Monetary Policy, Central Banks, and Money Markets. 1 Macroeconomics Lecture 5

Size: px
Start display at page:

Download "Monetary Policy, Central Banks, and Money Markets. 1 Macroeconomics Lecture 5"

Transcription

1 Monetary Policy, Central Banks, and Money Markets Topic 5 1

2 Goals of of the Topic Lecture5 Introduction to the Money Market. Money Supply: Central Bank and the Banking sector. Role of the Banking System and Monetary Policy. Money Demand: Portfolio Decision (how to allocate wealth across asset markets). Derive the Equilibrium on the Asset market - derive LM curve. Equilibrium in the money MKT. (It is going to help us pin down the price level in the economy when we put everything together in Topic 6). 2

3 Definition of Money We define Money as the Asset Used To Make Payments. Money is a medium of exchange. (Legal tender in many countries by law it cannot be refused in honoring a payment). Facilitates transactions (think of difficulties with barter). Money is a unit of account. (Allows to compare heterogeneous goods and services). Money is a store of value. (Allows intertemporal transfers of resources). 3

4 Monetary Aggregates We measure Money in the economy through Monetary Aggregates. They are the official measure of the money stock. M1 = the most liquid aggregate. Includes Cash and Checking Accounts. M2 = the second most liquid aggregate. Includes M1 and other less liquid assets like Money Market Instruments and some types of Saving Deposits. Generally when we talk about Money we will mean M1. 4

5 US M1 Money Stock 5

6 Money Supply: Basics The amount of money available in the economy is determined by the Central Bank (CB). The CB is the administrative unit of government in charge of monetary policy (setting the Money Supply). The intuition of how the supply of money is directly affected by the CB: To increase the money supply the central bank acquires certain goods or titles (e.g. government bonds) from a market to which the public has access (hence an OPEN MARKET) in exchange of currency (think of printing money for now). This increases the amount of M available in the economy. To decrease the money supply the central bank sells certain assets (e.g. government bonds) in a market to which the public has access (hence an OPEN MARKET) in exchange of currency (taking back money). This decreases the amount of M available in the economy. 6

7 Money Supply: Basics (Cont.) The CB also exerts influence by being the monopoly supplier of the reserves that back the supply of bank money. Bank Reserves are liquid assets held by banks at the CB to meet the demand for withdrawals by depositors or to pay out checks. By reducing the supply of reserves, it can cause the supply of bank money to fall and market interest rates to rise. Next slide on how this works. Reading on the Economist ( Who needs money? ) about the plausibility of a decrease in importance of bank money and the role of Central Banks when non- bank money (credit cards, pension funds, insurers, and mutual funds) enters the picture. Ben Friedman at Harvard thinks so. 7

8 The Banking System: An Introduction Central Bank Assets and Liabilities: Assets: Treasuries + Financial Assets Liabilities: TC + Reserves (TR). Private Bank Assets and Liabilities: Assets: Loans (TL) + Reserves (TR) + Treasuries + Financial Assets Liabilities: Deposits (TD). Equity = Assets-Liabilities How do banks make money? They Lend. How much do they lend? Must keep reserves (required by law). Assume banks lend all they can: TR = m TD, where m = required reserve ratio Fractional reserve banking (m < 1). 8

9 The Banking System: An Introduction Some Important Equations: TD = TL + TR (money held within the banking system) ΔTD = ΔTL + ΔTR M s = TC + TD M s = Money Supply TC = Total Currency in Circulation (outside banking system) Δ M s = ΔTC + ΔTD Δ M s = ΔTC + ΔTR + ΔTL 9

10 The Banking System: An Example Suppose I put $500 in the bank (removing it from under my mattress). We call the $500 that starts the process the Initial Deposit (ID) *** Suppose that nobody else in the economy holds cash (TC = 0). *** Suppose banks lend to their limit. Suppose that m= What happens in the banking system: Step 1: Deposits increase by $500. Bank has to only commit $50 to reserves. It can lend the rest! Step 2: Then, Deposits increase by another $450. Step 3: Then, Deposits increase by another $405. Step 4:.(keep increasing) Step infinity: (keep increasing) Why do deposits keep increasing? LOANS!!!! 10

11 The Banking System: An Example Step 1: Liabilities = 500 (TD) Assets = 450 (TL) + 50 (TR) Step 2: Liabilities = (TD) Assets = ( ) (TL) + ( ) (TR) Step 3: Liabilities = (TD) Assets ( ) (TL) + ( ) (TR). How much do deposits increase by eventually? 5000 (= 500/0.1) 11

12 The Banking System: An Example The banks lend out all the assets in excess of reserve requirements. Such assets are immediately redeposited. Step 1: Liabilities = 500 (TD) Initial increase ID Assets = 450 (TL) + 50 (TR) Step 2: Liabilities = (TD) Assets = ( ) (TL) + ( ) (TR) Step 3: Liabilities = (TD) Assets ( ) (TL) + ( ) (TR). How much do deposits increase by eventually? 5000 (= 500/0.1) 12

13 The Money Multiplier Total Change in Deposits: Change in Deposits = ID + ID (1-m) + ID(1-m) = ID (1 + (1-m) + (1-m) ) = ID (1/m) Money Multiplier (μ m ) = 1/m Some caveats on the money multiplier: The holding of currency out of the banking system (TC > 0) Banks hold no excess reserves Day to Day transactions don t cause money supply to change significantly. Bank Runs can be important. 13

14 The CB in the Banking System Who controls reserves? The Central Bank. What is the Federal Reserve (Fed)? U.S. Central Bank. What is the Bank of Canada? Canada s Central Bank. See Textbook Chapter 14 for details. How Can CB Affect Money Supply/Interest Rates? By creating reserves. How? a) Open Market Operations (Overnight/Fed Funds Rate used often) b) Reserve Ratio (not used very much) c) Discount Rate (not used very much) 14

15 Notes on Central Banks The Central Bank is The Banks Bank. The Central Bank operates a clearinghouse for bank checks. Each member bank has an account with the Central Bank. In the U.S. the deposits that t banks have with the Fed are called fd federal lfunds. A closely l related term, which is not specific to the U.S., is bank reserves (which consist of deposits with the Central Bank plus vault cash, or currency in the bank s cash machines, teller drawers, and vault). A check written against private bank A and deposited with private bank B reduces bank A s federal funds and increases bank B s federal funds. Thus banks want federal funds so they can honor check withdrawals. They want vault cash to honor cash withdrawals. Upshot: banks need reserves to honor withdrawals. Neither the Fed nor other major Central Banks (including BofC) target growth rates of the money supply (which consists of currency plus various measures of liquid assets like deposits). (This concept is very Friedman-esque) The BofC targets the overnight rate. Fed targets the federal funds rate. 15

16 Notes on Central Banks Certain central banks are driven in their monetary policy decisions both by the goal of business cycle stabilization and stable price growth. The Fed is one of these (Federal Reserve Act of 1913 requires this dual mandate.) The Bank of Canada, on the other hand, cares only about inflation stabilization. According to bankofcanada.ca Inflation-control targeting has been a cornerstone of monetary policy in Canada since its introduction in At present the target range is 1 to 3 per cent, with the Bank's monetary policy aimed at keeping inflation at the 2 per cent target midpoint. [ ] One of the most important benefits of a clear inflation target is its role in anchoring expectations of future inflation. European Central Bank behaves more similarly to BofC. 16

17 What is the overnight rate? Reserves are the deposits of private banks with the CB. The reserves market consists of private banks borrowing and lending their excess reserves amongst each other overnight. The effective overnight rate is the interest rate on these overnight loans. It is set by supply and demand, not the CB. The CB can change the supply of reserves through open market operations, exerting a powerful indirect effect on the overnight rate. 17

18 The Bank of Canada Overnight rate: Target (Left) and Effective (Right) Overnight rate target, July 1996-present Overnight rate effective, July 1996-present Note: They basically coincide. Central Banks have close to full control of short- term rates. 18

