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The Monetary System
The Monetary System
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Jul 22, 2015
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About This Presentation
The Monetary System
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560.07 KB
Language:
en
Added:
Jul 22, 2015
Slides:
45 pages
Slide Content
Slide 1
10
MONEY AND PRICES IN THE LONG RUN
Slide 2
Copyright © 2004 South-Western
2929
The Monetary
System
Slide 3
Copyright © 2004 South-Western
THE MEANING OF MONEY
•Money is the set of assets in an economy that
people regularly use to buy goods and services
from other people.
Slide 4
Copyright © 2004 South-Western
The Functions of Money
•Money has three functions in the economy:
•Medium of exchange
•Unit of account
•Store of value
Slide 5
Copyright © 2004 South-Western
The Functions of Money
•Medium of Exchange
•A medium of exchange is an item that buyers give
to sellers when they want to purchase goods and
services.
•A medium of exchange is anything that is readily
acceptable as payment.
Slide 6
Copyright © 2004 South-Western
The Functions of Money
•Unit of Account
•A unit of account is the yardstick people use to post
prices and record debts.
•Store of Value
•A store of value is an item that people can use to
transfer purchasing power from the present to the
future.
Slide 7
Copyright © 2004 South-Western
The Functions of Money
•Liquidity
•Liquidity is the ease with which an asset can be
converted into the economy’s medium of exchange.
Slide 8
Copyright © 2004 South-Western
The Kinds of Money
•Commodity money takes the form of a
commodity with intrinsic value.
•Examples: Gold, silver, cigarettes.
•Fiat money is used as money because of
government decree.
•It does not have intrinsic value.
•Examples: Coins, currency, check deposits.
Slide 9
Copyright © 2004 South-Western
Money in the U.S. Economy
•Currency is the paper bills and coins in the
hands of the public.
•Demand deposits are balances in bank accounts
that depositors can access on demand by
writing a check.
Slide 10
Figure 1 Money in the U.S. Economy
Copyright©2003 Southwestern/Thomson Learning
Billions
of Dollars
• Currency
($580 billion)
• Demand deposits
• Traveler’s checks
• Other checkable deposits
($599 billion)
• Everything in M1
($1,179 billion)
• Savings deposits
• Small time deposits
• Money market
mutual funds
• A few minor categories
($4,276 billion)
0
M1
$1,179
M2
$5,455
Slide 11
Copyright © 2004 South-Western
CASE STUDY: Where Is All The Currency?
•In 2001 there was about $580 billion of U.S.
currency outstanding.
•That is $2,734 in currency per adult.
•Who is holding all this currency?
•Currency held abroad
•Currency held by illegal entities
Slide 12
Copyright © 2004 South-Western
THE FEDERAL RESERVE
SYSTEM
•The Federal Reserve (Fed) serves as the
nation’s central bank.
•It is designed to oversee the banking system.
•It regulates the quantity of money in the economy.
Slide 13
Copyright © 2004 South-Western
THE FEDERAL RESERVE
SYSTEM
•The Fed was created in 1914 after a series of
bank failures convinced Congress that the
United States needed a central bank to ensure
the health of the nation’s banking system.
Slide 14
Copyright © 2004 South-Western
THE FEDERAL RESERVE
SYSTEM
•The Structure of the Federal Reserve System:
•The primary elements in the Federal Reserve
System are:
•1) The Board of Governors
•2) The Regional Federal Reserve Banks
•3) The Federal Open Market Committee
Slide 15
Copyright © 2004 South-Western
The Fed’s Organization
•The Fed is run by a Board of Governors, which
has seven members appointed by the president
and confirmed by the Senate.
•Among the seven members, the most important
is the chairman.
•The chairman directs the Fed staff, presides over
board meetings, and testifies about Fed policy in
front of Congressional Committees.
Slide 16
Copyright © 2004 South-Western
The Fed’s Organization
•The Board of Governors
•Seven members
•Appointed by the president
•Confirmed by the Senate
•Serve staggered 14-year terms so that one comes
vacant every two years.
