Ch10 Lecture and Textbook Notes
Ch10 Lecture and Textbook Notes
Functions of money
Anything used as money must serve functions in economy
1. Medium of exchange
Sellers willing to accept it in exchange for goods/services
2. Unit of account
Once single good used as money, each good has single price rather than many
prices
3. Store of value
Hold rest of money to use in future
Most liquid asset
4. Standard of differed payment
Facilitate exchange at point in time by providing medium of exchange and unit
of account
Value of money depends on purchasing power
Commodity money
Has value independent of its use as money
Gold is example b/c medium of exchange, unit of account, store of value, and standard of
deferred payment
Using gold has problem: money supply difficult to control b/c depends partly on
unpredictable discoveries of new gold fields
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Flat money
Money authorized by central bank/govt body and doesn't have to be exchanged by central bank
for gold/some other commodity money
In modern economies, paper issued by central bank, which is agency of govt that regulates
money supply
Bank of Canada = central bank of Canada
Currency is legal tender in Canada = federal govt requires that accepted in payment of debts and
requires cash/cheques denominated in dollars be used in payment of taxes
Households/firms have confidence that if accept paper dollars in exchange for goods/services,
dollars not lose much value during time they hold them
Desired reserves = reserves that bank desires to hold, based on its chequing
account deposits (rd)
Excess reserves = reserves that banks hold over and above desired amounts
Loan is asset to bank b/c represents promise by person taking out loan to make certain
specified payments to bank
Make consumer loans to households and commercial loans to businesses
Deposits bank's largest liability
Calculate total increase in chequing account deposits from increase in bank reserves
The simple deposits multiplier versus the real world deposit multiplier
In deriving simple deposit multiplier, made 2 assumptions
1. Banks hold no excess reserves
2. Whole amount of every cheque deposited in bank; no one takes any of it out as
currency
Reduce real-world deposit multiplier
Most important part of money supply is chequing account balance component
Summarize important conclusions
1. When banks gain reserves, make new loans, and money supply expands
2. When banks lose reserves, reduce loans, and money supply contracts
Bank run = situation where many depositors simultaneously decide to withdraw money from
bank
Bank panic = situation where many banks experience runs at same time
Possible for bank to handle run by borrowing from others, but if many simultaneously
experience runs, banking system in trouble
BOC act as lender of last resort to prevent bank panic
Open market sales shrink bank reserves and monetary base, raising short-term
interest rates and lowering money supply
Purchase and resale agreements (PRA) = BOC's purchase of govt securities form
primary dealers w agreement to resell later
Sale and repurchase agreements (SRA) = BOC's sale of govt securities to primary
dealers, w agreement to repurchase them later
BOC conducts monetary policy principally through open market buyback
operations for 3 reasons
1. Controls buyback volume
2. Make large and small open market buyback operations
3. Implement open market buyback operations quickly, w no admin
delay/required changes in regulations
2. Lending to financial institutions
BOC lending important in preventing financial panics
Provides emergency lending assistance
The "Shadow Banking System" and the global financial crisis of 2007-2009
In past 25 years important developments occurred in financial system
1. Banks begun to resell many of their loans
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2. Financial firms other than commercial banks become sources of credit to businesses
Securitization comes to banking
Security = financial asset that can be bought and sold in market
When asset first sold, sale takes place in primary market
Investor resells asset, sale takes place in secondary market
Securitization = process of transforming loans/other financial assets into securities
Shadow banking system
Financial system transformed in 90s and 2000s by increasing importance of nonbank financial
firms
Late 90s, investment banks expanded buying of mortgages, bundling together into bonds
(mortgage-backed securities) and reselling them
Paid higher rates than other securities
Money market mutual funds become important
Sell shares to investors and use money to buy short-term securities
Hedge funds raise money from wealthy investors and use sophisticated investment strategies
Accuracy of quantity theory depends on whether key assumption that velocity constant is
correct
Most of variation in inflation rates across decades can explained by variation in rates of growth
of money supply