1 of 25 PART III The Core of Macroeconomic Theory © 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as...

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1 of PART III The Core of Macroeconomic Theory © 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall Prepared by: Fernando Quijano & Shelly Tefft CASE FAIR OSTER P R I N C I P L E S O F MACROECONOMICS T E N T H E D I T I O N
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Transcript of 1 of 25 PART III The Core of Macroeconomic Theory © 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as...

Page 1: 1 of 25 PART III The Core of Macroeconomic Theory © 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall Prepared by: Fernando Quijano & Shelly Tefft.

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CASE FAIR OSTER

P R I N C I P L E S O F

MACROECONOMICST E N T H E D I T I O N

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CHAPTER OUTLINE

11Money Demand and the Equilibrium

Interest Rate

Interest Rates and Bond Prices

The Demand for MoneyThe Transaction MotiveThe Speculation MotiveThe Total Demand for MoneyThe Effect of Nominal Income on the Demand for Money

The Equilibrium Interest RateSupply and Demand in the Money MarketChanging the Money Supply to Affect the Interest RateIncreases in P • Y and Shifts in the Money Demand CurveZero Interest Rate Bound

Looking Ahead: The Federal Reserve and Monetary Policy

Appendix A: The Various Interest Rates in the U.S. Economy

Appendix B: The Demand for Money: A Numerical Example

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Interest Rates and Bond Prices

interest The fee that borrowers pay to lenders for the use of their funds.

Firms and governments borrow funds by issuing bonds, and they pay interest to the lenders that purchase the bonds.

When interest rates rise, the prices of existing bonds fall.

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In Chekhov’s play Uncle Vanya, Alexander Vladimirovitch Serebryakov, a retired professor, but apparently not of economics, calls his household together to propose the following:

…Our estate yields on an average not more than two per cent, on its capital value. I propose to sell it. If we invest the money in suitable securities, we should get from four to five per cent, and I think we might even have a few thousand roubles to spare…

Uncle Vanya tried to kill Professor Serebryakov for this idea, but no one pointed out that this was bad economics and not a scheme.

Perhaps had Uncle Vanya taken an introductory economics course and known this, he would have been less agitated.

Professor Serebryakov Makes an Economic Error

E C O N O M I C S I N P R A C T I C E

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transaction motive The main reason that people hold money—to buy things.

When we speak of the demand for money, we are concerned with how much of your financial assets you want to hold in the form of money, which does not earn interest, versus how much you want to hold in interest-bearing securities such as bonds.

The Demand for Money

The Transaction Motive

nonsynchronization of income and spending The mismatch between the timing of money inflow to the household and the timing of money outflow for household expenses.

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Income arrives only once a month, but spending takes place continuously.

FIGURE 11.1 The Nonsynchronization of Income and Spending

The Demand for Money

The Transaction Motive

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Jim could decide to deposit his entire paycheck ($1,200) into his checking account at the start of the month and run his balance down to zero by the end of the month.

In this case, his average balance would be $600.

FIGURE 11.2 Jim’s Monthly Checking Account Balances: Strategy 1

The Demand for Money

The Transaction Motive

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Jim could also choose to put half of his paycheck into his checking account and buy a bond with the other half of his income.

At midmonth, Jim would sell the bond and deposit the $600 into his checking account to pay the second half of the month’s bills.

Following this strategy, Jim’s average money holdings would be $300.

FIGURE 11.3 Jim’s Monthly Checking Account Balances: Strategy 2

The Demand for Money

The Transaction Motive

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The quantity of money demanded (the amount of money households and firms want to hold) is a function of the interest rate.

Because the interest rate is the opportunity cost of holding money balances, increases in the interest rate reduce the quantity of money that firms and households want to hold and decreases in the interest rate increase the quantity of money that firms and households want to hold.

FIGURE 11.4 The Demand Curve for Money Balances

The Demand for Money

The Transaction Motive

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speculation motive One reason for holding bonds instead of money: Because the market price of interest-bearing bonds is inversely related to the interest rate, investors may want to hold bonds when interest rates are high with the hope of selling them when interest rates fall.

The Demand for Money

The Speculation Motive

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The total quantity of money demanded in the economy is the sum of the demand for checking account balances and cash by both households and firms.

At any given moment, there is a demand for money—for cash and checking account balances. Although households and firms need to hold balances for everyday transactions, their demand has a limit.

For both households and firms, the quantity of money demanded at any moment depends on the opportunity cost of holding money, a cost determined by the interest rate.

The Demand for Money

The Total Demand for Money

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Italy makes a great case study of the effects of the spread of ATMs on the demand for money. In Italy, virtually all checking accounts pay interest. What doesn’t pay interest is cash.

The study found that the demand for cash responds to changes in the interest rate paid on checking accounts. The higher the interest rate, the less cash held.

In other words, when the interest rate on checking accounts rises, people go to ATM machines more often and take out less in cash each time, thereby keeping, on average, more in checking accounts earning the higher interest rate.

E C O N O M I C S I N P R A C T I C E

ATMs and the Demand for Money

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FIGURE 11.5 An Increase in Nominal Aggregate Output (Income) (P •Y) Shifts the Money Demand Curve to the Right

The Demand for Money

The Effect of Nominal Income on the Demand for Money

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TABLE 11.1 Determinants of Money Demand

1. The interest rate: r (The quantity of money demanded is a negative function of the interest rate.)

2. Aggregate nominal output (income) P • Y

a. Real aggregate output (income): Y (An increase in Y shifts the money demand curve to the right.)

b. The aggregate price level: P (An increase in P shifts the money demand curve to the right.)

