Macroeconomic Policy Fundamentals

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Macroeconomic Policy Fundamentals Chapter 13 + Discussion Topics Characteristics of money Federal Reserve System Changing the money supply Money market equilibrium Effects of monetary policy on economy The federal budget deficit The national debt Fiscal policy options Irving Fisher 1867-1947 Yale economist - eccentric and colorful Founder of monetary macroeconomic theory Life Son of a minister Graduate of Yale - dissertation Married, two daughters and a son TB Became an activist for health issues Advisor to Benito Mussolini? Inventor visible card index system similar to rolodex, founder of company eventually becoming Sperry Rand (now part of Unisys and Honeywell $10 million to rags 1

Functions of Money Medium of exchange facilitates payment to others for goods and services Unit of accounting assessing profitability of businesses, household budgets and aggregate variables like GDP Store of value money is a liquid asset which has value in investment portfolios and cash flow decisions of businesses and households Gold Standard Certificate Payable in Gold Coins The gold standard is a monetary system in the medium of exchange are paper notes that are normally freely convertible into pre-set, fixed quantities of gold. The gold standard is not currently used by any governments, having been replaced completely by fiat currency. Fiat money is money declared by a government to be legal tender. Silver Certificate Silver Certificate Legal Tender Payable in Silver Silver Certificates were printed from 1878 to 1964 in response to citizens who were angered by the Fourth Coinage Act, which had effectively placed the United States on a gold standard. The certificates were initially redeemable in the same face value of silver dollar coins. Since 1968 they have been redeemable only in Federal Reserve Notes and are thus obsolete, but are still valid legal tender. 2

Fiat Money Paper currency are called Federal Reserve Notes Bank of Origin Legal Tender Fiduciary Monetary System Value of money rests on the public s belief that a piece of paper can be exchanged for goods and services Three reasons why a fiduciary system has value Money is acceptable by others when purchasing goods and services Money has been designated legal tender by the federal government Predictable value a dollar is a dollar Definition of money M1, M2, and M3 Federal Reserve System - Fed Country s central bank - created in December 1914 12 Districts Major goals Encourage economic growth Combat both inflationary and recessionary tendencies in the domestic economy Lower transaction costs / banking Accomplishes goals Regulating quantity and cost of credit Regulating banks and acts as a clearing house 3

Functions of the Fed Supply the economy with paper currency Supervise member banks Provide check collection and clearing services Maintain the reserve balances of depository institutions Lend to depository institutions Act at the federal government s banker and fiscal agent Regulate the money supply Determinants of the Money Supply Money Supply How Determined Scenario $200,000 in the economy Banks can loan out deposits Banks must keep 40% of the deposit on hand Why? How much money is in the economy, if all $200,000 is deposited initially in a bank and all loaned out. 4

Bank Change in Deposits Change in Reserves = deposit *0.4 Change in Loans = deposit - reserve A 200,000 80,000 120,000 B 120,000 48,000 72,000 C 72,000 28,800 43,200 D 43,200 17,280 25,920 subtotal 435,200 174,080 261,120 Etc. Money Supply Continued Other banks 64,800 25,920 38,880 Total 500,000 200,000 300,000 Change in the Money Supply We can skip tracing deposits through the economy by using the following money supply (M S ) equation: M S = (1.0 RR) TR = MM TR where TR represents total reserves and RR is the reserve requirement ratio. The expression with the brackets is known as the money multiplier. We can restate this equation in terms of the change in the money supply as follows: M S = (1.0 RR) TR = MM TR Back to the Example Using the $200,000 deposit and 40% reserve requirements ratio, the change in the money supply is M S = (1.0 RR) x TR = MM x TR = (1.0 0.40) x 200,000 = 2.5 x 200,000 = $500,000 Money Multiplier This results in a change in loans of of 2.5 Interpretation? loans = MS - TR = $500,000 - $200,000 = $300,000 If RR = 0.1 what is MM, MS, and loans? 5

Interest rate Money Supply Existing money supply curve. Note it is perpendicular to the quantity axis, implying it is unaffected by the interest rate. M C M S M E Expansionary shift Expansionary monetary policy actions will shift the M S curve to the right. Contractionary shift Contractionary monetary policy actions will shift M S curve to the left. Quantity of Money The Fed s Policy Tools Reserve requirements depository institutions are required to maintain a specific fraction of their customers deposits as reserves MM Discount rate rate depository institutions pay when they borrow from the Fed - TR Open market operations Fed can buy or sell government securities to alter the money supply - TR Impacts of Policy Tools Expansionary actions Effects of action Fed buys securities Total reserves increase Fed lowers the discount rate Total reserves increase Fed lowers required reserve ratio Money multiplier increases Contractionary actions Fed sells securities Fed raises the discount rate Fed raises required reserve ratio Effects of action Total reserves decrease Total reserves decrease Money multiplier decreases MS = MM TR Powell 6

