Krugman/Wells. The following materials are taken from Chap. 26, Economics, 2 nd ed., Krugman and Wells(2009), Worth Palgrave MaCmillan.

Similar documents
chapter: Savings, Investment Spending, and the Financial System Krugman/Wells 1 of Worth Publishers

Practice Problems: Chapter 10 Savings, Investment Spending, and the Financial System

Saving, Investment, and the Financial System

PRODUCTION and GROWTH. Mankiw, Chapter 25 Krugman, Chapter 25

The Financial System. FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS IN THE U.S. ECONOMY Financial Markets Stock Market Bond Market

SAVING, INVESTMENT, AND THE FINANCIAL SYSTEM

Saving, Investment, and the Financial System

Savings, Investment Spending, and the Financial System

5. What is the Savings-Investment Spending Identity? Savings = Investment Spending for the economy as a whole

FINANCE, SAVING, AND INVESTMENT

The Financial Sector. section FUNNY MONEY

In this chapter, look for the answers to these questions

6 The Open Economy. This chapter:

SAVING, INVESTMENT, AND THE FINANCIAL SYSTEM

FINANCE, SAVING, AND INVESTMENT

AGGREGATE DEMAND, AGGREGATE SUPPLY, AND INFLATION. Chapter 25

The Financial System. Sherif Khalifa. Sherif Khalifa () The Financial System 1 / 52

Long Run vs. Short Run

ECON Intermediate Macroeconomic Theory

Chapter 7. SAVING, INVESTMENT and FINIANCE. Income not spent is saved. Where do those dollars go?

Chapter 7. SAVING, INVESTMENT and FINIANCE. Income not spent is saved. Where do those dollars go?

Chapter# The Level and Structure of Interest Rates

Aggregate Demand and Aggregate Supply

The Financial System. Sherif Khalifa. Sherif Khalifa () The Financial System 1 / 55

ECON 1010 Principles of Macroeconomics Solutions to Exam #3. Section A: Multiple Choice Questions. (30 points; 2 pts each)

Class Notes. Chapter 5 Saving and Investment in the Open Economy Learning Objectives

Fig. 1. The orthodox liquidity market model

Economics 102 Fall 2015 Answers to Homework #4 Due Monday, November 9, 2015

MACROECONOMICS. Semester 2, 2016 ECF1200

Economic Growth, the Financial System, and the Business Cycle

Financial Strategy First Test

Chapter 26 Savings and Investments

A Macroeconomic Theory of the Open Economy

ECON 3303 Money and Banking Final Exam. MULTIPLE CHOICE. Choose the one alternative that best completes the statement or answers the question.

Chapter 7. Production and Growth Saving, Investment and the Financial System

Economic Growth and the Financial system

The Demand for Money. Lecture Notes for Chapter 7 of Macroeconomics: An Introduction. In this chapter we will discuss -

2015 Pearson. Why have interest rates been so low?

ECON 3010 Intermediate Macroeconomics Chapter 6

Disclaimer: This resource package is for studying purposes only EDUCATION

Midsummer Examinations 2013

An Introduction to Basic Macroeconomic Markets

Monetary Policy and EMU Introduction Why Study Money and Monetary Policy?

Ch. 2 AN OVERVIEW OF THE FINANCIAL SYSTEM

ECON 314: MACROECONOMICS II CONSUMPTION

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

Lower prices. Lower costs, esp. wages. Higher productivity. Higher quality/more desirable exports. Greater natural resources. Higher interest rates

EC 205 Lecture 20 04/05/15

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

National Income & Business Cycles

Econ 100B: Macroeconomic Analysis Fall 2008

Money & Capital Markets Exam 1: Chapters 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 & 6. Name. Multiple Choice: 4 points each

Financial Institutions, Markets, and Money, 9 th Edition

1. Under what condition will the nominal interest rate be equal to the real interest rate?

Macroeconomics I International Group Course

Economics. Saving, Investment, and the Financial System CHAPTER. N. Gregory Mankiw. Principles of. Seventh Edition. Wojciech Gerson ( )

Text transcription of Chapter 8 Savings, Investment and the Financial System

AND INVESTMENT * Chapt er. Key Concepts

EconS 102: Mid Term 3 Date: July 14th, Name: WSU ID:

a) Calculate the value of government savings (Sg). Is the government running a budget deficit or a budget surplus? Show how you got your answer.