The Demand for Money

The Effect of Nominal Income on the Demand for Money

The demand for money depends negatively on the interest rate, r, and positively on real income, Y, and the price level, P.

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We are now in a position to consider one of the key questions in macroeconomics: How is the interest rate determined in the economy?

The point at which the quantity of money demanded equals the quantity of money supplied determines the equilibrium interest rate in the economy.

The Equilibrium Interest Rate

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Equilibrium exists in the money market when the supply of money is equal to the demand for money and thus when the supply of bonds is equal to the demand for bonds.

At r0 the price of bonds would be bid up (and thus the interest rate down).

At r1 the price of bonds would be bid down (and thus the interest rate up).

FIGURE 11.6 Adjustments in the Money Market

The Equilibrium Interest Rate

Supply and Demand in the Money Market

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FIGURE 11.7 The Effect of an Increase in the Supply of Money on the Interest Rate

An increase in the supply of money from MS

0 to MS1 lowers the rate of

interest from 7 percent to 4 percent.

The Equilibrium Interest Rate

Changing the Money Supply to Affect the Interest Rate

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FIGURE 11.8 The Effect of an Increase in Nominal Income (P • Y) on the Interest Rate

An increase in nominal income (P • Y) shifts the money demand curve from Md

0 to Md

1, which raises the equilibrium interest rate from 4 percent to 7 percent.

The Equilibrium Interest Rate

Increases in P • Y and Shifts in the Money Demand Curve

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The Equilibrium Interest Rate

Zero Interest Rate Bound

By the middle of 2008 the Fed had driven the short-term interest rate close to zero, and it remained at essentially zero through the middle of 2010.

The Fed does this, of course, by increasing the money supply until the intersection of the money supply at the demand for money curve is at an interest rate of roughly zero.

The Fed cannot drive the interest rate lower than zero, preventing it from stimulating the economy further.

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tight monetary policy Fed policies that contract the money supply and thus raise interest rates in an effort to restrain the economy.

easy monetary policy Fed policies that expand the money supply and thus lower interest rates in an effort to stimulate the economy.

Looking Ahead: The Federal Reserve and Monetary Policy

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easy monetary policy

interest

nonsynchronization of income and spending

speculation motive

tight monetary policy

transaction motive

R E V I E W T E R M S A N D C O N C E P T S

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The term structure of interest rates is the relationship among the interest rates offered on securities of different maturities.

According to a theory called the expectations theory of the term structure of interest rates, the 2-year rate is equal to the average of the current 1-year rate and the 1-year rate expected a year from now.

Fed behavior may directly affect people’s expectations of the future short-term rates, which will then affect long-term rates.

CHAPTER 11 APPENDIX A

The Various Interest Rates in the U.S. Economy

The Term Structure of Interest Rates

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Three-Month Treasury Bill Rate Probably the most widely followed short-term interest rate.

Government Bond Rate There are 1-year bonds, 2-year bonds, and so on, up to 30-year bonds. Bonds of different terms have different interest rates.

Federal Funds Rate The rate banks are charged to borrow reserves from other banks. Generally a 1-day rate on which the Fed has the most effect through its open market operations.

Commercial Paper Rate Short-term corporate IOUs that offer a designated rate of interest depending on the financial condition of the firm and the maturity date of the IOU.

Prime Rate A benchmark that banks often use in quoting interest rates to their customers depending on the cost of funds to the bank; it moves up and down with changes in the economy.

AAA Corporate Bond Rate Classified by various bond dealers according to their risk. Bonds have a longer maturity than commercial paper. The interest rate on bonds rated AAA is the triple A corporate bond rate, the rate that the least risky firms pay on the bonds that they issue.

CHAPTER 11 APPENDIX A

The Various Interest Rates in the U.S. Economy

Types of Interest Rates

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TABLE 11B.1 Optimum Money Holdings

1Number of Switchesa

2Average Money

Holdingsb

3Average Bond

Holdingsc

4Interest Earnedd

5Cost of

Switchinge

6Net

Profitf

r 5 percent

0 $600.00 $ 0.00 $ 0.00 $0.00 $0.00

1 300.00 300.00 15.00 2.00 13.00

2 200.00 400.00 20.00 4.00 16.00

3 150.00* 450.00 22.50 6.00 16.50

4 120.00 480.00 24.00 8.00 16.00

Assumptions: Interest rate r 0.05. Cost of switching from bonds to money equals $2 per transaction.

r 3 percent

0 $600.00 $ 0.00 $ 0.00 $0.00 $0.00

1 300.00 300.00 9.00 2.00 7.00

2 200.00* 400.00 12.00 4.00 8.00

3 150.00 450.00 13.50 6.00 7.50

4 120.00 480.00 14.40 8.00 6.40

Assumptions: Interest rate r 0.03. Cost of switching from bonds to money equals $2 per transaction.*Optimum money holdings.aThat is, the number of times you sell a bond.bCalculated as 600/(col. 1 1).cCalculated as 600 col. 2. dCalculated as r col. 3, where r is the interest rate.eCalculated as t col. 1, where t is the cost per switch ($2).fCalculated as col. 4 col. 5.

CHAPTER 11 APPENDIX B

The Demand For Money: A Numerical Example