19 The US federal funds rate: Target (Blue) and Effective (Red) 19

20 The Overnight/Federal funds rate vs. the Discount rate The discount rate is the interest rate on direct loans from the CB to private banks. The CB sets the discount rate. Discount window loans play a minor role in CB policy. The CoB targets the overnight rate. The Fed targets the federal funds rate. This target changes over time. The CB carries out open market operations to keep the actual rate near the target rate. This isthe heart of monetary policy. 20

21 US FF and Discount rate (split into primary and secondary in 2003) 21

22 What are Open Market Operations? Open market operations = Central Bank purchases and sales of government securities on the open market. Open market purchase = A Central Bank purchase of government securities. The seller bank receives reserves payment in exchange. Reserves Central Bank Private Banks = Government Bonds Reserves Loans = Fed Funds (US) i 22

23 A CB Purchase of Government Securities Raises the supply of reserves. More reserves mean they are cheaper to borrow, so a lower overnight rate ensues. (An increase in the supply of federal funds lowers their price, the federal funds rate). Drives up the price of those securities, which lowers their yield. A lower yield means a lower interest rate on government securities. Leaves banks flush with reserves. Banks find it profitable to convert some of their new zero-interest-earning reserves into loans (which in turn creates more deposits, raising the money supply). To get people/firms to borrow more (take the new loans they are offering), banks lower the interest rate on the loans. Bottom Line: CB purchases of government securities increase reserves and lower i. 23

24 The Federal funds rate and Prime rate 24

25 Canadian Primary Dealers of Government Securities Government Securities Distributors Bank of Montreal (treasury bills only) Beacon Securities Limited BMO Nesbitt Burns Inc. (marketable bonds only) Canaccord Genuity Corp. Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce (treasury bills only) Casgrain & Company Limited CIBC World Markets Inc. (marketable bonds only) CTI Capital Securities Inc. Desjardins Securities Inc. Deutsche Bank Securities Limited HSBC Bank Canada (treasury bills only) HSBC Securities (Canada) Inc. (marketable bonds only) Laurentian Bank Securities Inc. Merrill Lynch Canada Inc. National Bank Financial Inc. Ocean Securities Inc. Odlum Brown Limited PI Financial Corp. RBC Dominion Securities Inc. Scotia Capital Inc. The Toronto-Dominion Bank 25

26 What if the CB pays interest rate on Reserves? Suppose banks are flush with reserves. Banks find it profitable to convert reserves into loans because they make money out of issuing loans (they transform low-yield into high-yield assets). However, for given amount of outstanding reserves (Fed Funds), if the Central Bank increases the interest rate on reserves, the incentive to issue new loans are lowered. So the CB can control how many new loans private banks issue by decreasing their opportunity cost. Part of the 2010 US monetary exit strategy to absorb excess liquidity pumped in during the crisis. 26

27 What is Quantitative Easing? Conventional Open Market operation: CB buys short-term Govmn t Bonds in exchange of reserves to increase money supply. This lowers short term rates because it affects the cost of reserves (fed funds overnight rate) and affects the yield of the short-term Treasuries (because their price increases due to CB s demand). QE: Unconventional monetary policy, CB buys (longer maturity) Financial Assets in exchange of reserves to increase money supply by a predetermined quantity of money. This lowers long-term rates because it affects the yield of the long-term assets purchased (because their price increases due to CB s demand). QE aims at moving the long end of the Yield curve. It works even when the short end is near zero. 27

28 Notes on FOMC directives The Federal Reserve Open Market Committee (FOMC) meets every 6 weeks and issues a directive to the trading desk of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York. Fed Time: the Desk carries out open market operations between 11:30 and 11:45 ET each trading day to keep the actual fed funds rate near the target. The FOMC directive is also asymmetric or symmetric: Symmetric: No bias. Neutral stance (balance). Just as likely to raise as to lower the target next. Asymmetric: A bias toward easing (more likely to lower than raise the target next) or a bias toward tightening (more likely to raise than lower the target next). 28

29 Typical FOMC Policy Decision Federal Reserve: FOMC Press Release Release Date: April 30, 2008 For immediate release The Federal Open Market Committee decided today to lower its target for the federal funds rate 25 basis points to 2 percent. Recent information indicates that economic activity remains weak. Household and business spending has been subdued and labor markets have softened further. Financial markets remain under considerable stress, and tight credit conditions and the deepening housing contraction are likely to weigh on economic growth over the next few quarters. Although readings on core inflation have improved somewhat, energy and other commodity prices have increased, and some indicators of inflation expectations have risen in recent months. The Committee expects inflation to moderate in coming quarters, reflecting a projected leveling-out of energy and other commodity prices and an easing of pressures on resource utilization. Still, uncertainty about the inflation outlook remains high. It will be necessary to continue to monitor inflation developments carefully. The substantial easing of monetary policy to date, combined with ongoing measures to foster market liquidity, should help to promote moderate growth over time and to mitigate risks to economic activity. The Committee will continue to monitor economic and financial developments and will act as needed to promote sustainable economic growth and price stability. 29

30 Recent FOMC Policy Decisions 30

31 Notes on FOMC directives (Cont.) The Federal Reserve Open Market Committee (FOMC) The minutes of the FOMC meetings are not public until over 6 weeks after each meeting. Look at the federal funds rate futures in the WSJ to see what the market thinks. If interested, read the book Maestro by Bob Woodward (book is a biography of Alan Greenspan s Fed - goes into the workings of the Fed in gory detail). 31

32 The CB s Balance Sheet The CB receives interest on its assets (government securities, like treasuries). The CB pays no interest on its liabilities (currency and reserves). 1997: Fed assets = $522 billion, on which it earned 5%, yielding $26 billion in interest income (called seignorage). Netting off the Fed s $5 billion in expenses, the Fed made $21 billion. The Fed is highly profitable (its profits equal 0.26% of GDP), which fosters its independence. The Fed returns its profits to the Treasury. In this way, the portion of the public debt held by the Central Bank has been monetized (converted into currency and reserves). The Treasury effectively pays no interest on this portion. 32

33 Does the CB affect the real economy? Overnight rates may affect the real economy (Y) through 3 main channels. See reading A Blunt Tool in the Economist: Affects the cost of borrowing in the market which, if reduced, stimulates current consumption by individuals and investment by firms. Interest rates on short-term loans are positively correlated with the overnight rate. [Strongly dissenting view in Barro s article.] C, I Affects the prices of financial assets (equity prices). Lower interest rates lift share prices and this may boost consumer spending as private shareholders feel wealthier (income effect), or spur corporate investment by reducing the cost of capital. C, I Affects the exchange rate. Looser monetary policy should push down the dollar, boosting net exports. (US goods are cheaper for other countries). NX Note: Slow transmission mechanism (up to 2 yrs.). 33

34 Percent Changes in the Federal funds rate and S&P

35 European Central Bank (ECB) Sets Nominal Money Supply (M s ) in Euro Area. Similar procedure to the Fed. The Rate on the Deposit Facility, which banks may use to make overnight deposits with the Eurosystem is the correspondent of fed funds rate. (now at 3%) and Marginal Lending Facility Rate (5%). Main difference: on paper mainly focused on inflation (explicit inflation target 2%). No statutory concern for economic growth. Economist s reading on Haughty Indifference. Rates too high in Europe? Chocking investment and exports in a sluggish economy? Slower transmission mechanism than US due to less developed credit markets? 35

36 Websites with more info Overview of the Bank of Canada: The Fed and District Banks (see the Board of Governors website for FOMC minutes and speeches and testimony of FOMC members): Foreign Central Banks: Fed Points (each explains something, e.g. how currency gets into circulation): Details on how open market operations work: / / b/ 36

37 Recap: Money Supply Nominal Money Supply (M s ) Affected by the Central Bank Fed conducts monetary policy to modify Money Supply - Open Market Operations - Change the Discount Rate - Change the Reserve Ratio 37