Aggregate Demand and the Powerful Consumer

The Influence of Monetary and Fiscal Policy on Aggregate Demand

Title: Principle of Economics Saving and investment

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

Economic 100B Macroeconomic Analysis Professor Steven Wood. Exam #1 ANSWERS

THE INFLUENCE OF MONETARY AND FISCAL POLICY ON AGGREGATE DEMAND

Lecture 7. Fiscal Policy

Macroeonomics. Saving, Investment, and the Financial System 8/29/2012. Financial Institutions

INTRODUCTION TO MACRO ECONOMICS. Zoubida SAMLAL - MBA, CFA Member, PHD candidate for HBS program

Economics 1012A: Introduction to Macroeconomics FALL 2007 Dr. R. E. Mueller Third Midterm Examination November 15, 2007

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

Chapter 03 Bonds and Loanable Funds

Econ 102 Exam 2 Name ID Section Number

The business of making money. Rate of return of a simple asset /1. The role of financial assets /2

Saving, Investment and Capital Markets I. The World of Finance and its Macroeconomic Significance October 11 th, 2017

1. Primary markets are markets in which users of funds raise cash by selling securities to funds' suppliers.

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

LECTURE VI. 17 July Tuesday, July 17, 12

Chapter 6. The Open Economy

ECON 201: Introduction to Macroeconomics Professor Robert Gordon Final Exam: March 18, 2016

May 18, Chapter 12 Money.notebook. Dec 2 8:03 PM. Dec 2 8:10 PM. Dec 2 8:33 PM. Dec 2 8:23 PM

Macroeconomics: Principles, Applications, and Tools

Aggregate Demand in Keynesian Analysis

Saving, Investment, and the Financial System. Premium PowerPoint Slides by Ron Cronovich, Updated by Vance Ginn

CHAPTER 3 National Income: Where It Comes From and Where It Goes

Financial Institutions

file:///c:/users/moha/desktop/mac8e/new folder (13)/CourseComp...

Chapter 12 Money.notebook. February 03, 2017

Dr. Barry Haworth University of Louisville Department of Economics Economics 202. Midterm #2

Net Exports and Capital Flows: Linking Financial and Goods Markets

THE INFLUENCE OF MONETARY AND FISCAL POLICY ON AGGREGATE DEMAND. Chapter 34

Midsummer Examinations 2011

a. What is your interpretation of the slope of the consumption function?

See Barro, Macroeconomics, Chapter 14, Public debt, page 256, column 1, Figure 14-1

Midterm 1 Practice Multiple Choice Questions

AP Macroeconomics. The Loanable Funds Market

Define inflation. Define price level. Define deflation. Deflation. Define disinflation. The average price of goods and services in the economy

Dunbar s Big Review Sheet AP Macroeconomics Exam Content Area [Hubbard Textbook pages] (percentage coverage on AP Macroeconomics Exam) I.

Open Economy. Sherif Khalifa. Sherif Khalifa () Open Economy 1 / 70

Saving, Investment, and the Financial System

Transcription:

chapter: 26 Krugman/Wells The following materials are taken from Chap. 26, Economics, 2 nd ed., Krugman and Wells(2009), Worth Palgrave MaCmillan. 2009 Worth Publishers 1 of 58

WHAT YOU WILL LEARN IN THIS CHAPTER The relationship between savings and investment spending Aspects of the loanable funds market, which shows how savers are matched with borrowers The purpose of the five principal types of assets: stocks, bonds, loans, real estate and bank deposits How financial intermediaries help investors achieve diversification Some competing views of what determines stock prices and why stock market fluctuations can be a source of macroeconomic instability 2 of 58

Matching Up Savings and Investment Spending According to the savings investment spending identity, savings and investment spending are always equal for the economy as a whole. The budget surplus is the difference between tax revenue and government spending when tax revenue exceeds government spending. The budget deficit is the difference between tax revenue and government spending when government spending exceeds tax revenue. 3 of 58

Matching Up Savings and Investment Spending The budget balance is the difference between tax revenue and government spending. National savings, the sum of private savings plus the budget balance, is the total amount of savings generated within the economy. Capital inflow is the net inflow of funds into a country. 4 of 58

The Savings Investment Spending Identity In a simplified economy: (1) Total Income = Total Spending (2) Total income = Consumption spending + Savings Meanwhile, spending consists of either consumption spending or investment spending: (3) Total spending = Consumption spending + Investment spending Putting these together, we get: (4) Consumption spending + Savings = Consumption spending + Investment spending Subtract consumption spending from both sides, and we get: (5) Savings = Investment spending 5 of 58

The Savings Investment Spending Identity In a simplified economy: GDP = C + I + G SPrivate = GDP + TR T C SGovernment = T TR G NS = SPrivate + SGovernment = (GDP + TR T C) + (T TR G) = GDP C G Hence, I = NS Investment spending = National savings in a closed economy 6 of 58

