MACROECONOMICS
AND THE GLOBAL BUSINESS ENVIRONMENT
2nd edition
Money and Prices
1
PowerPoint by Beth Ingram
University of Iowa Copyright © 2005 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. All rights reserved.
2
Key Concepts
Inflation
Inflation rate.
Inlation rate on various prices- WPI, CPI.
Causes of Inflation.
Types of Inlation based on rates.
Impact of Inflation.
Control measures.
3
Inflation Rate
The rate of change in the price level
P(1) – P(0)
Rate of Inflation =
P(0)
4
Measuring Inflation
Consumer Price Index (CPI)
Producers’ Price Index (PPI)
GDP Deflator
Ratio of Nominal GDP to Real GDP
Mis-measurement issues
5
Calculation of Inflation Rate- India
435 Commodities.
Primary articles.
Fuel, power, light and lubricant.
Manufactured products.
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Excluded
Services.
Real Estate.
7
Different weights
Primary artcles – 22.02%.
Fuel power light and lubricants – 14.2%.
Manufactured products – 63.75%.
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UK Prices, 1661 - 1991
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UK Inflation, 1661 - 1999
10
G7 Inflation, 1975 - 2000
30 Canada
25 USA
France
20
Germany
15
Italy
10 Japan
5 UK
0
-5
1973
1975
1977
1979
1981
1983
1985
1987
1989
1991
1993
1995
1997
1999
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Types of Inflation Based on Rates-
Samuelson
Moderate – Creeping, walking.
Running.
Walking.
Galloping.
Hyper.
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Moderate Inflation
a. creeping inflation ( less than 10 % per
annum).
B. walking inflation 10 % per annum)
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Running Inflation
More than 10 % up to 20% per annum
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Galloping Inflation
More than 20% up to triple digit per annum
15
Hyper
More than 1000% per annum .
Example – Germany. 1922. Zimbabwe- present.
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Headline Inflation
Weekly inflation data reported in newspapers.
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Core Inflation
Core inflation is a measure of inflation which
excludes certain items that face volatile price
movements e.g. food products and energy.
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Money Neutrality
Price level is a yardstick
Does it matter which unit we use?
Double all prices and incomes
Is your welfare the same, better, or worse?
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Costs of Inflation
Nominal contracts
Tax systems
Mortgages
Menu costs
Transactions costs associated with changing
prices
Effect of changes in pricing technology (bar
codes)
Relative price issues
Effect on long-run growth
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What about deflation?
Price uncertainty
High real interest rates
Real burden of debt
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Money
Money was never a big motivation for me, except as a way to
keep score. The real excitement is playing the game.
Donald Trump, "Trump: Art of the Deal"
Money is a terrible master but an excellent servant.
Phineas Taylor Barnum
A billion here, a billion there - pretty soon it adds up to real
money.
Senator Everett Dirksen (1896 - 1969)
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Why a currency?
Role of money
Store of value
Medium of exchange
Unit of account
Kinds of money
Commodity Money
Backed currency
Fiat Currency
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The Money Supply
M1: Currency + Traveler’s Checks + demand
deposits + other checkable deposits
M2: M1 + retail money market mutual funds +
savings and small time deposits + overnight
repurchase agreements
M3: M2 + large time deposits + term
repurchase agreements + eurodollars +
institutional money market mutual funds
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Monetary Aggregates, June 2004
10000
8000
6000
M3
4000
M2
2000
M1
0
1
Source: Board of Governors On-line Statistics
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Money Multiplier
Vault Accumulation
$10 $19 $26.10 … $100
$100 $90 $71 …
$100 $190 $261 … $1000
Total Money
Base Currency M1
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Money Multiplier = 1/(reserve requirement)
Assumes banks don’t hold excess reserves
Assumes loans make it back to bank as
deposits
Assumes currency doesn’t leave country
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Seignorage
How does it work?
Direct – print money
Indirect – print money, buy and hold
government debt
Inflation Tax
Decline in value of cash holdings due to
inflation
Same as seignorage if inflation rate = growth
rate in currency
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Seignorage
Country % of GDP % Country % of GDP % Gov.
Gov.Spending Spending
USA 0.43 1.96 Philippines 1.23 8.96
Canada 0.44 2.01 El Salvador 1.53 10.89
UK 0.47 1.28 Nigeria 1.57 11.12
France 0.55 1.39 India 1.72 11.82
Switzerland 0.62 6.74 Ecuador 2.17 15.81
Cameroon 0.64 3.38 Greece 3.13 10.51
S. Africa 0.65 2.53 Ghana 3.31 22.01
Germany 0.69 2.35 Turkey 3.58 15.20
Burundi 0.85 6.12 Bolivia 3.81 19.76
Japan 0.96 5.62 Peru 4.99 28.23
Thailand 1.09 6.30 Argentina 9.73 62.00
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Hyperinflation
High and persistent rate of inflation
Relationship to fiscal policy
Finance government.
spending via inflation
tax
Rising Inflation
Declining value of Money
People decrease
money holdings by
buying goods
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Seven Hyperinflations – 1920s and 1940s
End Avg. Avg
Price/Initial Monthly Monthly
Beginning End Price Inflation Money
Austria 01/10/21 01/08/22 70 47 31
Germany 01/08/22 01/11/23 1x10+10 322 314
Greece 01/11/43 01/11/44 4.7x10+6 365 220
Hungary I 01/03/23 01/02/24 44 46 33
Hungary II 01/08/45 01/07/46 3.8x10+27 19,800 12,200
Poland 01/01/23 01/01/24 699 82 72
Russia 01/12/21 01/01/24 1.2x10+5 57 49
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The German hyperinflation 1922-23
(January 1922 =1)
Currency Prices Real Inflation
Money (% per month)
Jan 1922 1 1 1.00 5
Jan 1923 16 75 0.21 189
July 1923 354 2021 0.18 386
Sept 1923 227777 645946 0.35 2532
Oct 1923 20201256 191891890 0.11 29720
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Quantity Theory
MV = PY
Velocity: the circulation rate of money
Inflation is always and everywhere monetary phenomenon.
Milton Friedman
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%∆M + %∆V = %∆P + %∆Y
Assume V = constant, so %∆V = 0
%∆M = %∆P + %∆Y
%∆Y determined by investment, technology,
etc.
%∆M is proportional to %∆P
Growth in
Seignorage Money Inflation
Supply
35
US Inflation and Money Growth
10
8
1970s
1910s
6 1940s
1980s
Inflation %
4
1960s
1990s 1950s
2 1900s
0
1890s
1930s 1880s
-2 1920s 1870s
-4
0 2 4 6 8 10 12
Money Supply Grow th (%)
36
UK Inflation and Money Growth
37
Cross-country Inflation and Money
Growth, Long Run
38
Cross-country Inflation and Money
Growth, Short Run
39
Summary
Inflation
Measures
Costs
Deflation
Money
Definitions
Multiplier
Seignorage and Inflation Tax
Hyperinflation
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