•President appoints a member as chairman to serve a
four-year term.
Slide 17
Copyright © 2004 South-Western
The Fed’s Organization
•The Federal Reserve System is made up of the
Federal Reserve Board in Washington, D.C.,
and twelve regional Federal Reserve Banks.
Slide 18
Copyright © 2004 South-Western
The Fed’s Organization
•The Federal Reserve Banks
•Twelve district banks
•Nine directors
•Three appointed by the Board of Governors.
•Six are elected by the commercial banks in the district.
•The directors appoint the district president, which is
approved by the Board of Governors.
Slide 19
The Federal Reserve System
Copyright©2003 Southwestern/Thomson Learning
Slide 20
Copyright © 2004 South-Western
The Fed’s Organization
•The Federal Reserve Banks
•The New York Fed implements some of the Fed’s
most important policy decisions.
Slide 21
Copyright © 2004 South-Western
The Fed’s Organization
•The Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC)
•Serves as the main policy-making organ of the
Federal Reserve System.
•Meets approximately every six weeks to review the
economy.
Slide 22
Copyright © 2004 South-Western
The Fed’s Organization
•The Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC)
is made up of the following voting members:
•The chairman and the other six members of the
Board of Governors.
•The president of the Federal Reserve Bank of New
York.
•The presidents of the other regional Federal Reserve
banks (four vote on a yearly rotating basis).
Slide 23
Copyright © 2004 South-Western
The Fed’s Organization
•Monetary policy is conducted by the Federal
Open Market Committee.
•Monetary policy is the setting of the money supply
by policymakers in the central bank
•The money supply refers to the quantity of money
available in the economy.
Slide 24
Copyright © 2004 South-Western
The Federal Open Market Committee
•Three Primary Functions of the Fed
•Regulates banks to ensure they follow federal laws
intended to promote safe and sound banking
practices.
•Acts as a banker’s bank, making loans to banks and
as a lender of last resort.
•Conducts monetary policy by controlling the money
supply.
Slide 25
Copyright © 2004 South-Western
The Federal Open Market Committee
•Open-Market Operations
•The money supply is the quantity of money
available in the economy.
•The primary way in which the Fed changes the
money supply is through open-market operations.
•The Fed purchases and sells U.S. government bonds.
Slide 26
Copyright © 2004 South-Western
The Federal Open Market Committee
•Open-Market Operations
•To increase the money supply, the Fed buys
government bonds from the public.
•To decrease the money supply, the Fed sells
government bonds to the public.
Slide 27
Copyright © 2004 South-Western
BANKS AND THE MONEY
SUPPLY
•Banks can influence the quantity of demand
deposits in the economy and the money supply.
Slide 28
Copyright © 2004 South-Western
BANKS AND THE MONEY
SUPPLY
•Reserves are deposits that banks have received
but have not loaned out.
•In a fractional-reserve banking system, banks
hold a fraction of the money deposited as
reserves and lend out the rest.
Slide 29
Copyright © 2004 South-Western
BANKS AND THE MONEY
SUPPLY
•Reserve Ratio
•The reserve ratio is the fraction of deposits that
banks hold as reserves.
Slide 30
Copyright © 2004 South-Western
Money Creation with Fractional-Reserve
Banking
•When a bank makes a loan from its reserves, the
money supply increases.
•The money supply is affected by the amount
deposited in banks and the amount that banks loan.
•Deposits into a bank are recorded as both assets and
liabilities.
•The fraction of total deposits that a bank has to keep as
reserves is called the reserve ratio.
•Loans become an asset to the bank.
Slide 31
Copyright © 2004 South-Western
Money Creation with Fractional-Reserve
Banking
•This T-Account shows a bank that…
•accepts deposits,
•keeps a portion
as reserves,
•and lends out
the rest.
•It assumes a
reserve ratio
of 10%.
