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What Is Money?What Is Money?What Is Money?What Is Money?
Money is anything that is regularly used in economic transactions or exchanges.
People are willing to accept money as a medium of exchange because of its recognizable value. We trust that the money we receive will also be accepted by others in lieu of payment.
Three Properties of MoneyThree Properties of MoneyThree Properties of MoneyThree Properties of Money
1. Money serves as a medium of exchange: Instead of using money, we could barter—or trade
goods directly for goods. But when compared to barter, money is clearly more efficient.
Barter requires a double coincidence of wants. Barter requires you to find someone who has precisely what you are looking for and wants to buy precisely what you are willing to offer in exchange.
The probability of a double coincidence of wants occurring is very, very tiny. Money solves that problem.
Three Properties of MoneyThree Properties of MoneyThree Properties of MoneyThree Properties of Money
2. Money serves as a unit of account: Money provides a convenient
measuring rod when prices for all goods are quoted in money terms.
Money serves as the unit of account, or standard unit which can be used to compare the relative value of goods, making it easier to carry out economic transactions.
Measuring Money in the U.S. EconomyMeasuring Money in the U.S. EconomyMeasuring Money in the U.S. EconomyMeasuring Money in the U.S. Economy Since there are approximately 280 million
people in the United States, the $630 billion of currency held by the public amounts to $2,250 per person.
In fact, most people don’t hold such a large amount of cash. Much of this currency is held abroad by wealthy people who hold part of their wealth in U.S. dollars; some circulates in other countries along with the official currency; and some is used in illegal transactions.
Measuring Money in the U.S. EconomyMeasuring Money in the U.S. EconomyMeasuring Money in the U.S. EconomyMeasuring Money in the U.S. Economy
A broader definition of money, known as M2, includes assets that are sometimes used in economic exchanges or can be readily turned into M1, such as deposits in money market mutual funds and savings accounts.
The Process of Money CreationThe Process of Money CreationThe Process of Money CreationThe Process of Money Creation Currency and checking deposits are included in the
money supply. When a customer makes a $1,000 cash deposit to open
a checking account, currency held by the public decreases and checking deposits increase. The money supply remains unchanged, but the bank’s reserves increase.
First Bank of Hollywood
Assets LiabilitiesReserves $100 Deposits $1,000
Loans 900
Assume that the bank holds no excess reserves and the required reserve ratio equals 10% of deposits.
The $1,000 deposit changes the bank’s balance sheet as follows:
The Money MultiplierThe Money MultiplierThe Money MultiplierThe Money Multiplier
The money multiplier for the United States is between 2 and 3. It is much smaller than the value in our example because, in reality, people hold part of their loans as cash. This cash is not available for the banking system to lend.
The Money MultiplierThe Money MultiplierThe Money MultiplierThe Money Multiplier The money multiplier also works in reverse.
Assuming a reserve ratio of 10%, a withdrawal of $1,000 reduces reserves by $100, and results in $900 less the bank will have to lend out.
Finally, it is important to note that when one individual writes a check to another, and the other deposits the check in the bank, the money supply will not change. Instead, the expansion in one bank’s reserves will offset the contraction in the reserves of the other.
Open Market OperationsOpen Market OperationsOpen Market OperationsOpen Market Operations
The Federal Reserve, our central bank, has the power to change the total amount of reserves in the banking system.
The most important tool to change the total amount of reserves in the banking system, and therefore the money supply, is called Open Market Operations — the purchase and sale of government securities to the private sector.
Open Market OperationsOpen Market OperationsOpen Market OperationsOpen Market Operations
Suppose the Fed purchases $1 million worth of government bonds from the private sector.
The Fed writes a check for $1 million and presents it to the party who sold the bonds. The Fed now owns those bonds, and the party who sold the bonds has a check for $1 million.
Checks written against the Fed count as reserves for banks. If the reserve ratio is 10%, the bank must keep $100,000 in new reserves, but can make loans for $900,000. And so, the process of money creation begins.
Open Market OperationsOpen Market OperationsOpen Market OperationsOpen Market Operations
Open market purchases increase the money supply; and open market sales decrease it.
The Fed has unlimited ability to create money. It can write checks against itself to purchase the government bonds without having any explicit “funds.” Banks accept it because these checks count as reserves for the bank.
Other Tools of Monetary PolicyOther Tools of Monetary PolicyOther Tools of Monetary PolicyOther Tools of Monetary Policy
The Fed does not increase the reserve requirement often because it can be disruptive to the banking system. Banks would be forced to call in or cancel many of its loans.
Before banks borrow from the Fed, they try to borrow from each other through the federal funds market, a market in which banks lend or borrow reserves from each other, overnight.
Other Tools of Monetary PolicyOther Tools of Monetary PolicyOther Tools of Monetary PolicyOther Tools of Monetary Policy
In practice, the Fed keeps the discount rate close to the federal funds rate to avoid large swings in borrowed reserves by banks.
The Fed conducts monetary policy by setting targets for the federal funds rate. Once it has set those targets, it uses open market operations to keep the actual federal funds rate on target.
The Structure of the Federal ReserveThe Structure of the Federal ReserveThe Structure of the Federal ReserveThe Structure of the Federal Reserve
The Federal Reserve System was created in 1913 following a series of financial panics in the United States.
Congress created the Federal Reserve to be a central bank, serving as a banker’s bank.
One of the Fed’s primary jobs was to serve as a lender of last resort—lending funds to banks that suffered from panic runs, thereby reducing some of the adverse consequences of the panics.
The Structure of the Federal ReserveThe Structure of the Federal ReserveThe Structure of the Federal ReserveThe Structure of the Federal Reserve
The United States was divided into 12 Federal Reserve districts, each of which has a Federal Reserve Bank.
The reason for creating 12 separate, semiautonomous regional banks was to avoid monopoly and concentration of power in a single area or financial center.
District banks provide advice and take part in monetary policy decisions, and provide a liaison between the Fed and the banks in their districts.
The Board of GovernorsThe Board of GovernorsThe Board of GovernorsThe Board of Governors
The Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve is the true seat of power over the monetary system.
Headquartered in Washington, DC, the seven members of the board are appointed for staggered 14-year terms by the President and must be confirmed by the Senate.
The chairperson serves a four-year term and is the principal spokesperson for monetary policy in the U.S. What he speaks is carefully observed, or anticipated, by financial markets.
The Federal Open Market Committee The Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC)(FOMC)The Federal Open Market Committee The Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC)(FOMC)
The Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) is a 12-person board consisting of the seven members of the Board of Governors, the president of the New York Federal Reserve Bank, plus the presidents of four other regional Federal Reserve Banks. These four presidents serve on a rotating basis.
The seven nonvoting bank presidents attend the meetings and provide their views. The chairperson of the Board of Governors also serves as the chairperson of the FOMC.
Central Bank IndependenceCentral Bank IndependenceCentral Bank IndependenceCentral Bank Independence
In the United States, the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve operates with considerable independence.
Presidents and members of Congress can bring political pressures on the Board of Governors, but the 14-year terms provide some insulation from external pressures.
Central Bank IndependenceCentral Bank IndependenceCentral Bank IndependenceCentral Bank Independence
There are both supporters and opponents of the current system which allows bank presidents to play an important role in the determination of monetary policy. These presidents are neither appointed by elected officials nor confirmed by the Senate.
The Fed is a subject of significant public interest because the Fed exercises ultimate control of the money supply, which gives it substantial power over the economy.