38 Money Demand We are going to assume that in our economy there are only two types of assets. Monetary Assets (M) and dnon-monetary Assets (NM). Monetary Assets (M) do not pay any nominal interest and Non- Monetary Assets (NM) pay nominal interest i. The quantity of Monetary Assets that individuals choose to hold is the demand for nominal money balances (i.e. Money Demand). Individuals decide to allocate their wealth between M and NM assets (it is a portfolio allocation decision). So for given wealth level if an agent decides how much M to hold, she is also deciding NM. 38

39 Money Demand: Determinants We will not derive a Money Demand Schedule but for simplicity we will assume (a realistic) one. Nominal money demand is determined by: 1) the Price Level; 2) Real Income; 3) Interest Rate. 39

40 Money Demand: Determinants (Cont.) Nominal money demand is proportional to the price level. For example, if prices go up by 10% then individuals need 10% more money for transactions. As Y increases, desired consumption increases and so individuals need more money for the increased number of desired transactions. This is the liquidity demand for money. As the nominal interest rate on non-money assets (bonds), i, increases the opportunity cost of holding money increases and so the demand for nominal money balances decreases. Since i = r + π e, we can decompose the effects on an increase in i into real interest rate increases (holding expected inflation fixed) and expected inflation increases (holding the real interest rate fixed). 40

41 Money Demand: Determinants (Cont.) Other determinants of Money Demand that we could also want to think about are: Inflation risk (if agents do not like risk holding money in their pockets kt when the risk ikof fhihiflti high inflation is elevated tdmay decrease their demand for money). Alternative payment technologies. If you can more easily do without money (electronic payments, direct deposits) money demand decreases. Liquidity of NM Assets. If interest-bearing assets become more liquid (closer substitute to Money) people will want to hold less money. 41

42 Money Demand Model Our model for the demand for nominal money balances takes the following form where: M d = P L d (Y, i) M d = demand for nominal money balances (demand for M1) L d = demand for liquidity function P = aggregate price level (CPI or GDP deflator) Y = real income (real GDP) i = nominal interest rate on non-money assets 42

43 Money Demand Model (Cont.) The demand for real balances. Since the demand for nominal balances is proportional to the aggregate price level, we can divide id both sides of the nominal money demand d equation by P. This gives the liquidity demand function or the demand for real balances function: M d /P = L d (Y, r + π e ) The left-hand-side of the above equation is the demand d for nominal balances divided by the aggregate price level or the demand for real balances (the real purchasing power of money). The right-hand side is the liquidity demand function. The demand for real balances is decomposed into a transactions demand for money (captured by Y) and a portfolio demand for money (captured by r and π e ). 43

44 Money Demand 44

45 Money Demand/Money Supply Interactions The Money Market is in Equilibrium when Real Money Demand = Real Money Supply where Real Money Supply = M s /P Real Money Demand = M d /P = L d (Y, r + π e ) Note: The money supply curve does not change with interest rates (it is vertical). Important questions for tests: What shifts real money supply: M, P What shifts real money demand: Y, W, liquidity of NM, π e 45

46 Money Market Equilibrium Money Market M s /P r 0 M d /P= L d (Y, r+π e ) M/P 46

47 Money Market Equilibrium Money Market M s /P r 0 r 1 1 M s M d M d /P = L d (Y, r+π e ) M/P At 1 demand d for monetary assets is larger than money supply. People want to hold too few NM assets and too many M assets. So prices of NM will go down and interest rates will go up. 47

48 Money Demand/Money Supply Interactions (Cont.) The Money MKT equilibrium produces the equilibrium on the Non-Monetary Asset tmkt as well. Total Wealth = Total Assets in the Economy TW M +NM M +NM TW = M s + NM s = M d + NM d Hence, M d = M s => NM d = NM s 48

49 Interest Rates and Prices of NM Assets Prices of Non-Monetary Assets and their Yields (i.e. the interest rate they pay) are negatively related. Consider 2 zero coupon bonds that pay $100 in 1 year, issued by 2 different companies: 1. SuperSafe Inc (a very solid company that s going to repay for sure); 2. SuperJunk Corp (an extremely shaky enterprise that s probably going to default). SuperJunk needs to pay a higher interest rate than SuperSafe on the bond in order to compensate investors for the risk of default. So i j > i s How much are you willing to pay for the two bonds today? P j = 100/(1+i j ) and P s = 100/(1+i s ). It follows that since So i j > i s., then P j = 100/(1+i j ) < P s = 100/(1+i s ). 49

50 Money Market Equilibrium Increasing Y Money Market r M s /P r 0 M d /P = L d (Y, r+π e ) M d /P = L d (Y, r+π e ) M/P Suppose Y increases from Y to Y (Holding Money Supply fixed!) 50

51 Positive Relationship Between Y and r (in Money Market) LM curve r r Y Y Y 51

52 The LM (Liquidity-Money) Curve LM Curve: (drawn in (Y, r) space) - represents the relationship of Y and r through the money market (specifically - Y s Ys affect on money demand). For any level of output Y the LM curve shows the value of r for which the assets MKT is in Equilibrium. The LM Curve relates real interest rates to real changes in output in the money market. As Y increases - M d shifts upwards - causing real interest rates to rise (increase in transactions demand increases the demand for money). 52

53 Interest Rates and Output This is the second curve expressing a relationship between real interest rates and output. 1) The IS curve. Topic 4. 2) The LM curve. The transaction motive for holding money (the monetary feedback mechanism). As Y increases, demand for money increases and r increases. Y increasing causes r to increase (positive relationship - the LM curve) 53

54 The LM (Liquidity-Money) Curve What shifts the LM curve? Money (M): Increasing Money Supply increases M/P causing the LM curve to the right. Prices (P): Increasing Prices causes real Money Balances to fall shifting LM curve to the left. π e : Increasing expected inflation causes returns on bonds (assets other than money) to increase making it less attractive to hold cash. Causes LM curve to shift right! In general anything that increases demand for real balances will produce an increase in the price of real balances (r) and a shift of the LM curve up to the left. 54

55 Example 1: Shift in LM curve - An increase in M Money Market M s /PM s /P r 0 r 1 M d /P = L d (Y, r+π e ) M/P After the increase in M, at 0 demand d for monetary assets is smaller than money supply. People want to hold too many NM assets and too few M assets. So prices of NM will go up and interest rates will go down. 55

56 Example 1: LM Curve movement after increase in M LM curve M/P = L d (Y, r+π e ) r M /P M/P = L e d (Y, r+π ) r Y For every Y the corresponding r that clears the assets MKT is going to be lower. 56

57 Example 1: together - shifting the LM curve Thought experiment: Suppose M increases. What level of Y is needed to hold r constant. Or, put another way, what would happen to r if Y was held constant? M s s/ /P M s1 /P LM(M 0 ) LM(M1 ) r 0 x r 0 x z r 1 r 1 z M d (Y 0 )/P Money Market LM curve Y 0 An increase in the nominal money supply will cause the LM curve to shift to the right. 57

58 Example 2: Shifts in LM curve - An increase in π e Money Market M s /P r 1 0 r 2 M d /P = L d (Y, r+π e ) M d /P = L d (Y, r+π e ) M/P We have a drop in money demand. d At1 demand d for monetary assets is smaller than money supply. People want to hold too many NM assets and too few M assets. So prices of NM will go up and interest rates will go down. 58

59 Example 2: LM Curve movement after increase in π e LM curve M\P = L d (Y, r+π e ) r M\P = L r+π e d (Y, ) r Y For every Y the corresponding r that clears the assets MKT is going to be lower. 59

60 Example 3: Shifts in LM curve - An increase in P Money Market M s /P M s /P 1 r Notice that it is a movement along the real balances now. r r 0 L d d( (Y, r+π e ) M/P We have a drop in money supply. At0 demand d for monetary assets is larger than money supply. People want to hold too few NM assets and too many M assets. So prices of NM will go down and interest rates will go up. 60

61 Example 3: LM Curve movement after increase in P r LM curve M\P = L d (Y, r+π e ) M\P = L d (Y, r+π e ) r Y For every Y the corresponding r that clears the assets MKT is going to be higher. 61

