111 chapter 17: domestic and international dimensions of monetary policy 1 econ 151 – principles...
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111
Chapter 17: Domestic and International Dimensions of Monetary Policy
1
ECON 151 – PRINCIPLES OF MACROECONOMICS
Materials include content from Pearson Addison-Wesley which has been modified by the instructor and displayed with permission of the publisher. All rights reserved.
What’s So Special About Money? The demand for money, what people wish to
holdPeople have certain motivation that causes them to
want to hold money balances.There is a demand for money by the public,
motivated by several factors. Transactions demand Precautionary demand Asset demand
17-2
What’s So Special About Money? (cont'd) Money Balances
Synonymous with money, money stock, and money holdings
Transactions Demand
Holding money as a medium of exchange to make payments
The level varies directly with nominal GDP.
17-3
What’s So Special About Money? (cont'd) Precautionary Demand
Holding money to meet unplanned expenditures and emergencies
Asset Demand
Holding money as a store of value instead of other assets such as certificates of deposit, corporate bonds, and stocks
17-4
What’s So Special About Money? (cont'd) The demand for money curve
Assume the amount of money demanded for transactions purposes is proportionate to income
Precautionary and asset demand are determined by the opportunity cost of holding money (the interest rate).
17-5
The Demand for Money Curve
17-7
Quantity of Money
Inte
rest
Rat
e
Md
• When the interest rate rises the opportunity cost of holding money increases and the quantity of money demanded falls
• The location of Md is determined by the level of income
Q1
Br2
Ar1
Q2
The Tools of Monetary Policy
The Fed seeks to alter consumption, investment, and aggregate demand as a whole by altering the rate of growth of the money supply.
17-8
The Tools of Monetary Policy (cont'd) The Fed has three tools at its disposal as part
of its policymaking action.
Open market operations
Discount rate changes
Reserve requirement changes
17-9
The Tools of Monetary Policy (cont'd) Open market operations
Fed purchases and sells government bonds issued by the U.S. Treasury
At first, there is some equilibrium level of interest rate (and bond prices).
An open market operation must cause a change in the price of bonds.
17-10
Figure 17-2 Determining the Price of Bonds, Panel (a)
17-11
Contractionary Policy• Fed sells bonds• Supply of bonds increases• Bond prices fall
Figure 17-2 Determining the Price of Bonds, Panel (b)
17-12
Expansionary Policy• Fed buys bonds• Supply of bonds falls• Bond prices rise
The Tools of Monetary Policy (cont'd) Relationship between the price of existing
bonds and the rate of interestThere is an inverse relationship between the price
of existing bonds and the rate of interest.
17-13
The Tools of Monetary Policy (cont'd) Example
You pay $1,000 for a bond that pays $50/year in interest.
17-14
Bond yield =$50
$1,000= 5%
Now suppose you pay $500 for the same bond.
Bond yield =$50
$500= 10%
The Tools of Monetary Policy (cont'd) The market price of existing bonds (and all
fixed-income assets) is inversely related to the rate of interest prevailing in the economy.
17-15
The Tools of Monetary Policy (cont'd) Changes in the difference between the discount
rate and the federal funds rateThe discount rate is generally kept at 1 percentage
point above the market-determined federal funds rate.
Increasing (decreasing) the discount rate increases (decreases) the cost of borrowed funds for depository institutions that borrow reserves.
17-16
The Tools of Monetary Policy (cont'd) Changes in the reserve requirements
An increase (decrease) in the required reserve ratio
Makes it more (less) expensive for banks to meet reserve requirements
Reduces (expands) bank lending
17-17
Effects of an Increase in The Money Supply (cont'd) Direct effect
Aggregate demand rises because with an increase in the money supply, at any given price level people now want to purchase more output of real goods and services.
17-18
Effects of an Increase in The Money Supply (cont'd) Indirect effect
Not everybody will necessarily spend the newfound money on goods and services.
Some of the money gets deposited, so banks have higher reserves (and they lend the excess out).
17-19
Effects of an Increase in The Money Supply (cont'd) Indirect effect
Banks lower rates to induce borrowing. Businesses engage in investment. Individuals consume durable goods (like housing and autos).
Increased loans generate an increase in aggregate demand.
More people are involved in more spending (even those who didn’t get money from the helicopter!).
17-20
Graphing the Effects of an Expansionary Monetary Policy Assume the economy is operating at less than
full employment
Expansionary monetary policy can close the recessionary gap.
Direct and indirect effects cause the aggregate demand curve to shift outward.
17-21
Figure 17-3 Expansionary Monetary Policy with Underutilized Resources
17-22
• The recessionary gap isdue to insufficient AD
• To increase AD, use expansionary monetary policy
• AD increases and real GDP increases to full employment
Graphing the Effects of Contractionary Monetary Policy Assume there is an inflationary gap
Contractionary monetary policy can eliminate this inflationary gap.
Direct and indirect effects cause the aggregate demand curve to shift inward.
17-23
Figure 17-4 Contractionary Monetary Policy with Overutilized Resources
17-24
•The inflationary gap is shown
•To decrease AD, use contractionary monetary policy
•AD decreases and real GDP decreases
Open Economy Transmission of Monetary Policy So far we have discussed monetary policy in a
closed economy.
