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Econ 303: Money and Banking

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Title: Econ 303: Money and Banking


1
Econ 303 Money and Banking
  • Fall 2007 Giandomenico Sarolli

2
Information
  • Syllabus
  • Textbook ?
  • WSJ and Economist
  • Calculators and Excel
  • Tests and Memos
  • Office Hours
  • (3x5 index card)
  • Name, Year, Hometown, birthday, why study MB,
    Favorite sports team, Fun Fact , Fed Funds on
    12/11

3
Why Study Money, Banking, and Financial Markets?
  • To examine how financial markets such as bond,
    stock and foreign exchange markets work
  • To examine how financial institutions such as
    banks and insurance companies work
  • To examine the role of money in the economy

4
Bonds and Interest Rates
5
The Bond Market and Interest Rates
  • A security (financial instrument) is a claim on
    the issuers future income or assets
  • A bond is a debt security that promises to make
    payments periodically for a specified period of
    time
  • An interest rate is the cost of borrowing or the
    price paid for the rental of funds
  • Q1 What happened in the late 1970s?

6
US Stock Market
7
The Stock Market
  • Common stock represents a share of ownership in a
    corporation
  • A share of stock is a claim on the earnings and
    assets of the corporation
  • Q1 How is a stock valued?
  • Q2 What is the Dow Jones Industrial Avg?
  • Q3 What is the difference between Real and
    Nominal?

8
US Exchange Rate
9
The Foreign Exchange Market
  • The foreign exchange market is where funds are
    converted from one currency into another
  • The foreign exchange rate is the price of one
    currency in terms of another currency
  • The foreign exchange market determines the
    foreign exchange rate
  • Q1 What is Purchasing Power Parity and what does
    that have to do with hamburgers?

10
Banking and Financial Institutions
  • Financial Intermediariesinstitutions that borrow
    funds from people who have saved and make loans
    to other people
  • Banksinstitutions that accept deposits and make
    loans
  • Other Financial Institutionsinsurance companies,
    finance companies, pension funds, mutual funds
    and investment banks
  • Financial Innovationin particular, the advent of
    the information age and e-finance

11
Money and Business Cycles
  • Evidence suggests that money plays an important
    role in generating business cycles
  • Recessions (unemployment) and booms (inflation)
    affect all of us
  • Monetary Theory ties changes in the money supply
    to changes in aggregate economic activity and the
    price level

12
Money Supply
13
Money and Prices
14
Money and Inflation
15
Money and Inflation
  • The aggregate price level is the average price
    of goods and services in an economy
  • A continual rise in the price level (inflation)
    affects all economic players
  • Data shows a connection between the money supply
    and the price level
  • Q1 What is a regression? Plot a regression line
    on the cross country data about inflation.

16
Money and Interest Rates
  • Interest rates are the price of money
  • Prior to 1980, the rate of money growth and the
    interest rate on long-term Treasure bonds were
    closely tied
  • Since then, the relationship is less clear but
    still an important determinant of interest rates
  • Q1 When the US had a large budget surplus, there
    was no more need to issue long term T-Bonds,
    given their importance for financial firms what
    could they do to replace the lost bonds?

17
US Budgets
18
Monetary and Fiscal Policy
  • Monetary policy is the management of the money
    supply and interest rates
  • Conducted in the U.S. by the Federal Reserve Bank
    (Fed)
  • Fiscal policy is government spending and
    taxation
  • Budget deficit is the excess of expenditures over
    revenues for a particular year
  • Budget surplus is the excess of revenues over
    expenditures for a particular year
  • Any deficit must be financed by borrowing

19
An Overview of the Financial System
20
Purpose of the Financial System
  • Provides channels to transfer funds from savers
    to borrowers.
  • Savers are suppliers of funds.
  • Borrowers are demanders of funds.
  • Financial markets issue claims on borrowers
    directly to savers.
  • Financial intermediaries act as go-betweens by
    holding a portfolio of assets and issuing claims
    to savers.

21
Moving Funds Through the Financial System
22
Key Services Provided by the Financial System
23
Key Services Provided by the Financial System
  • Risk sharing by allowing savers to hold many
    assets
  • Liquidity, which is the ease with which an asset
    can be exchanged for money
  • Information about borrowers and returns on
    financial assets

24
Financial Markets
  • Primary markets are those in which newly issued
    claims are sold to initial buyers.
  • Secondary markets are those in which previously
    issued claims are resold.
  • Risk-sharing, liquidity, and information services
    are provided in secondary markets.

25
Types of Secondary Financial Markets
  • Maturity money and capital markets
  • Trading places auction and over-the-counter
    markets
  • Settlement cash or derivative

26
Financial Intermediaries Tasks
  • Match savers and borrowers
  • Provide risk-sharing, liquidity, and information
    services

27
Competition and Change
  • Financial innovation results from change.
  • Ease of communicating information has allowed for
    greater financial integration.

28
Goals of Financial Regulation
  • Provision of information
  • Maintenance of financial stability
  • Controlling the money supply
  • Encouraging particular activities (like home
    ownership)
  • Regulation affects the ability of financial
    markets and institutions to provide risk-sharing,
    liquidity, and information services, as seen in
    Table 3.1

29
Regulation of Financial Institutions and Markets
in the United States
30
MONEY
31
Meeting the Needs of Exchange
  • 3 methods to gain the efficiency benefits of
    specialization include barter, government
    allocation, and money
  • Money can help people benefit from specialization
    without incurring the high trading costs of
    barter or the misallocations of government
    allocation

32
Methods of Exchange
33
Functions of Money
  • Medium of exchange
  • Unit of account
  • Store of value
  • Standard of deferred payment

34
Criteria for Medium of Exchange
  • Acceptable to most traders
  • Standardized quality
  • Durable
  • Valuable relative to its weight
  • Divisible

35
Payments Systems
  • Commodity money
  • Physical goods (precious metals) by which trade
    was accomplished
  • Fiat money
  • Money authorized by a central bank is the
    definitive money and doesnt have to be exchanged
    for gold or commodity money
  • Checks
  • Promises to pay definitive money on demand, drawn
    on money deposited in a financial institution
  • Electronic funds
  • Computerized payment-clearing

36
NEW UVA MONEY!
  • Create a new form of currency at UVA!

37
Measuring the Money Supply
  • To understand moneys role as an economic
    variable, we need to measure it.
  • Definitions of the money supply are based o the
    assets included as money and depend on how
    substitutable different assets are for money.
  • Liquidity refers to the cost at which an asset
    can be converted into definitive money.

38
Monetary Aggregates
  • The Federal Reserve has developed 3 definitions
    of money that include assets broader than
    currency, called monetary aggregates
  • M1
  • M2
  • Broader monetary aggregates

39
Measuring Monetary Aggregates, February 2006
40
Selecting Monetary Aggregates
  • M2 currently considered best.
  • Aggregates move broadly together over long time
    periods.
  • Some significant differences in monetary
    aggregate movements have occurred during certain
    periods
  • The different monetary aggregates give a
    different picture of movements in the money
    supply over time.

41
Growth Rates of M1 and M2, 1960-2006
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