62 Example 3: LM Curve movement after increase in P This exercise looks at changes in P. But for given r and M s, the Money Market actually determines the equilibrium i P. P = M s /L d (Y, r + π e ) Note: This also gives a relationship between inflation rate, growth of nominal money supply, and growth of demand of real money balances. π = ΔP/P = ΔM s /M s - ΔL d (Y, r + π e )/ L d (Y, r + π e ) 62

63 Some Monetary Facts: The Quantity Equation M*V = P*Y M = money supply, P = the GDP deflator, Y = real GDP. V = velocity = PY/M. We define V in this way. If V is constant and Y is beyond the Central Bank s LR control then When the Central Bank doubles M, the result is a doubling of P. Inflation is always and everywhere a monetary phenomenon. This Friedman s quote is not literally correct because of Y and V movements. But a LR correlation of.95 means it s close enough. 63

64 Money Growth and Inflation 64

65 Notes on the Quantity Equation V is defined so that the Quantity Equation holds (so it s really an identity). Therefore one cannot argue with P = MV / Y. Inflation (rising P) is caused by too much money chasing too few goods, i.e. by M rising relative to Y (controlling for how much M we need to transact PY, which is V). [Ref. Some monetary facts ] Note inflation could rise despite fixed M because of falling Y or rising V (fewer goods relative to the M we need so that P rises). Across countries, however, most differences in inflation (= P growth) are associated with differences in M growth: the correlation between M growth and inflation is above.95 (and the coefficient is about 1) in the LR. V is not fixed in reality. V rises with financial innovation and with i (the nominal interest rate). Recall that i = r + π. If, like Y, r is beyond the Central Bank s LR control, then higher inflation translates one-for-one into higher i. Implication: V rises with the rate of inflation. Thus taking into account that V is not fixed only makes the channel from M growth to P growth stronger: when M growth is high it generates inflation, which raises V, which in turn raises inflation further. This is a big deal in hyperinflations. 65

66 Monetizing Government Debt The Central Bank buys public debt with reserves. When public debt is growing faster than GDP, there is political pressure on the Central Bank to monetize some of the government debt b/c fixed nominal debt is easier to pay off the higher is P. public debt pays interest, reserves do not. Large budget deficits are the underlying cause of hyperinflations. The debt and deficit limits in Europe s European Monetary Union are meant to prevent member countries from pushing for higher inflation. Central Bank independence from fiscal authorities (the Government) can insulate it from pressure to monetize the public debt. 66

67 CB Independence & Inflation: More Independence, Less π 67

68 Hyperinflations are... Sometimes defined as 30% or more inflation in a year. Usually characterized by accelerating inflation. (wage indexation) Caused by rapid M growth (the Central Bank creating new reserves at a rapid rate). Exacerbated by rising velocity (efforts to economize on M). Highly disruptive to Y. [But in general inflation rates have zero effect on growth, see reading Some Monetary Facts ] 1985 Bolivia 10,000%, 1989 Argentina 3100%, 1990 Peru 7500%, 1993 Brazil 2100%, 1993 Ukraine 5000%. 68

69 Why Do Governments Grow the Money Supply? Short Term Political Gains - reduce unemployment (or raise output). If the economy is capacity constrained - prices must rise (however, this usually occurs with a lag!) Accommodating Supply Shocks - The U.S. in the 70s! (as opposed to breaking the inflation cycle). Financing Government Deficits by Printing Money!!! We will deal with this more in future lectures! 69

70 Conclusions on the Money Market Introduction to Money. Introduction to the role of the Banking Sector. Advanced Class on Money and Banking. Overview of the basics of Monetary Policy. Advanced Class on Monetary Policy and Central Banks. LM Curve. 70

Monetary policy, central banks, and money markets

Monetary policy, central banks, and money markets Monetary policy, central banks, and money markets Topic 5 1 Goals of the lecture Introduction to the money market Money supply: central bank and the banking sector Role of the banking system and monetary

More information

TOPIC 5. Fed Policy and Money Markets

TOPIC 5. Fed Policy and Money Markets TOPIC 5 Fed Policy and Money Markets 1 2 Outline What is Money? What does affect the supply of Money? How the banking system works? What is the Fed and how does it work? What is a monetary policy? What

More information

Fed Policy and Money Markets

Fed Policy and Money Markets TOPIC 5 Fed Policy and Money Markets 1 Outline What is Money? What affects the supply of money? How does the banking system work? What is the Fed? How does it work? What is monetary policy? What affects

More information

Outline. How the banking system works? What is the Fed and how does it work? What is a monetary policy?

Outline. How the banking system works? What is the Fed and how does it work? What is a monetary policy? FdPli Fed Policy and dm Money Markets kt 1 Outline How the banking system works? What is the Fed and how does it work? What is a monetary policy? What about the current credit crunch? 2 Money Supply We

More information

Outline. What is Money? What does affect the supply of Money? What does affect the demand of Money? Asset Portfolio Decision

Outline. What is Money? What does affect the supply of Money? What does affect the demand of Money? Asset Portfolio Decision TOPIC 5 Money 1 Outline What is Money? What does affect the supply of Money? What does affect the demand of Money? Asset Portfolio Decision Quantitative Theory of Money Equilibrium in the Money Market

More information

Government of Canada Securities

Government of Canada Securities A Publication of the Department of Finance Canadian Economy July Selected Canadian economic statistics Q Q Q Government of debt (accumulated deficit) and budgetary balance Annualized growth rates () Real

More information

Government of Canada Securities

Government of Canada Securities A Publication of the Department of Finance Canadian Economy April Selected Canadian economic statistics Q Q Q Q Government of debt (accumulated deficit) and budgetary balance of GDP of GDP Annualized growth

More information

International Money and Banking: 6. Problems with Monetarism

International Money and Banking: 6. Problems with Monetarism International Money and Banking: 6. Problems with Monetarism Karl Whelan School of Economics, UCD Spring 2018 Karl Whelan (UCD) Money and Inflation Spring 2018 1 / 30 The Basic Elements of Monetarism Last

More information

THE FEDERAL RESERVE AND MONETARY POLICY Macroeconomics in Context (Goodwin, et al.)

THE FEDERAL RESERVE AND MONETARY POLICY Macroeconomics in Context (Goodwin, et al.) Chapter 12 THE FEDERAL RESERVE AND MONETARY POLICY Macroeconomics in Context (Goodwin, et al.) Chapter Overview In this chapter, you will be introduced to a standard treatment of central banking and monetary

More information

MONEY. Economics Unit 4 Macroeconomics Just the Facts Handout

MONEY. Economics Unit 4 Macroeconomics Just the Facts Handout MONEY Economics Unit 4 Macroeconomics Just the Facts Handout Barter Economy A barter economy is an economy with no money. The only way you can get what you want in a barter economy is to trade something

More information

Chapter Eighteen 4/19/2018. Linking Tools to Objectives. Linking Tools to Objectives

Chapter Eighteen 4/19/2018. Linking Tools to Objectives. Linking Tools to Objectives Chapter Eighteen Chapter 18 Monetary Policy: Stabilizing the Domestic Economy Part 3 Linking Tools to Objectives Tools OMO Discount Rate Reserve Req. Deposit rate Linking Tools to Objectives Monetary goals

More information

MONEY, THE PRICE LEVEL, AND INFLATION

MONEY, THE PRICE LEVEL, AND INFLATION 24 MONEY, THE PRICE LEVEL, AND INFLATION After studying this chapter, you will be able to: Define money and describe its functions Explain the economic functions of banks Describe the structure and functions

More information

Econ 330 Final Exam Name ID Section Number

Econ 330 Final Exam Name ID Section Number Econ 330 Final Exam Name ID Section Number MULTIPLE CHOICE. Choose the one alternative that best completes the statement or answers the question. 1) A group of economists believe that the natural rate

More information

Macroeconomics for Finance

Macroeconomics for Finance Macroeconomics for Finance Joanna Mackiewicz-Łyziak Lecture 1 Contact E-mail: jmackiewicz@wne.uw.edu.pl Office hours: Wednesdays, 5:00-6:00 p.m., room 409. Webpage: http://coin.wne.uw.edu.pl/jmackiewicz/

