Chapter 13
Two Most Common Measures of Money: M2
M1 plus other assets, including deposits in savings and loans accounts and money market mutual funds (savings deposits are the largest component of M2)
The Federal Reserve: central bank
a banker's bank (provides loans to banks): an official bank that controls the supply of money in a country
The Federal Reserve: lender of last resort
a central bank is the lender of last resort, the last place, all others having failed, form which banks in emergency situations can obtain loans
Different Types of Monetary Systems: gold standard
a monetary system in which gold backs up paper money
Different Types of Monetary Systems: fiat money
a monetary system in which money has no intrinsic value but is backed by the government - people just accept currency; unstable b/c people could lose confidence in the US dollar
Different Types of Monetary Systems: commodity money
a monetary system in which the actual money is a commodity, such as gold or silver (in war used cigarettes)
Three Properties of Money (2) money serves as a Unit of Account
a standard unit in which prices can e stated and the value of goods and services can be compared (*not "moola" b/c can't use it to pay taxes*)
How did the Fed Manage to Keep the Financial System in Operation Immediately Following the Attacks on 9/11
allowed banks to borrow more, allowed float to increase sharply (lending a lot of money), purchased gov securities (bonds), thereby preventing a financial panic
How Banks Create Money: balance sheet
an account statement for a bank that shows the sources of tis funds (liabilities - money you owe back to someone else) as well as the sues of its funds (assists - the IOU and income stream you get)
How Banks Create Money: excess reserves
any additional reserves that a bank hold above required reserves
Three Properties of Money (1) money serves as a Medium of Exchange
any item that buyers give to sellers when they purchase goods and services
Why would a bank want to lend out everything they could (no excess reserves)?
b/c that's how they make their money!
Why do People Generally Only Hold Liquid Assets if They Plan to Spend Them?
b/c the opportunity cost of having cash is not getting the rate of return you'd have gotten if you'd have put your money in savings
Fractional Reserve
bank holds a fraction of your wealth at the bank and the rest is being lent out - you get compensated for this risk and less liquid by giving you a deposit rate
Different Types of Monetary Systems: gold standard - problem
causes huge distortions if you find more gold
How did the Fed Successfully Respond to the Collapse of Major Financial Institutions in 2008
developed new programs that bypassed the banking system b/c the banks were just keeping the money in reserves so it wasn't helping at all. purchased the short term debt of corporations, extended loans to money market funds, and payed interest on reserves held at the fed
Functions of the Federal Reserve: (1) the fed supplies currency to the economy
fed tells treasury how much money to print; also provides currency to back all electronic and checking deposits
Functions of the Federal Reserve: (3) the fed holds reserves from banks and other depository institutions and regulates banks
holds reserves form banks, and regulates banks to ensure they are complying with rules and regulations; ensures financial system is safe
The Structure of the Federal Reserve: federal reserve bank
one of 12 regional banks that are an official part of the Federal Reserve System (banks regulated by government - still money making banks!) serve as a liaison b/w the Fed and the banks in their districts
The Independence of the Federal Reserve
politicians not in charge therefore not held politically accountable and can think long-term. chairperson of the board is required to report to Congress on a regular basis, but in practice, the fed makes its own decisions and later informs Congress.
Functions of the Federal Reserve: (2) the fed provides a system of check collection and clearing
responsible for making our system of complex financial transactions "work"; Fed makes sure Freda's banks receives the funds from Paul's bank when he writes her a check
Measurement of the Money Supply Helps Us Predict
spending (AD in the Keynesian model) and prices (in both models)
The Structure of the Federal Reserve: board of governors of the federal reserve
the 7-person governing body of the federal reserve system in Washington DC
Three Properties of Money (1) money serves as a medium of exchange - Barter is the Alternative
the exchange of one good or service for another - barter economies are very primitive; produce general needs and goods - can't save
How Banks Create Money: owners' equity
the funds provided to a bank by its owners
The Structure of the Federal Reserve: federal open market committee (FOMC)
the group that decides on monetary policy: it consists of the 7members of the board of governors plus 5 of 12 regional bank presidents on a rotating basis (internal checks and balances)
How Banks Create Money: reserves
the portion of banks' deposits set aside in either vault cash or as deposits at the Federal Reserve (for daily spending)
Three Properties of Money (1) money serves as a medium of exchange - Double Coincidence of Wants
the problem in a system of barter that one person may not have what the other desires - if i'm selling med services and you're selling fruit and I don't like fruit, then you don't get med services
Three Properties of Money (3) money serves as a Store of Value
the property of money that holds that money preserves value until it is used in an exchange
Functions of the Federal Reserve: (4) the fed conducts monetary policy
the range of actions taken by the Federal Reserve to influence the level of GDP or inflation
How Banks Create Money: reserve ratio
the ratio of reserves to deposits
Money Multiplier
the ratio of the increase in total checking account deposits to an initial cash deposit (a fall in cash deposits works in the opposite direction, decreasing the money supply)
How Banks Create Money: liabilities
the sources of funds for a bank, including deposits and owners' equity (the money I have to play with)
How Banks Create Money: required reserves
the specific fraction of their deposits that banks are required by law to hold as reserves
Two Most Common Measures of Money: M1
the sum of currency (cash) in the hands of the public, demand deposits, other checkable deposits, and traveler's checks (this used to be a very good predictor of spending) (currency is the largest component of M1)
How Banks Create Money: assets
the uses of the funds of a bank, including loans and reserves
Banks Are Financial Intermediaries
they affect long-run GDP and real wages by increasing the efficiency with which households lend to firms
Banks Affect the Money Supply
they create loans, which creates AD and short-run GDP. they affect prices as well
What is Money?
wealth we're using to buy stuff - don't want all wealth in money; want to minimize money b/c doesn't have a rate of return