Intermediate Macroeconomic Econ 2102/2220B
Intermediate Macroeconomic Econ 2102/2220B
Econ 2102/2220B
Lecture 5
Fall, 2014
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Outline
What is Money?
Portfolio Allocation and the Demand for Assets
Money Demand (and Supply)
Asset Market Equilibrium
Money Growth and Inflation
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What Is Money?
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Medium of exchange
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Unit of account
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Store of value
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Concepts of Money
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M1 and M2
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The money supply
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Portfolio Allocation and the Demand for Assets
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Expected return
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Risk
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Liquidity
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Portfolio Allocation and the Demand for Assets
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Portfolio Allocation and the Demand for Assets
Asset Demands
- Trade-off among expected return, risk, liquidity, and time to
maturity
- Assets with low risk and high liquidity, like checking
accounts, have low expected returns
- Investors consider diversification: spreading out
investments in different assets to reduce risk
- The amount a wealth holder wants of an asset is his or her
demand for that asset
- The sum of asset demands equals total wealth
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The Demand for Money
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The Demand for Money
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The Demand for Money
Price level
- The higher the price level, the more money you need for
transactions
- Prices are 10 times as high today as in 1935, so it takes 10
times as much money for equivalent transactions
- Nominal money demand is thus proportional to the price
level
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The Demand for Money
Real income
- The more transactions you conduct, the more money you
need
- Real income is a prime determinant of the number of
transactions you conduct
- So money demand rises as real income rises
- But money demand isnt proportional to real income, since
higher-income individuals use money more efficiently, and
since a countrys financial sophistication grows as its
income rises (use of credit and more sophisticated assets)
- Result: Money demand rises less than 1-to-1 with a rise in
real income
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The Demand for Money
Interest rates
- An increase in the interest rate or return on nonmonetary
assets decreases the demand for money
- An increase in the interest rate on money increases money
demand
- This occurs as people trade off liquidity for return
- Though there are many nonmonetary assets with many
different interest rates, because they often move together
we assume that for nonmonetary assets theres just one
nominal interest rate, i
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Interest Rates
r = i e
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The Demand for Money
M d = P L(Y , i) (1)
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The Demand for Money
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The money demand function
Alternative expression:
M d = P L(Y , r + e ) (2)
M d /P = L(Y , r + e ) (3)
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The Demand for Money
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The Demand for Money
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The Demand for Money
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The Demand for Money
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Asset Market Equilibrium
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Asset Market Equilibrium
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Asset Market Equilibrium
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The asset market equilibrium condition
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The asset market equilibrium condition
P = M/L(Y , r + e ) (8)
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Money Growth and Inflation
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Money Growth and Inflation in the long run
= M/M Y Y /Y (10)
Example:
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Expected Inflation Rate
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Inflation and money growth
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Inflation and money growth
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A Shift in the Money Growth Rate
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