More information

Elements of Macroeconomics: Homework #6. Due 11/27or 11/28 in assigned Section

Elements of Macroeconomics: Homework #6. Due 11/27or 11/28 in assigned Section Elements of Macroeconomics: Homework #6 Due 11/27or 11/28 in assigned Section Name: Section: Section I Based on the information given below, answer the following questions Brazil s real GDP = 6 trillion

More information

CIE Economics A-level

CIE Economics A-level CIE Economics A-level Topic 4: The Macroeconomy f) Money supply (theory) Notes Quantity theory of money (MV = PT) The Quantity Theory of Money states that there is inflation if the money supply increases

More information

After studying this chapter you will be able to

After studying this chapter you will be able to 30 Monetary Policy After studying this chapter you will be able to! Describe Canada s monetary policy objective and the framework for setting and achieving it! Explain how the Bank of Canada makes its

More information

Money, Banking and the Federal Reserve

Money, Banking and the Federal Reserve Money, Banking and the Federal Reserve What Is Money? Money is any asset that can easily be used to purchase goods and services. Fiat money : Money, such as paper currency, that is authorized by a central

More information

Chapter 10. Conduct of Monetary Policy: Tools, Goals, Strategy, and Tactics. Chapter Preview

Chapter 10. Conduct of Monetary Policy: Tools, Goals, Strategy, and Tactics. Chapter Preview Chapter 10 Conduct of Monetary Policy: Tools, Goals, Strategy, and Tactics Chapter Preview Monetary policy refers to the management of the money supply. The theories guiding the Federal Reserve are complex

More information

VII. LONG-RUN ECONOMIC GROWTH

VII. LONG-RUN ECONOMIC GROWTH VII. LONG-RUN ECONOMIC GROWTH A. Employment and Production 1. Employment and unemployment a. The unemployment rate is defined as the ratio of unemployed workers (those seeking employment) to the labor

More information

9. ISLM model. Introduction to Economic Fluctuations CHAPTER 9. slide 0

9. ISLM model. Introduction to Economic Fluctuations CHAPTER 9. slide 0 9. ISLM model slide 0 In this lecture, you will learn an introduction to business cycle and aggregate demand the IS curve, and its relation to the Keynesian cross the loanable funds model the LM curve,

More information

Leandro Conte UniSi, Department of Economics and Statistics. Money, Macroeconomic Theory and Historical evidence. SSF_ aa

Leandro Conte UniSi, Department of Economics and Statistics. Money, Macroeconomic Theory and Historical evidence. SSF_ aa Leandro Conte UniSi, Department of Economics and Statistics Money, Macroeconomic Theory and Historical evidence SSF_ aa.2017-18 Learning Objectives ASSESS AND INTERPRET THE EMPIRICAL EVIDENCE ON THE VALIDITY

More information

Lecture 6. The Monetary System Prof. Samuel Moon Jung 1

Lecture 6. The Monetary System Prof. Samuel Moon Jung 1 Lecture 6. The Monetary System Prof. Samuel Moon Jung 1 Main concepts: The meaning of money, the Federal Reserve System, banks and money supply, the Fed s tools of monetary control Introduction In the

More information

AQA Economics AS-level

AQA Economics AS-level AQA Economics AS-level Macroeconomics Topic 2: How the Macroeconomy Works 2.2 Aggregate demand and aggregate supply analysis Notes Aggregate demand is the total demand in the economy. It measures spending

More information

MULTIPLE CHOICE. Choose the one alternative that best completes the statement or answers the question.

MULTIPLE CHOICE. Choose the one alternative that best completes the statement or answers the question. Econ 330 Spring 2017: FINAL EXAM Name ID Section Number MULTIPLE CHOICE. Choose the one alternative that best completes the statement or answers the question. 1) Tobin's q theory suggests that monetary

More information

Questions and Answers. Intermediate Macroeconomics. Second Year

Questions and Answers. Intermediate Macroeconomics. Second Year Questions and Answers Intermediate Macroeconomics Second Year Chapter2 Q1: MCQ 1) If the quantity of money increases, the A) price level rises and the AD curve does not shift. B) AD curve shifts leftward

More information

Money Demand. ECON 40364: Monetary Theory & Policy. Eric Sims. Fall University of Notre Dame

Money Demand. ECON 40364: Monetary Theory & Policy. Eric Sims. Fall University of Notre Dame Money Demand ECON 40364: Monetary Theory & Policy Eric Sims University of Notre Dame Fall 2017 1 / 37 Readings Mishkin Ch. 19 2 / 37 Classical Monetary Theory We have now defined what money is and how

More information

Money and the Economy CHAPTER

Money and the Economy CHAPTER Money and the Economy 14 CHAPTER Money and the Price Level Classical economists believed that changes in the money supply affect the price level in the economy. Their position was based on the equation

More information

M.Sc. in Economic Policy Studies

M.Sc. in Economic Policy Studies M.Sc. in Economic Policy Studies John FitzGerald, room 3012, jofitzge@tcd.ie 02/10/2015 1 Outline of lectures 3: October 16 th Money and the macro-economy Demand for money The demand for money The quantity

More information

Question 5 : Franco Modigliani's answer to Simon Kuznets's puzzle regarding long-term constancy of the average propensity to consume is that : the ave

Question 5 : Franco Modigliani's answer to Simon Kuznets's puzzle regarding long-term constancy of the average propensity to consume is that : the ave DIVISION OF MANAGEMENT UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO AT SCARBOROUGH ECMCO6H3 L01 Topics in Macroeconomic Theory Winter 2002 April 30, 2002 FINAL EXAMINATION PART A: Answer the followinq 20 multiple choice questions.

More information

VI. LONG-RUN ECONOMIC GROWTH

VI. LONG-RUN ECONOMIC GROWTH VI. LONG-RUN ECONOMIC GROWTH A. Employment and Production 1. Employment and unemployment a. The unemployment rate is defined as the ratio of unemployed workers (those seeking employment) to the labor force.

More information

The Model at Work. (Reference Slides I may or may not talk about all of this depending on time and how the conversation in class evolves)

The Model at Work. (Reference Slides I may or may not talk about all of this depending on time and how the conversation in class evolves) TOPIC 7 The Model at Work (Reference Slides I may or may not talk about all of this depending on time and how the conversation in class evolves) Note: In terms of the details of the models for changing

More information

2010 Pearson Addison Wesley CHAPTER 1

2010 Pearson Addison Wesley CHAPTER 1 CHAPTER 1 Money has taken many forms. What is money today? What happens when the bank lends the money we re deposited to someone else? How does the Fed influence the quantity of money? What happens when

More information

INTERMEDIATE OPEN ECONOMY MACROECONOMICS - WINTER

INTERMEDIATE OPEN ECONOMY MACROECONOMICS - WINTER INTERMEDIATE OPEN ECONOMY MACROECONOMICS - WINTER 2019 - Francesco Trebbi 1 Course Preliminaries Lecture Notes: I upload them online before class. They are comprehensive and detailed. All material is posted

More information

3. Financial Markets, the Demand for Money and Interest Rates

3. Financial Markets, the Demand for Money and Interest Rates Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy, Tufts University 3. Financial Markets, the Demand for Money and Interest Rates E212 Macroeconomics Prof. George Alogoskoufis Financial Markets, the Demand for Money

More information

Boğaziçi University, Department of Economics Spring 2016 EC 102 PRINCIPLES of MACROECONOMICS FINAL , Saturday 10:00 TYPE A

Boğaziçi University, Department of Economics Spring 2016 EC 102 PRINCIPLES of MACROECONOMICS FINAL , Saturday 10:00 TYPE A NAME: NO: SECTION: Boğaziçi University, Department of Economics Spring 2016 EC 102 PRINCIPLES of MACROECONOMICS FINAL 21.05.2016, Saturday 10:00 TYPE A Turn off your cell phone and put it away. During

More information

the Federal Reserve System

the Federal Reserve System CHAPTER 14 Money, Banks, and the Federal Reserve System Chapter Summary and Learning Objectives 14.1 What Is Money, and Why Do We Need It? (pages 456 459) Define money and discuss the four functions of