Reserve Requirement As of November 2017 Transaction Accounts Amounts 0 16 million 0% 16 122.3 million 3% > 122.3 million 10% Open Market Operations 1/1/2003-7/1/2017 Yellen Discount Rate 2/1/1950-1/4/2017 Yellen 7

Federal Fund Rate1/7/1954-10/1/2017 Yellen Determinants of the Money Demand Demand for Money Transactions demand for money carry cash to pay for normal expenditures Precautionary demand for money carry cash to cover unexpected expenditures Speculative demand for money hold cash as an asset in investment portfolios since the value of cash does not decline during periods of falling asset prices. 8

Interest rate Interest rate Interest rate Demand for Money M D The money demand curve is given by MD = c d x R where R is the rate of interest Quantity of Money Downward sloping why? Interest rate cost of holding money Movement along the demand curve vs. shift in the demand curve Demand for Money M D Increase in national income leads to an increase in demand for money. Why? Decrease in national income leads to an decrease in demand for money. Why? Quantity of Money Equilibrium Money Market R* M D M S Money market interest rate given by intersection of money demand and money supply Quantity of Money 9

Interest rate Monetary Policy M C M S M E Contractionary Policy leads to an increase in the interest rate Expansionary policy leads to a decrease in the interest rate R* M D Quantity of Money How Monetary Policy Works Change in monetary policy Change in excess reserves Multiple changes in money supply Change in the interest rate Change in planned investment Change in national income The full effects of this change could take 12 months or more to register in bank deposits A change in the money supply alters the equilibrium interest rate in the money market A change in interest rates leads to movement along the planned investment function.increasing or decreasing new investment Changes in investment expenditures, a component of GDP, changes the demand for labor, changes unemployment and affects growth in national income Money Supply and GDP - Quarterly Fed increases money supply during recessions to increase GDP notice lag GDP decreased before money supply increase 10

Price Level Price Level Eliminating Recessionary and Inflationary Gaps Recessionary Gap AS Current equilibrium Y 0 and P 0 P 0 AD 0 What is the magnitude of the recessionary gap? Y 0 Y FE Y POT Aggregate Output It is Y FE Y 0 Monetary Policy to Increase AD P 1 P 0 AD 0 AD 1 AS The use of expansionary monetary policy actions to push aggregate demand from AD 0 to AD 1 increases real GDP from Y 0 to Y 1 while only increasing the general price level to P 1. Y 0 Y 1 Y FE Inflation rate (P 1 P 0 ) P 0 Aggregate Output Y POT Recessionary gap of Y FE Y 0 is partially closed to Y FE Y 1 11

Price Level Price Level Monetary Policy to Increase AD P 2 P 1 P 0 AD 0 AD 1 AD 2 AS The further use of expansionary monetary policy to push aggregate demand from AD 1 to AD 2 increases real GDP from Y 1 to Y FE (full employment GDP), but increases the general price level to P 2. Inflation rate (P 2 P 1 ) P 1 Y 0 Y Y FE Y 1 POT Aggregate Output Recessionary gap Closed Y E = Y FE Monetary Policy to Increase AD P 3 P 2 P 1 AD 0 AD 1 AD 2 AD 3 AS The use of expansionary monetary policy to attain Y POT by shifting aggregate demand to AD 3 will increase the general price level to P 3. P 0 Inflation rate (P 3 P 2 ) P 2 Y 0 Y Y FE Y 1 POT Aggregate Output Inflationary gap Created Y E = Y POT > Y FE What is Fiscal Policy? Taxation by federal, state and local governments Major revenue sources - sales, property, and income Government spending by federal state and local governments Budget deficits and the national debt Many states / local balanced budget 12

States Revenue Sources Nine states do not have a state income tax but New Hampshire and Tennessee tax dividends and interest AK, FL, NV, SD, TX, WA, WY, NH, TN Five states do not have a state sales tax (may have a local sales tax) Alaska Delaware Montana New Hampshire Oregon All states appear to have some type of property taxes http://www.kiplinger.com/tools/retiree_map/index.html?map=2 https://files.taxfoundation.org/legacy/docs/lost--2015.png http://taxfoundation.org/article/state-local-tax-burden-rankings-fy-2012 13

