UNIT 4:
3/4/16
I. USES OF MONEY a. Medium of Exchange:
- Trade & Barter
- Establishes economic worth in exchange process
- Ex: Cake as payment
- Money holds its value over a period of time whereas products may not.
II. TYPES OF MONEY
a. Commodity Money:
- It gets its value from the type of material from which it is made.
- Ex: Gold coins made from gold
- Paper money that is backed up by something tangible that gives it value
- It is money because the government says so and because it is the money used in the U.S.
III: CHARACTERISTICS OF MONEY
a. Portable
b. Durable
c. Uniform
d. Scarce
e. Acceptable
f. Divisible
IV: MONEY SUPPLY
a. M1 Money:
- Currency - broken down into cash and coins
- Checkable Deposits
- Travelers' Check - 2-3 signatures to actually use
- 75% most liquid ---> easy to convert to cash
b. M2 Money:
- Consists of M1 Money + Savings Accounts and deposits held by banks outside the U.S.
- Not as liquid as M1 Money
c. M3 Money:
3/9/16
Time Value of Money:
- Is a dollar today worth more than a dollar tomorrow?
- Yes.
- Why?
- Opportunity cost & inflation
- This is the reason for charging & paying interest
- Let v = future value of $
r = real interest rate (nominal rate - inflation rate)
n = years
k = number of times interest is credited per year
The Simple Interest Formula:
- Formula: v = (1 + r)n * p
- Formula: V = (1 + r/k)nk * p
Decrease of money has an inverse relationship between nominal interest rates & quantity of money demanded.
1. What happens to the quantity demanded of money when interest rates increase?
- Quantity demanded falls because individuals would prefer to have interest earning assets instead of borrowed liabilities.
2. What happens to the quantity demanded when interest rates decrease?
Increasing the Money Supply:
How does this affect AD?
- Increase money supply
- Decreases interest rate
- Increases investment
- Increases AD
Decreasing Money Supply:
How does this affect AD?
- Decrease money supply
- Increase interest rate
- Decrease investment
- Decrease AD
Financial Sector: Financial Assets vs. Financial Liabilities
Financial Assets:(What you OWN)
- f
- It benefits the owner based upon the issuer of the assets meeting certain obligations
Financial Liabilities:
(What you OWE)
- Liabilities incurred by the issuer of a financial asset to stand behind the issued asset.
- f
Interest Rate:
- Financial assets that conveys ownership in a company
- Stock market is high risk
Bonds:
- The promise to pay a certain amount of money + interest in the future.
- Have no hold on it, they're safer.
What Banks Do:
- A bank is a financial intermediary
- Uses liquid assets (i.e. bank deposits) to finance the investments of borrowers
- Process is known as Fractional Reverse Banking
- A system in which depository institutions hold liquid assets less than the amount of deposits
- Can take the form of:
1. Currency in bank vaults
2. Bank Reserves: Deposits held at the Federal Reverse.
3/10/16
Ultimate Lenders --> Financial Intermediaries --> Ultimate Borrowers
T-Account (Balance Sheet):
- Statements of assets & liabilities
- Items to which a bank holds legal claim
- The use of funds by financial intermediaries
- The legal claims against a bank
- The sources of funds for financial intermediaries
Federal Reserve Bank (The Fed):
- Houses the Secret Service
- 7 board members appointed by President
Functions:
- Uses paper currency
- Sets reserve requirements & holds reserves of the banks
- It lends money to the banks & charges them interest
- They are check-clearing service for the banks
- Acts as personal bank for the government
- Supervises members' banks
- It controls the money suplly in the economy
How do banks create money?
- By lending out deposits that are used multiple times.
Where do the loans come from?
- They come from depositers who take cash and place it in their banks.
How are the amounts of potential loans calculated?
- By using the balance sheet or the T-Account that consists of liabilities and assets
Bank liabilities (on the right side of T-Account)
#1 Demand Deposits or Checkable Deposits
- They belong to depositers and can be withdrawn by depositers
#2 Owner's Equity
- Values of stock held by the public ownership of bank shares
Bank assets (the left side of the T-Account)
#1 Required Reseves
- Percentage of demand deposirs that must be held in the vault so that some depositers have access to their money
#2 Excess Reseves
#3 Property
#4 Securities (Bonds)
#5 Loans
Reserve Requirement:
- The Fed requites banks to always have some money readily available to meet the consumer's demand for cash.
- The amount set by the Fed, is the Required Reserve Ratio.
- The Required Reserve Ratio is the % of demand deposits (checking account balances) that must not be loaned out
- Typically the Required Reserve Ratio = 10%
The Three Types of Multiple deposit Expansion Question:
Type 1: Calculate the initial change in excess reserves the initial deposit
Type 2: Calculate the change in loans in banking system
Type 3: Calculate the change in the money supply.
*Sometimes Type 2 & Type 3 will have the same result (i.e. NO Fed involvement)
3/21/16
#1. The Reserve Requirement:
- Only a small percent of your bank deposit is in the safe. The rest of your $ has been loaned out.
- The reserve requirement (reserve ratio) is the % of deposits that banks must hold in reserve and NOT loan out.)
- When the Fed increases the money supply it increases the amount of money held in bank deposits.
If there is a RECESSION, what should the Fed do to the Reserve Requirement?
- Decrease the Reserve Ratio
- Banks hold less money & have more excess reserves
- Banks create more money by loaning out excess
- Money supply increases, interest rates fall, AD goes up.
If there is INFLATION, what should the Fed do to the Reserve Requirement?
- Increase the Reserve Ratio
- Banks hold more money & have less excess reserves
- Banks create less money
- Money supply decease, interest rates up, AD goes down.
#2. The Discount Rate:
- The Discount Rate is the interest rate that the Fed charges commercial banks.
- To INCREASE the Money Supply, the Fed should DECREASE the Discount Rate (Easy Money Policy)
- To DECREASE the Money Supply, the Fed should INCREASE the Discount Rate (Tight Money Policy)
#3. Open Market Operations:
- The Fed buys/ sells government bonds (securities).
- This is the most important and widely used monetary policy.
- To INCREASE the Money Supply, the Fed should BUY government securities.
- To DECREASE the Money Supply, the Fed should SELL government securities.
Federal Funds Rate:
- Where FDIC member banks loan each other overnight bonds.
- The interest rate that banks give to their most credit-worthy customers.
If the economy goes into recession, the real GDP will decrease for at least 6 months.
If the economy suffers from too much ddemand-pull inflation or cost inflation
Your notes are filled with knowledge! I like how you include the prime rate, which is a vocabulary word I did not have in my notes.
ReplyDelete-Stephanie McGowan
Period 4
I really enjoyed reading through your notes as everything was organized to a way of easy understanding for anyone who reads through it . Also your visuals really add an in depth understanding. Great job !
ReplyDelete