When we move to an open economy, monetary policy becomes more complex.
17-25
Open Economy Transmission of Monetary Policy (cont'd) The net export effect
Impact of expansionary (contractionary) monetary Lower (higher) interest rates Financial capital flows out of (into) the United States Demand for dollars will decrease (increase) International price of dollar goes down (up) Foreign goods look more (less) expensive in
United States Net exports increase (decrease) and imports fall (go up)
17-26
Open Economy Transmission of Monetary Policy (cont'd) Globalization of international
money markets
Global money markets reduce the Fed's ability to control the rate of growth in the money supply.
Foreign entities can influence both the supply of and demand for U.S. dollars.
Their actions can reinforce or offset the Fed strategy.
17-27
Monetary Policy and Inflation
Most theories of inflation relate to the short run and the price index in the short run can fluctuate due toOil price shocks, labor union strikes
In the long run, there is a more stable relationship between growth in the money supply and inflation.
17-28
Monetary Policy and Inflation (cont'd) Simple supply and demand analysis can be used
to explain Why the price level rises when the money supply is
increased
If the supply of money expands relative to the demand for money It takes more units of money to purchase given
quantities of goods and services (i.e., the price level has risen)
17-29
Monetary Policy and Inflation (cont'd) The Equation of Exchange
The formula indicating that the number of monetary units times the number of times each unit is spent on final goods and services is identical to the price level times real GDP
17-30
MsV = PY
Monetary Policy and Inflation (cont'd) V = Income Velocity of Money
The number of times per year the dollar is spent on final goods and services; equal to the nominal GDP divided by the money supply.
17-31
Monetary Policy and Inflation (cont'd) The equation of exchange and the quantity
theory: MSV = PY
MS = actual money balances held by nonbanking public
V = income velocity of money; the number of times, on average per year, each monetary unit is spent on final goods and services
P = price level or price index
Y = real GDP per year17-32
Monetary Policy and Inflation (cont'd) The equation of exchange as
an identity
Total funds spent on final output MsV equals total funds received PY
The value of goods purchased is equal to the value of goods sold
MsV = PY = nominal GDP
17-33
Monetary Policy and Inflation (cont'd)
Assume: V is constantY is stable
Increases in Ms must be matched by equal increases in the price level
17-34
MsV = PY
Quantity Theory of Money and Prices
The hypothesis that changes in the money supply lead to proportional changes in the price level
Monetary Policy in Action: The Transmission Mechanism Recall we talked about the direct and indirect
effects of monetary policy.Direct effect: implies increase in money supply
causes people to have excess money balances.
Indirect effect: occurs as people purchase interest-bearing assets, causing the price of such assets to go up.
17-36
Figure 17-7 Adding Monetary Policy to the Aggregate Demand–Aggregate Supply Model, Panel (a)
17-38
At lower rates, a larger quantity of money will be demanded
Figure 17-7 Adding Monetary Policy to the Aggregate Demand–Aggregate Supply Model, Panel (b)
17-39
The decrease in the interest rate stimulates investment
Figure 17-7 Adding Monetary Policy to the Aggregate Demand–Aggregate Supply Model, Panel (c)
17-40
The increase in investment shifts the AD curve to the right
Fed Target Choice: Interest Rates or Money Supply? It is not possible to stabilize the money supply and
interest rates simultaneously.
The Fed has often sought to achieve an interest rate target.
There is a fundamental tension between targeting interest rates and controlling the money supply.
The Fed, in the short run, can select an interest rate or a money supply target but not both.
17-41
Figure 17-8 Choosing a Monetary Policy Target
17-42
If the Fed selects re, it
must accept Ms
If the Fed selects M’s,
it must allow the interest rate to fall
Fed Target Choice: Interest Rates or Money Supply? (cont'd) The Fed, in the short run, can select
an interest rate or a money supply target but not both.
17-43
Fed Target Choice: Interest Rates or Money Supply? (cont'd) Choosing a policy target
Money supply When variations in private spending occur
Interest rates When the demand for (or supply of) money
is unstable Interest rate targets are preferred
17-44
The Way Fed Policy is Currently Implemented At present the Fed announces an interest rate
target.
The rate referred to is the federal funds rate of interest.
Or, the rate at which banks can borrow excess reserves from each other.
17-45
The Way Fed Policy is Currently Implemented (cont'd) If the Fed wants to raise “the” interest rate, it
engages in contractionary open market operations.
Fed sells more Treasury securities than it buys, thereby reducing the money supply.
This tends to boost “the” rate of interest.
17-46
The Way Fed Policy is Currently Implemented (cont'd) Conversely, if the Fed wants to decrease “the”
rate of interest, it engages in expansionary open market operations.
Fed buys more Treasury securities, increasing the money supply.
This tends to lower “the” rate of interest.
17-47
The Way Fed Policy is Currently Implemented (cont'd) FOMC Directive
A document that summarizes the Federal Open Market Committee’s general policy strategy
Establishes near-term objectives for the federal funds rate and specifies target ranges for money supply growth
17-48
The Way Fed Policy is Currently Implemented (cont'd) Trading Desk
An office at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York charged with implementing monetary policy strategies developed by the FOMC
17-49
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