The Savings Investment Spending Identity (a) United States (b) Japan Share of GDP 25% Share of GDP 25% 20 15 10 5 0 5 10 15 Investment spending Budget deficit Savings Capital inflows Private savings 20 15 10 5 0 5 10 15 Investment spending Capital outflows Budget deficit Savings Private savings 7 of 58

The Savings Investment Spending Identity Investment spending = National savings + Capital inflow in an open economy I = SPrivate + SGovernment + (IM X) = NS + KI 8 of 58

The Market for Loanable Funds The loanable funds market is a hypothetical market that examines the market outcome of the demand for funds generated by borrowers and the supply of funds provided by lenders. The interest rate is the price, calculated as a percentage of the amount borrowed, charged by the lender to a borrower for the use of their savings for one year. 9 of 58

The Market for Loanable Funds The rate of return on a project is the profit earned on the project expressed as a percentage of its cost. 10 of 58

The Demand for Loanable Funds Interest rate 12% A 4 B Demand for loanable funds, D 0 $150 450 Quantity of loanable funds (billions of dollars) 11 of 58

The Supply for Loanable Funds Interest rate Supply of loanable funds, S 12% Y 4 X 0 $150 450 Quantity of loanable funds (billions of dollars) 12 of 58

Equilibrium in the Loanable Funds Market Interest rate Projects with rate of return 8% or greater are funded. 12% Offers not accepted from lenders who demand interest rate of more than 8%. r* 8 Projects with rate of return less than 8% are not funded. 4 0 Offers accepted from lenders willing to lend at interest rate of 8% or less. $300 Quantity of loanable funds Q* (billions of dollars) 13 of 58

Shifts of the Demand for Loanable Funds Factors that can cause the demand curve for loanable funds to shift include: Changes in perceived business opportunities Changes in the government s borrowing Crowding out occurs when a government deficit drives up the interest rate and leads to reduced investment spending. 14 of 58

An Increase in the Demand for Loanable Funds Interest rate S... leads to a rise in the equilibrium interest rate. r 2 r 1 An increase in the demand for loanable funds... D 2 D 1 Quantity of loanable funds 15 of 58

Shifts of the Supply for Loanable Funds Factors that can cause the supply of loanable funds to shift include: Changes in private savings behavior: Between 2000 and 2006 rising home prices in the United States made many homeowners feel richer, making them willing to spend more and save less This shifted the supply of loanable funds to the left. Changes in capital inflows: The U.S. has received large capital inflows in recent years, with much of the money coming from China and the Middle East. Those inflows helped fuel a big increase in residential investment spending from 2003 to 2006. As a result of the worldwide slump, those inflows began to trail off in 2008. 16 of 58

An Increase in the Supply of Loanable Funds Interest rate S 1 S 2... leads to a fall in the equilibrium interest rate. r 1 r 2 An increase in the supply for loanable funds... D Quantity of loanable funds 17 of 58

Inflation and Interest Rates Anything that shifts either the supply of loanable funds curve or the demand for loanable funds curve changes the interest rate. Historically, major changes in interest rates have been driven by many factors, including: changes in government policy. technological innovations that created new investment opportunities. 18 of 58

Inflation and Interest Rates However, arguably the most important factor affecting interest rates over time is changing expectations about future inflation. This shifts both the supply and the demand for loanable funds. This is the reason, for example, that interest rates today are much lower than they were in the late 1970s and early 1980s. 19 of 58

Inflation and Interest Rates Real interest rate = nominal interest rate - inflation rate In the real world neither borrowers nor lenders know what the future inflation rate will be when they make a deal. Actual loan contracts, therefore, specify a nominal interest rate rather than a real interest rate. 20 of 58

The Fisher Effect According to the Fisher effect, an increase in expected future inflation drives up the nominal interest rate, leaving the expected real interest rate unchanged. 21 of 58

The Fisher Effect Nominal Interest rate Demand for loanable funds at 10% expected inflation Supply of loanable funds at 10% expected inflation 14% E 10 S 10 Demand for loanable funds at 0% expected inflation Supply of loanable funds at 0% expected inflation D 10 S 0 4 E 0 D 0 0 Q* Quantity of loanable funds 22 of 58

ECONOMICS IN ACTION Changes in the U.S. Interest Rates Over Time (a) Changes in Expected Inflation and Interest Rates (b) Changes in Expected Rate of Return on Investment Spending and Interest Rates 10-Year Treasury constant maturity rate, inflation rate 10-Year Treasury constant maturity rate 16% 14 12 10 8 6 4 2 7% 6 5 4 3 1958 1970 1980 1990 2000 2008 Year 1998 2000 2002 2004 2006 2008 Year 23 of 58