More information

The Fed and The U.S. Economic Outlook

The Fed and The U.S. Economic Outlook The Fed and The U.S. Economic Outlook Maria Luengo-Prado Senior Economist and Policy Advisor Federal Reserve Bank of Boston May 13, 2016 Presentation prepared for the Telergee Alliance CFO & Controllers

More information

ECONOMIC GROWTH 1. THE ACCUMULATION OF CAPITAL

ECONOMIC GROWTH 1. THE ACCUMULATION OF CAPITAL ECON 3560/5040 ECONOMIC GROWTH - Understand what causes differences in income over time and across countries - Sources of economy s output: factors of production (K, L) and production technology differences

More information

Money, prices and exchange rates in the long run

Money, prices and exchange rates in the long run Money, prices and exchange rates in the long run Outline Part I: Money and inflation 1. Definition of money 2. Money supply and money demand 3. The neutrality of money 4. The dichotomy principle and its

More information

the Federal Reserve System

the Federal Reserve System CHAPTER 13 Money, Banks, and the Federal Reserve System Chapter Summary and Learning Objectives 13.1 What Is Money, and Why Do We Need It? (pages 422 425) Define money and discuss its four functions. A

More information

Macroeconomics and the Global Economic Environment (FNCE 613) SAMPLE EXAM 1

Macroeconomics and the Global Economic Environment (FNCE 613) SAMPLE EXAM 1 Macroeconomics and the Global Economic Environment (FNCE 613) SAMPLE EXAM 1 Macroeconomics and the Global Economic Environment (FNCE 613) SAMPLE EXAM 1 NAME (IN BLOCK LETTERS) Class time (CIRCLE ONE):

More information

ECO202: PRINCIPLES OF MACROECONOMICS SECOND MIDTERM EXAM SPRING Prof. Bill Even FORM 1. Directions

ECO202: PRINCIPLES OF MACROECONOMICS SECOND MIDTERM EXAM SPRING Prof. Bill Even FORM 1. Directions ECO202: PRINCIPLES OF MACROECONOMICS SECOND MIDTERM EXAM SPRING 2011 Prof. Bill Even FORM 1 Directions 1. Fill in your scantron with your unique id and form number. Doing this properly is worth the equivalent

More information

EC202 Macroeconomics

EC202 Macroeconomics EC202 Macroeconomics Koç University, Summer 2014 by Arhan Ertan Study Questions - 3 1. Suppose a government is able to permanently reduce its budget deficit. Use the Solow growth model of Chapter 9 to

More information

19.2 Exchange Rates in the Long Run Introduction 1/24/2013. Exchange Rates and International Finance. The Nominal Exchange Rate

19.2 Exchange Rates in the Long Run Introduction 1/24/2013. Exchange Rates and International Finance. The Nominal Exchange Rate Chapter 19 Exchange Rates and International Finance By Charles I. Jones International trade of goods and services exceeds 20 percent of GDP in most countries. Media Slides Created By Dave Brown Penn State

More information

Session 9. The Interactions Between Cyclical and Long-term Dynamics: The Role of Inflation

Session 9. The Interactions Between Cyclical and Long-term Dynamics: The Role of Inflation Session 9. The Interactions Between Cyclical and Long-term Dynamics: The Role of Inflation Potential Output and Inflation Inflation as a Mechanism of Adjustment The Role of Expectations and the Phillips

More information

The Federal Reserve and Monetary Policy 1

The Federal Reserve and Monetary Policy 1 The Federal Reserve and Monetary Policy 1 We have examined the money market using the supply and demand framework developed earlier in the class. We now turn our attention to how monetary policy is conducted,

More information

ECON 2301 TEST 3 Study Guide. Spring 2013

ECON 2301 TEST 3 Study Guide. Spring 2013 ECON 2301 TEST 3 Study Guide Spring 2013 Instructions: 33 multiple-choice questions, each with 4 responses Students need to bring: (1) Sanddollar ID card; (2) scantron Form 882-E; (3) pencil; (4) calculator

More information

L-4 Analyzing Inflation and Assessing Monetary Policy

L-4 Analyzing Inflation and Assessing Monetary Policy L-4 Analyzing Inflation and Assessing Monetary Policy IMF Singapore Regional Training Institute OT 18.52 Macroeconomic Diagnostics February 26 March 2, 2018 Presenter Reza Siregar This training material

More information

LIMIT INFLATION Country and Time- Zimbabwe, 2008 Annual Inflation Rate- 79,600,000,000% Time for Prices to Double hours

LIMIT INFLATION Country and Time- Zimbabwe, 2008 Annual Inflation Rate- 79,600,000,000% Time for Prices to Double hours Inflation 1 Copyright LIMIT INFLATION Country and Time- Zimbabwe, 2008 Annual Inflation Rate- 79,600,000,000% Time for Prices to Double- 24.7 hours What is Inflation? Inflation is rising general level

More information

Eastern Mediterranean University Faculty of Business and Economics Department of Economics Spring Semester

Eastern Mediterranean University Faculty of Business and Economics Department of Economics Spring Semester Eastern Mediterranean University Faculty of Business and Economics Department of Economics 2015-16 Spring Semester Duration: 90 minutes ECON102 - Introduction to Economics II Final Exam Type A 2 June 2016

More information

Chapter 14 Monetary Policy

Chapter 14 Monetary Policy Chapter Overview Chapter 14 Monetary Policy The objectives and the mechanics of monetary policy are covered in this chapter. It is organized around seven major topics: (1) interest rate determination;

More information

The Conduct of Monetary Policy

The Conduct of Monetary Policy The Conduct of Monetary Policy This lecture examines the strategies and tactics central banks use to conduct monetary policy. Price Stability, a Nominal Anchor, and the Time-Inconsistency Problem A. Price

More information

FINAL EXAM (Two Hours) DECEMBER 21, 2016 SECTION #

FINAL EXAM (Two Hours) DECEMBER 21, 2016 SECTION # COURSE 180.101 MACROECONOMICS FINAL EXAM (Two Hours) DECEMBER 21, 2016 NAME TA Part I (20 points) SECTION # 1 POINT EACH QUESTION 1. China s GDP appears to be roughly 55% of U.S. GDP, if we use what currency

More information

II. Determinants of Asset Demand. Figure 1

II. Determinants of Asset Demand. Figure 1 University of California, Merced EC 121-Money and Banking Chapter 5 Lecture otes Professor Jason Lee I. Introduction Figure 1 shows the interest rates for 3 month treasury bills. As evidenced by the figure,

More information

Lecture Materials Topic 3 Yield Curves and Interest Forecasts ECONOMICS, MONEY MARKETS AND BANKING

Lecture Materials Topic 3 Yield Curves and Interest Forecasts ECONOMICS, MONEY MARKETS AND BANKING Lecture Materials Topic 3 Yield Curves and Interest Forecasts ECONOMICS, MONEY MARKETS AND BANKING Todd Patrick Senior Vice President - Capital Markets CenterState Bank Atlanta, Georgia tpatrick@centerstatebank.com

More information

ECO202: PRINCIPLES OF MACROECONOMICS SECOND MIDTERM EXAM SPRING 2009 Prof. Bill Even FORM 1. Directions

ECO202: PRINCIPLES OF MACROECONOMICS SECOND MIDTERM EXAM SPRING 2009 Prof. Bill Even FORM 1. Directions ECO202: PRINCIPLES OF MACROECONOMICS SECOND MIDTERM EXAM SPRING 2009 Prof. Bill Even FORM 1 Directions 1. Fill in your scantron with your unique id and form number. Doing this properly is worth the equivalent

More information

ECO202: PRINCIPLES OF MACROECONOMICS SECOND MIDTERM EXAM SPRING 2009 Prof. Bill Even FORM 4. Directions

ECO202: PRINCIPLES OF MACROECONOMICS SECOND MIDTERM EXAM SPRING 2009 Prof. Bill Even FORM 4. Directions ECO202: PRINCIPLES OF MACROECONOMICS SECOND MIDTERM EXAM SPRING 2009 Prof. Bill Even FORM 4 Directions 1. Fill in your scantron with your unique id and form number. Doing this properly is worth the equivalent