2012 State and Local Tax Burden Least Friendly Most Friendly State Rate % State Rate % New York 12.7 Alaska 6.5 Connecticut 12.6 South Dakota 7.1 New Jersey 12.2 Wyoming 7.1 Wisconsin 11.0 Tennessee 7.3 Illinois 11.0 Texas 7.6 U.S. Average 9.9% http://taxfoundation.org/article/state-local-tax-burden-rankings-fy-2012 http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/file:us_federal_debt_as_percent_of_gdp_by_president.jpg Debt and the Deficit 1940-2010 National debt T = National debt T-1 + Deficit T Debt as a Percent of GDP -1939-2016 14

http://www.advisorperspectives.com/dshort/updates/debt-taxes-and-politics.php http://www.advisorperspectives.com/dshort/updates/debt-taxes-and-politics.php Debt Longer Term http://www.usgovernmentspending.com/federal_debt 15

Housing Values http://www.ritholtz.com/blog Housing Values Jan 87- Aug 17 http://www.standardandpoors.com/indices/sp-case-shiller-home-price-indices/en/us/?indexid=spusa-cashpidff--p-us---- Individuals and not businesses pay the Bulk of federal taxes. 16

Federal Receipts % - 2016 Notice percentages change by year, recession and tax changes Federal Receipts Billions - 2016 Notice amount change by year, recession and tax changes Federal Receipts 17

June 1901 Sept. 2017 A strong economy and controlled spending led to the first budget surplus in more than 20 years The effects of the sub-prime lending defaults and subsequent financial crisis and deficit spending have led to record high deficits June 1939 Sept. 2016 The growth in federal debt has grown rapidly over the last 25+ years Current debt = $20.46 Trillion November 2, 2017 Debt per citizen = $62,720 What comes after a trillion? quadrillion 1 x 10 15 http://www.usdebtclock.org/ Federal government spending on agriculture programs is the fourth highest on this list of total federal spending. http://www.federalbudget.com/ 18

Department of Ag. Spending 2016 Fiscal Policy Options Automatic fiscal policy instruments - take effect without explicit action by policymakers (e.g., progressive tax rates) Discretionary fiscal policy instruments - require explicit actions by the president or Congress (e.g., passing a law) Impacts of Policy Tools Expansionary actions Cut taxes Increase government spending Contractionary actions Increase taxes Cut government spending Effects of action Increase disposable income Increase aggregate demand Effects of action Decrease disposable income Decrease aggregate demand Congress & Trump 19

Price Level Price Level Crowding Out Government spending exceeds taxes Government budget deficit occurs Treasury sells more bonds Interest rates rise Some planned investment crowded out by high rates A federal budget deficit requires the U.S. Treasury to issue more government securities to balance sources and uses of funds An increase in the sale of government securities reduces the pool of private capital available to finance investment expenditures, raising interest rates Higher interest rates depresses investment expenditures Fiscal Policy to Increase AD P 1 P 0 AD 0 AD 1 AS The use of expansionary fiscal policy actions to push aggregate demand from AD 0 to AD 1 increases real GDP from Y o to Y 1 while only increasing the general price level to P 1. Inflation rate (P 1 P 0 ) P 0 Y 0 Y Y FE Y 1 POT Aggregate Output Recessionary gap of Y FE Y 0 is partially closed to Y FE Y 1 Fiscal Policy to Increase AD P 2 P 1 P 0 AD 0 AD 1 AD 2 AS The use of expansionary fiscal policy to push demand from AD 1 to AD 2 increases real GDP from Y 1 to Y FE (full employment GDP), but increases the general price level to P 2. Inflation rate (P 2 P 1 ) P 1 Y 0 Y Y FE Y 1 POT Aggregate Output Recessionary gap Closed Y E = Y FE 20

Price Level Fiscal Policy to Increase AD P 3 P 2 P 1 P 0 AD 0 AD 1 AD 2 AD 3 AS The use of expansionary fiscal policy to attain Y POT by shifting aggregate demand to AD 3 will increase the general price level to P 3. Inflation rate (P 3 P 2 ) P 2 Y 0 Y Y FE Y 1 POT Aggregate Output Inflationary gap Created Y E = Y POT > Y FE Monetary Policy Summary Functions of money and the role of the Federal Reserve System in the economy The money multiplier and the growth of the money supply Tools of monetary policy Demand for money and money market equilibrium Policy linkages and timing of full effects Elimination of recessionary and inflationary gaps. Fiscal Policy Summary Difference between discretionary and automatic fiscal policy tools Expansionary and contractionary fiscal policy actions Application to eliminating recessionary and inflationary gaps Budget deficits, national debt and concept of crowding out 21