Assets Liabilities
First National Bank
Reserves
$10.00
Loans
$90.00
Deposits
$100.00
Total Assets
$100.00
Total Liabilities
$100.00
Slide 32
Copyright © 2004 South-Western
Money Creation with Fractional-Reserve
Banking
•When one bank loans money, that money is
generally deposited into another bank.
•This creates more deposits and more reserves to
be lent out.
•When a bank makes a loan from its reserves,
the money supply increases.
Slide 33
Copyright © 2004 South-Western
The Money Multiplier
•How much money is eventually created in this
economy?
Slide 34
Copyright © 2004 South-Western
The Money Multiplier
•The money multiplier is the amount of money
the banking system generates with each dollar
of reserves.
Slide 35
Copyright © 2004 South-Western
The Money Multiplier
Assets Liabilities
First National Bank
Reserves
$10.00
Loans
$90.00
Deposits
$100.00
Total Assets
$100.00
Total Liabilities
$100.00
Assets Liabilities
Second National Bank
Reserves
$9.00
Loans
$81.00
Deposits
$90.00
Total Assets
$90.00
Total Liabilities
$90.00
Money Supply = $190.00!
Slide 36
Copyright © 2004 South-Western
The Money Multiplier
•The money multiplier is the reciprocal of the
reserve ratio:
M = 1/R
•With a reserve requirement, R = 20% or 1/5,
•The multiplier is 5.
Slide 37
Copyright © 2004 South-Western
The Fed’s Tools of Monetary Control
•The Fed has three tools in its monetary toolbox:
•Open-market operations
•Changing the reserve requirement
•Changing the discount rate
Slide 38
Copyright © 2004 South-Western
The Fed’s Tools of Monetary Control
•Open-Market Operations
•The Fed conducts open-market operations when it
buys government bonds from or sells government
bonds to the public:
•When the Fed buys government bonds, the money supply
increases.
•The money supply decreases when the Fed sells
government bonds.
Slide 39
Copyright © 2004 South-Western
The Fed’s Tools of Monetary Control
•Reserve Requirements
•The Fed also influences the money supply with
reserve requirements.
•Reserve requirements are regulations on the
minimum amount of reserves that banks must hold
against deposits.
Slide 40
Copyright © 2004 South-Western
The Fed’s Tools of Monetary Control
•Changing the Reserve Requirement
•The reserve requirement is the amount (%) of a
bank’s total reserves that may not be loaned out.
•Increasing the reserve requirement decreases the money
supply.
•Decreasing the reserve requirement increases the money
supply.
Slide 41
Copyright © 2004 South-Western
The Fed’s Tools of Monetary Control
•Changing the Discount Rate
•The discount rate is the interest rate the Fed charges
banks for loans.
•Increasing the discount rate decreases the money supply.
•Decreasing the discount rate increases the money supply.
Slide 42
Copyright © 2004 South-Western
Problems in Controlling the Money Supply
•The Fed’s control of the money supply is not
precise.
•The Fed must wrestle with two problems that
arise due to fractional-reserve banking.
•The Fed does not control the amount of money that
households choose to hold as deposits in banks.
•The Fed does not control the amount of money that
bankers choose to lend.
Slide 43
Copyright © 2004 South-Western
Summary
•The term money refers to assets that people
regularly use to buy goods and services.
•Money serves three functions in an economy:
as a medium of exchange, a unit of account,
and a store of value.
•Commodity money is money that has intrinsic
value.
•Fiat money is money without intrinsic value.
Slide 44
Copyright © 2004 South-Western
Summary
•The Federal Reserve, the central bank of the
United States, regulates the U.S. monetary
system.
•It controls the money supply through open-
market operations or by changing reserve
requirements or the discount rate.
Slide 45
Copyright © 2004 South-Western
Summary
•When banks loan out their deposits, they
increase the quantity of money in the economy.
•Because the Fed cannot control the amount
bankers choose to lend or the amount
households choose to deposit in banks, the
Fed’s control of the money supply is imperfect.
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