More information

Economics 435 The Financial System (11/14/2016) Instructor: Prof. Menzie Chinn UW Madison Fall 2016

Economics 435 The Financial System (11/14/2016) Instructor: Prof. Menzie Chinn UW Madison Fall 2016 Economics 435 The Financial System (11/14/2016) Instructor: Prof. Menzie Chinn UW Madison Fall 2016 Outline What is the Fed? What is the ECB? IS LM: Textbook monetary policy (pre 2008) IS LM: monetary

More information

Money, Banks and the Federal Reserve

Money, Banks and the Federal Reserve Money, Banks and the Federal Reserve By The Great Gamecock 2009 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Essentials of Economics Hubbard/O Brien, 2e. 1 of 43 2009 Prentice Hall Business Publishing Essentials

More information

MACROECONOMICS. Inflation: Its Causes, Effects, and Social Costs. N. Gregory Mankiw. PowerPoint Slides by Ron Cronovich

MACROECONOMICS. Inflation: Its Causes, Effects, and Social Costs. N. Gregory Mankiw. PowerPoint Slides by Ron Cronovich 5 : Its Causes, Effects, and Social Costs MACROECONOMICS N. Gregory Mankiw Modified for EC 204 by Bob Murphy PowerPoint Slides by Ron Cronovich 2013 Worth Publishers, all rights reserved IN THIS CHAPTER,

More information

FETP/MPP8/Macroeconomics/Riedel. General Equilibrium in the Short Run II The IS-LM model

FETP/MPP8/Macroeconomics/Riedel. General Equilibrium in the Short Run II The IS-LM model FETP/MPP8/Macroeconomics/iedel General Equilibrium in the Short un II The -LM model The -LM Model Like the AA-DD model, the -LM model is a general equilibrium model, which derives the conditions for simultaneous

More information

12/03/2012. What is Money?

12/03/2012. What is Money? Money has taken many forms. What is money today? What happens when the bank lends the money we re deposited to someone else? How does the Bank of Canada influence the quantity of money? What happens when

More information

WJEC (Wales) Economics A-level

WJEC (Wales) Economics A-level WJEC (Wales) Economics A-level Macroeconomics Topic 2: Macroeconomic Objectives 2.3 Inflation and deflation Notes Inflation is the sustained rise in the general price level over time. This means that the

More information

Chapter 9 The IS LM FE Model: A General Framework for Macroeconomic Analysis

Chapter 9 The IS LM FE Model: A General Framework for Macroeconomic Analysis Chapter 9 The IS LM FE Model: A General Framework for Macroeconomic Analysis The main goal of Chapter 8 was to describe business cycles by presenting the business cycle facts. This and the following three

More information

ECON 4325 Monetary Policy Lecture 11: Zero Lower Bound and Unconventional Monetary Policy. Martin Blomhoff Holm

ECON 4325 Monetary Policy Lecture 11: Zero Lower Bound and Unconventional Monetary Policy. Martin Blomhoff Holm ECON 4325 Monetary Policy Lecture 11: Zero Lower Bound and Unconventional Monetary Policy Martin Blomhoff Holm Outline 1. Recap from lecture 10 (it was a lot of channels!) 2. The Zero Lower Bound and the

More information

The classical theory of inflation. causes effects. Classical assumes prices are flexible & markets clear Applies to the long run

The classical theory of inflation. causes effects. Classical assumes prices are flexible & markets clear Applies to the long run Money and inflation The classical theory of inflation causes effects Classical assumes prices are flexible & markets clear Applies to the long run 15% 12% % change in CPI from 12 months earlier 9% long-run

More information

10. Fiscal Policy and the Government Budget

10. Fiscal Policy and the Government Budget 10. Fiscal Policy and the Government Budget 1 The Government Budget The government s budget is affected by: Government spending (outlay) Tax revenue (income) 2 Government Spending Major components of government

More information

The Federal Reserve System and Open Market Operations

The Federal Reserve System and Open Market Operations Chapter 15 MODERN PRINCIPLES OF ECONOMICS Third Edition The Federal Reserve System and Open Market Operations Outline What Is the Federal Reserve System? The U.S. Money Supplies Fractional Reserve Banking,

More information

Unemployment that occurs at the natural rate of output is called:

Unemployment that occurs at the natural rate of output is called: ECON 1A Macroeconomics Lecture Notes: Chapter 11 - Aggregate Supply Aggregate Supply in the Short Run AS - relationship between the economy s price level and Assuming: Technology is fixed. Labor & AS:

More information

ECO 100Y INTRODUCTION TO ECONOMICS

ECO 100Y INTRODUCTION TO ECONOMICS Prof. Gustavo Indart Department of Economics University of Toronto ECO 100Y INTRODUCTION TO ECONOMICS Lecture 15. MONEY, BANKING, AND PRICES 15.1 WHAT IS MONEY? 15.1.1 Classical and Modern Views For the

More information

Am I a trillionaire for having this? The circular flux of income. Monetary economies are two faced. Why IM EX is foreign saving

Am I a trillionaire for having this? The circular flux of income. Monetary economies are two faced. Why IM EX is foreign saving The circular flux of income Am a trillionaire for having this? 57 http://stephenlaughlin.posterous.com/buy an 100 trillion zimbabwe dollar bank note http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/zimbabwean_dollar 58 Why

More information

AGGREGATE DEMAND AGGREGATE SUPPLY

AGGREGATE DEMAND AGGREGATE SUPPLY AGGREGATE DEMAND 8 AND CHAPTER AGGREGATE SUPPLY A Way to View the Economy We can think of an economy as consisting of two major activities: buying and producing. When economists speak about aggregate demand,

More information

FINAL EXAM: Macro 302 Winter 2014

FINAL EXAM: Macro 302 Winter 2014 FINAL EXAM: Macro 32 Winter 214 Surname: Name: Student Number: State clearly your assumptions when you derive a result. ou must always show your thinking to get full credit. ou have 3 hours to answer all

More information

ECON MACROECONOMIC THEORY Instructor: Dr. Juergen Jung Towson University

ECON MACROECONOMIC THEORY Instructor: Dr. Juergen Jung Towson University ECON 310 - MACROECONOMIC THEORY Instructor: Dr. Juergen Jung Towson University J.Jung Chapter 12 - Money and Monetary Policy Towson University 1 / 83 Disclaimer These lecture notes are customized for Intermediate

More information

Exam #2 Review Answers ECNS 303

Exam #2 Review Answers ECNS 303 Exam #2 Review Answers ECNS 303 Exam #2 will cover all the material we have covered since Exam #1. In addition to working these problems, I would recommend reviewing all of your old class notes and quizzes,

More information

Chapter 19. Quantity Theory, Inflation and the Demand for Money

Chapter 19. Quantity Theory, Inflation and the Demand for Money Chapter 19 Quantity Theory, Inflation and the Demand for Money Quantity Theory of Money Velocity of Money and The Equation of Exchange M = the money supply P = price level Y = aggregate output (income)

More information

Chapter 16. MODERN PRINCIPLES OF ECONOMICS Third Edition

Chapter 16. MODERN PRINCIPLES OF ECONOMICS Third Edition Chapter 16 MODERN PRINCIPLES OF ECONOMICS Third Edition Monetary Policy Outline Monetary Policy: The Best Case The Negative Real Shock Dilemma When the Fed Does Too Much 2 Introduction In this chapter,

More information

ECON2123-Tutorial 5 AS-AD Model

ECON2123-Tutorial 5 AS-AD Model ECON2123-Tutorial 5 AS-AD Model Department of Economics HKUST November 7, 2018 ECON2123-Tutorial 5 AS-AD Model 1 / 26 Supply and Demand In every commodity good market, there will be supply and demand,

More information

TOPIC 1: IS-LM MODEL...3 TOPIC 2: LABOUR MARKET...23 TOPIC 3: THE AD-AS MODEL...33 TOPIC 4: INFLATION AND UNEMPLOYMENT...41 TOPIC 5: MONETARY POLICY