The Financial System A household s wealth is the value of its accumulated savings. A financial asset is a paper claim that entitles the buyer to future income from the seller. A physical asset is a claim on a tangible object that gives the owner the right to dispose of the object as he or she wishes. 24 of 58

The Financial System A liability is a requirement to pay income in the future. Transaction costs are the expenses of negotiating and executing a deal. Financial risk is uncertainty about future outcomes that involve financial losses and gains. 25 of 58

The Financial System (a) Typical Individual (b) Wealthy Individual Change in individual welfare $1,000 Wealth gain from gaining $1,000 Change in individual welfare $1,000 Wealth gain from gaining $1,000 0 0 2,000 Wealth loss from losing $1,000 1,200 Wealth loss from losing $1,000 26 of 58

Three Tasks of a Financial System Reducing transaction costs the cost of making a deal. Reducing financial risk uncertainty about future outcomes that involves financial gains and losses. Providing liquid assets assets that can be quickly converted into cash (in contrast to illiquid assets, which can t). 27 of 58

Three Tasks of a Financial System An individual can engage in diversification by investing in several different things so that the possible losses are independent events. An asset is liquid if it can be quickly converted into cash. An asset is illiquid if it cannot be quickly converted into cash. 28 of 58

Types of Financial Assets There are four main types of financial assets: loans bonds stocks bank deposits In addition, financial innovation has allowed the creation of a wide range of loan-backed securities. 29 of 58

Types of Financial Assets A loan is a lending agreement between a particular lender and a particular borrower. A default occurs when a borrower fails to make payments as specified by the loan or bond contract. A loan-backed security is an asset created by pooling individual loans and selling shares in that pool. 30 of 58

Financial Intermediaries A financial intermediary is an institution that transforms the funds it gathers from many individuals into financial assets. A mutual fund is a financial intermediary that creates a stock portfolio and then resells shares of this portfolio to individual investors. A pension fund is a type of mutual fund that holds assets in order to provide retirement income to its members. 31 of 58

Financial Intermediaries A life insurance company sells policies that guarantee a payment to a policyholder s beneficiaries when the policyholder dies. A bank deposit is a claim on a bank that obliges the bank to give the depositor his or her cash when demanded. A bank is a financial intermediary that provides liquid assets in the form of bank deposits to lenders and uses those funds to finance the illiquid investments or investment spending needs of borrowers. 32 of 58

An Example of a Diversified Mutual Fund Fidelity Spartan S&P 500 Index Fund, Top Holdings (as of September 2008) Company Percent of mutual fund assets invested in a company Exxon Mobil 3.96% General Electric 2.49 Procter & Gamble 2.08 Microsoft 2.06 Johnson & Johnson 1.90 JPMorgan Chase 1.69 Chevron 1.66 AT&T 1.62 Bank of America 1.57 IBM 1.56 33 of 58

ECONOMICS IN ACTION Banks and the South Korean Miracle In the early 1960s, South Korea s interest rates on deposits were very low at a time when the country was experiencing high inflation. So savers didn t want to save by putting money in a bank, fearing that much of their purchasing power would be eroded by rising prices. Instead, they engaged in current consumption by spending their money on goods and services or on physical assets such as real estate and gold. In 1965 the South Korean government reformed the country s banks and increased interest rates. Over the next five years the value of bank deposits increased 600% and the national savings rate more than doubled. The rejuvenated banking system made it possible for South Korean businesses to launch a great investment boom, a key element in the country s growth surge. 34 of 58

Financial Fluctuations Financial market fluctuations can be a source of macroeconomic instability. Stock prices are determined by supply and demand as well as the desirability of competing assets, like bonds: when the interest rate rises, stock prices generally fall and vice versa. 35 of 58

Financial Fluctuations The value of a financial asset today depends on investors beliefs about the future value or price of the asset. If investors believe that it will be worth more in the future, they will demand more of the asset today at any given price. Consequently, today s equilibrium price of the asset will rise. 36 of 58

Financial Fluctuations If investors believe the asset will be worth less in the future, they will demand less today at any given price. Consequently, today s equilibrium price of the asset will fall. Today s stock prices will change according to changes in investors expectations about future stock prices. 37 of 58

Financial Fluctuations Financial market fluctuations can be a source of macroeconomic instability. There are two principal competing views about how asset price expectations are determined. One view, which comes from traditional economic analysis, emphasizes the rational reasons why expectations should change. The other, widely held by market participants and also supported by some economists, emphasizes the irrationality of market participants. 38 of 58

Financial Fluctuations One view of how expectations are formed is the efficient markets hypothesis, which holds that the prices of financial assets embody all publicly available information. It implies that fluctuations are inherently unpredictable they follow a random walk. 39 of 58