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Econ 102 Discussion Section 9 (Chapter 15) April 10, 2015

Chapter 15: Monetary Policy


Money Supply and Demand
The money demand curve shows the relationship between the interest rate and the quantity of
money demanded.

Why is the money demand curve downward sloping?


- Opportunity cost of holding money is the nominal interest rate
- ↑ nominal interest rate => ↑ opportunity cost of money => ↓ demand for money

Shifts of Money Demand Curve:

o Changes in Aggregate Price Level:


↑ prices => ↑ money needed to but goods and services => ↑ money demand

o Changes in Real GDP


↑ GDP => ↑ quantity of goods and services bought => ↑ money demand

o Changes in Credit Market and Banking Technology


New technology (credit cards/debit cards) allow buying of goods and services without
money and access to interest-bearing accounts at lower cost => ↓ money demand

The money supply curve shows the amount of


currency supplied by the Fed.

The Federal Reserve is able to increase or decrease


the money supply in order to affect the interest rate
and stabilize the economy. This is referred to as
monetary policy.
In the AD/AS model monetary policy works by
shifting the AD curve. The effects of monetary policy
can be either expansionary or contractionary:

Expansionary Monetary Policy: Monetary policy that increases aggregate demand


↑ money supply => ↓ interest rate => ↑ I , ↑ C (via multiplier) , ↑ NX => ↑ aggregate demand
(AD curve shifts right)

Contractionary Monetary Policy: Monetary policy that decreases aggregate demand


↓ money supply => ↑ interest rate => ↓ I , ↓ C (via multiplier) , ↓ NX => ↓ aggregate demand
(AD curve shifts right)

Also, note that this applies to both the static and the dynamic AD/AS model
Econ 102 Discussion Section 9 (Chapter 15) April 10, 2015

How does the Fed Set Monetary Policy Targets?


Most economists believe that the interest rate is the best monetary policy target, as opposed to
the money supply (the Fed cannot target both simultaneously.

Taylor Rule for Monetary Policy: A rule that sets the federal funds rate according to the sum of
the inflation rate, the equilibrium federal funds rate, and two addition terms (such as the inflation
gap and output gap). An example is below:

Federal  Funds  Rate


= Inflation  Rate + Equilibrium  Fed  Funds  Rate + 0.5×inflation  gap
+ 0.5×output  gap

Inflation Targeting: When the central bank sets an explicit target for the inflation rate and sets
monetary policy in order to hit that target

Practice Questions
1. If a checking account pays no interest and a Treasury bill pays 1% interest, then the
opportunity cost of holding money in checking is
A) 0% B) 1% C) 2%
D) there is never an opportunity cost of holding money in checking

2. An increase in government purchases causes GDP to increase, then the


A) money supply decreases. B) money supply increases.
C) money demand decreases. D) money demand increases.

3. If the equilibrium interest rate in the money market is 2%, then at an interest rate of 5%
A) money demanded exceeds the money supplied, and people shift from holding money
to interest bearing assets, causing the interest rate to fall.
B) money supplied exceeds the money demanded, and people shift from holding money
to interest bearing assets, causing the interest rate to fall.
C) money demanded exceeds the money supplied and people shift from holding interest
bearing assets to money, causing the interest rate to rise.
D) money supplied exceeds the money demanded and people shift from holding interest
bearing assets to money, causing the interest rate to rise.

4. An increase in the required reserve ratio will __________ the money supply, causing interest
rates to __________.
A) decrease; decrease B) decrease; increase
C) increase; decrease D) increase; increase
Econ 102 Discussion Section 9 (Chapter 15) April 10, 2015

5. When the Federal Reserve wants to increase the federal funds rate, it ________
A) buys treasury bills from banks, increasing bank reserves and increasing the money supply.
B) buys treasury bills from banks, decreasing bank reserves and decreasing the money supply.
C) sells treasury bills to banks, increasing bank reserves and increasing the money supply.
D) sells treasury bills to banks, decreasing bank reserves and decreasing the money supply.

6. When there is a recessionary gap, the Federal Reserve can __________ interest rates to
__________ GDP and __________ the price level.
A) increase; increase; increase
B) increase; decrease; increase
C) decrease; increase; increase
D) decrease; decrease; increase

7. Suppose expansionary fiscal policy causes inflation to rise above the Federal Reserve’s
inflation target. Then the Federal Reserve will __________ interest rates in order to __________
inflation.
A) decrease; decrease B) decrease; increase
C) increase; decrease D) increase; increase

8. Suppose that the Federal Reserve follows a Taylor rule for monetary policy. When inflation
increases, the Federal Reserve will want to __________ the interest rate. So it will __________
banks, causing the money supply to __________.
A) decrease; sell Treasury bills to; increase
B) decrease; buy treasury bills from; increase
C) increase; sell Treasury bills to; decrease
D) increase; buy Treasury bills from; decrease

9. Consider an economy that is in its long-run equilibrium right now. If the Federal Reserve
increases the money supply, then in the long run GDP will be __________ now and the price
level will be __________ now.
A) the same as; the same as B) lower than; higher than
C) higher than; the same as D) the same as; higher than

10. Suppose the Federal Reserve increases the money supply by buying Treasury bills from
banks. Then
A) in the short run interest rates decrease, and in the long run interest rates stay low
B) in the short run interest rates increase, and in the long run interest rates decrease
C) in the short run interest rates decrease, and in the long run interest rates return to
where they started
D) in the short run interest rate stay the same, and in the long run interest rates decrease
Econ 102 Discussion Section 9 (Chapter 15) April 10, 2015

11. Suppose the economy is in long run equilibrium. If the Fed engages in expansionary
monetary policy:
A) In the long run GDP increases and the price level increases
B) In the long run GDP increases and the price level does not change
C) In the long run neither GDP nor the price level changes
D) In the long run GDP does not change and the price level increases

12. Suppose there is an inflationary gap in the economy. To address this the Fed can:
A) Engage in an open market sale
B) Engage in an open market purchase
C) Both a and b
D) The Fed cannot close an inflationary gap using monetary policy

13. If the interest rate increases:


A) There is an increase in the quantity of money supplied
B) There is a decrease in the quantity of money supplied
C) There is no change in the quantity of money supplied
D) Not enough information

14. Consider an economy that is in long run equilibrium. If the long run aggregate supply curve
grows at a faster rate than demand, what can the Fed do in order to return to macroeconomic
equilibrium?
A) Conduct an open market sale
B) Increase the discount rate
C) Increase the required reserve ratio
D) None of the above

10. C) 11. D) 12. A) 13. C) 14. D) 8. C) 9. D)


3. B) 4. B) 5. D) 6. C) 7. C) 1. B) 2. D)
Answers:

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