TOPIC 1: IS-LM MODEL...3 TOPIC 2: LABOUR MARKET...23 TOPIC 3: THE AD-AS MODEL...33 TOPIC 4: INFLATION AND UNEMPLOYMENT...41 TOPIC 5: MONETARY POLICY TOPIC 1: IS-LM MODEL...3 TOPIC 2: LABOUR MARKET...23 TOPIC 3: THE AD-AS MODEL...33 TOPIC 4: INFLATION AND UNEMPLOYMENT...41 TOPIC 5: MONETARY POLICY AND THE RESERVE BANK OF AUSTRALIA...53 TOPIC 6: THE

More information

5. An increase in government spending is represented as a:

5. An increase in government spending is represented as a: Romer Section 1 1. The IS curve represents combinations of Y and r that: a. are consistent with equilibrium in the money market. b. are consistent with equilibrium in the goods market. c. are positively

More information

Intermediate Open Economy Macroeconomics

Intermediate Open Economy Macroeconomics Intermediate Open Economy Macroeconomics Martin Ellison 1 Course preliminaries Lecture notes: I upload them online before class. They are comprehensive and detailed. All material is posted on my webpage:

More information

14.02 Solutions Quiz III Spring 03

14.02 Solutions Quiz III Spring 03 Multiple Choice Questions (28/100): Please circle the correct answer for each of the 7 multiple-choice questions. In each question, only one of the answers is correct. Each question counts 4 points. 1.

More information

Aggregate Demand and Aggregate Supply

Aggregate Demand and Aggregate Supply Aggregate Demand and Aggregate Supply Aggregate Demand and Aggregate Supply The Learning Objectives in this presentation are covered in Chapter 20: Aggregate Demand and Aggregate Supply LEARNING OBJECTIVES

More information

Intermediate Macroeconomic Theory / Macroeconomic Analysis (ECON 3560/5040) Midterm Exam (Answers)

Intermediate Macroeconomic Theory / Macroeconomic Analysis (ECON 3560/5040) Midterm Exam (Answers) Intermediate Macroeconomic Theory / Macroeconomic Analysis (ECON 3560/5040) Midterm Exam (Answers) Part A (15 points) State whether you think each of the following questions is true (T), false (F), or

More information

Aggregate Supply and Aggregate Demand

Aggregate Supply and Aggregate Demand Aggregate Supply and Aggregate Demand ECO 301: Money and Banking 1 1.1 Goals Goals Specific Goals Be able to explain GDP fluctuations when the price level is also flexible. Explain how real GDP and the

More information

Lecture 12: Economic Fluctuations. Rob Godby University of Wyoming

Lecture 12: Economic Fluctuations. Rob Godby University of Wyoming Lecture 12: Economic Fluctuations Rob Godby University of Wyoming Short-Run Economic Fluctuations Economic activity fluctuates from year to year. In some years, the production of goods and services rises.

More information

= C + I + G + NX = Y 80r

= C + I + G + NX = Y 80r Economics 285 Chris Georges Help With ractice roblems 5 Chapter 12: 1. Questions For Review numbers 1,4 (p. 362). 1. We want to explain why an increase in the general price level () would cause equilibrium

More information

Opening the Economy. Topic 9

Opening the Economy. Topic 9 Opening the Economy Topic 9 Goals of Topic 9 What is the exchange rate? NX is back!! What is the link between the exchange rate and net exports? What is the trade deficit? How do different shocks affect

More information

MULTIPLE CHOICE. Choose the one alternative that best completes the statement or answers the question.

MULTIPLE CHOICE. Choose the one alternative that best completes the statement or answers the question. Econ 330 Spring 2015: FINAL EXAM Name ID Section Number MULTIPLE CHOICE. Choose the one alternative that best completes the statement or answers the question. 1) Suppose a report was released today that

More information

macro macroeconomics Money and Inflation (chapter 4) N. Gregory Mankiw The classical theory of inflation causes effects social costs

macro macroeconomics Money and Inflation (chapter 4) N. Gregory Mankiw The classical theory of inflation causes effects social costs macro Topic 7: (chapter 4) macroeconomics fifth edition N. Gregory Mankiw PowerPoint Slides by Ron Cronovich 2002 Worth Publishers, all rights reserved In this chapter you will learn The classical theory

More information

Topic 4: AS-AD Model Dealing with longer run; more variance; look at the role of wages and prices

Topic 4: AS-AD Model Dealing with longer run; more variance; look at the role of wages and prices Topic 4: AS-AD Model Dealing with longer run; more variance; look at the role of wages and prices Aggregate Supply-Aggregate Demand (AS-AD) Model: Diagram General price level measured by some price index

More information

MACROECONOMICS. N. Gregory Mankiw. Money and Inflation 8/15/2011. In this chapter, you will learn: The connection between money and prices

MACROECONOMICS. N. Gregory Mankiw. Money and Inflation 8/15/2011. In this chapter, you will learn: The connection between money and prices % change from 12 mos. earlier % change from 12 mos. earlier 2 0 1 0 U P D A T E S E V E N T H E D I T I O N 8/15/2011 MACROECONOMICS N. Gregory Mankiw PowerPoint Slides by Ron Cronovich C H A P T E R 4

More information

III. 9. IS LM: the basic framework to understand macro policy continued Text, ch 11

III. 9. IS LM: the basic framework to understand macro policy continued Text, ch 11 Objectives: To apply IS-LM analysis to understand the causes of short-run fluctuations in real GDP and the short-run impact of monetary and fiscal policies on the economy. To use the IS-LM model to analyse

More information

Macroeconomics 1 Lecture 11: ASAD model

Macroeconomics 1 Lecture 11: ASAD model Macroeconomics 1 Lecture 11: ASAD model Dr Gabriela Grotkowska Lecture objectives difference between short run & long run aggregate demand aggregate supply in the short run & long run see how model of

More information

Money and banking (First part) Macroeconomics Money and banking Money and its functions Different money types Modern banking Money creation

Money and banking (First part) Macroeconomics Money and banking Money and its functions Different money types Modern banking Money creation Money and banking (First part) Macroeconomics Money and banking Money and its functions Different money types Modern banking Money creation 1 What is money? It is a symbol of success, a source of crime,

More information

UNITS 12-13: FIXING AN ECONOMY: FISCAL & MONETARY POLICY WORKSHEET USE THE LECTURE NOTES TO ANSWER THE FOLLOWING QUESTIONS (10 pts each)

UNITS 12-13: FIXING AN ECONOMY: FISCAL & MONETARY POLICY WORKSHEET USE THE LECTURE NOTES TO ANSWER THE FOLLOWING QUESTIONS (10 pts each) DUE DATE: NAME: UNITS 12-13: FIXING AN ECONOMY: FISCAL & MONETARY POLICY WORKSHEET USE THE LECTURE NOTES TO ANSWER THE FOLLOWING QUESTIONS (10 pts each) 1. John Keynes suggested that government should

More information

Chapter 10 Aggregate Demand I CHAPTER 10 0

Chapter 10 Aggregate Demand I CHAPTER 10 0 Chapter 10 Aggregate Demand I CHAPTER 10 0 1 CHAPTER 10 1 2 Learning Objectives Chapter 9 introduced the model of aggregate demand and aggregate supply. Long run (Classical Theory) prices flexible output

More information

AGGREGATE DEMAND. 1. Keynes s Theory

AGGREGATE DEMAND. 1. Keynes s Theory AGGREGATE DEMAND 1. Keynes s Theory - John Maynard Keynes (1936) criticized classical theory for assuming that AS alone capital, labor, and technology determines national income proposed that low AD is

More information

Parkin/Bade, Economics: Canada in the Global Environment, 8e

Parkin/Bade, Economics: Canada in the Global Environment, 8e Chapter 24 Money, the Price Level, and Inflation 24.1 What Is Money? 1) Money is A) equivalent to barter. B) currency plus credit cards plus debit cards. C) the same as gold. D) a means of payment. E)

More information