest Rate (r): It reduces the demand for money Price Level (P): It raises the demand for money Real National Income (Y): It raises the demand for money M d = P x L (R,Y) Price Level Real National Income 18 FIGURE 4: Aggregate Real Money Demand and the Interest Rate Downward slope because of the negative relationship between interest rates And Aggregate Demand for Money: If r L(R,Y) Interest rate, R L(R,Y) Aggregate real money demand 19 FIGURE 5: Effect of a Rise in Real Income on the Aggregate Real Money Demand. An Increase in Real Income from Y1 to Y2 raises the demand for real money balances at every level of the interest rate and causes the whole demand curve to shift upward right. Interest rate, R Increase in real income L(R,Y2) L(R,Y1) Aggregate real money demand 20 The Equilibrium Interest Rate: The Interaction of Money Supply and Demand Equilibrium in the Money Market: The condition for equilibrium in the money market is: Ms=Md The money market equilibrium condition can be expressed in terms of aggregate real money demand as: M d = M s = P x L(R,Y) 21 How the Supply of Money and the Demand for Money Determine the Interest Rate Interest rate, R Real money supply 2 R2 1 R1=10% 3 R3 Q2 MS( = Q1) P Q3 FIGURE 6: Determination of the Equilibrium Interest Rate with the supply of money unchanged, market money equilibrium is at point 1 Aggregate real money demand, L(R,Y) Real money holdings 22 In Figure 6 the supply of money is a vertical line at the quantity Q1 indicating that in this hypothetical economy the Central Bank has set the supply of money at Q1. The supply of money is fixed at that quantity, and it will remain there until the Central Bank decides to change it. The quantity of money demanded is equal to the quantity supplied, Q1, at an interest rate of 10%. At that interest rate, people are happy to hold the quantity of money that is supplied by the Central Bank 23 How LM curve created FIGURE 7 An LM curve illustrates Interest rate, R Interest rate, R Real money supply the positive relationship between the equilibrium value of the interest rate and aggregate output (income) (Y) in the money market. LM CURVE R1 R0 L(R,Y2) L(R,Y1) MS ( = Q 1 ) Aggregate real P money demand INCOME INCREASED FROM Yo TO Y1 Y0 Y1 Y output / income 24 In the money market, on the left, the real money supply is the red vertical line. When the demand for money curve crosses it the equilibrium interest rate is found. For a higher level of national income (Y1), the equilibrium interest rate is higher. These points create the LM curve. Y M d r Y M r d The LM curve shows combinations of interest rates and levels of real output-income for which money supply equals money demand, that is for which money market is in equilibrium. 25 THE IS-LM DIAGRAM The IS-LM diagram is a way to show graphically the determination of aggregate output (income) and the interest rate in the goods and money markets. The IS curve describes the combination of interest rates and output that clear the goods and services market in the short run. The goods and services market is said to clear when spending by consumers, firms, the government (and foreigners if an open economy) on goods and services equals the production of goods and services. The LM curve summarizes all the combinations of income and interest rates that equate/link money demand and money supply. 26 Is and Lm Goods Market Money Market Interest rate, R Interest rate, R LM CURVE r2 r1 IS Y2 Y1 Output / Income (Y) Y1 Y2 Y output / income 27 THE IS-LM DIAGRAM Figure 8 : The point at which the IS and LM curves cross corresponds to the point at which both the goods market and the money market are in equilibrium. The equilibrium values of aggregate output and the interest rate are Y0 and r0. Interest rate, R LM CURVE Ro IS Yo Y output / income 28 The two dimensions of Macroeconomics: The ‘Real’ Economy and the ‘Monetary’ economy The Real Economy and the Goods market The Monetary Economy and the Money Market The linkages between the two markets: 1. the overall price levels and wage levels 2.the interest rates 3.the foreign exchange rate (through its impact on balance of payments) 29 The central Role of Interest Rates It plays a central role in the goods market as the price of capital – a determinant of investment It is the price of money in the money market It is an important factor in determining the exchange rate, especially in the short run 30 The link: Given price level and the exchange rate Y=C+I+G+(X-M) Md=M(i) I=I(i) i i IS 0 Md Q 0 Q 31 A P P E N D I X A: The Price Level The development of the framework so far has ignored the factor Price Level (P), as we supposed that the price level is constant. This may be reasonable for most short-run analysis but in fact this state is not correct generally. The Price Level change over time for three basic reasons: 1. Most countries have an amount of constant inflation. Inflation is a rise in the general level of prices of goods and services in an economy over a period of time. 2. Strong or weak aggregate demand can put pressure on the country’s price level. If aggregate demand increases, while aggregate supply remain stable, then the price of market products increases. On the other hand if aggregate demand is weak is creating downward pressure in the price level. 3. Shocks occasionally can cause large changes in the price level. E.g. an oil price huge increase as happened in the mid-2000 created rise in inflation in the countries that were importing oil. Also a large change in the exchange rate value of a country’s currency. A significant devaluation increases the price level because imports are becoming more expensive. 32 A change in the price level changes money demand and if we take as granted that money supply is stable then the LM Curve will shift over time. Fundamental changes that shift the LM curve down or to the right are: Increase in the money supply (expansionary monetary policy) Decrease in the average price level of a country’s Decrease in money demand: for example because of the use of credit cards. 33 APPENDIXB Other factors, than I, that affect IS curve The development of the framework has also ignored the factors consumption, government spending and trade considering only investment. In fact the above factors also affect the IS curve. For example trade (X-M) is depended on the income of foreign countries and if this income is higher then foreigners tend to buy more of our exports and this shift IS curve to the right( or up). Also the price level we saw in appendix A influences trade and consequently IS curve. For instance if a country has an advantage in price competitiveness then aggregate demand on exports increases and IS curve shift to the right( or up). Other fundamental changes that shifts IS curve to the right are: Increase in consumption Decrease in imports Increase in domestic Investment Increase in government spending or tax cut (expansionary fiscal policy) 34