Money and Inflation: Macroeconomics
Money and Inflation: Macroeconomics
Money and Inflation: Macroeconomics
CHAPTER FOUR
macroeconomics
fifth edition
N. Gregory Mankiw
PowerPoint Slides
by Ron Cronovich
2003 Worth Publishers, all rights reserved
CHAPTER 4
slide 2
1965
1970
1975
1980
1985
1990
1995
2000
Inflation rate
CHAPTER 4
slide 3
1965
1970
1975
1980
Inflation rate
CHAPTER 4
1985
1990
1995
2000
slide 4
CHAPTER 4
slide 5
Money: definition
Money is the stock
of assets that can
be readily used to
make transactions.
CHAPTER 4
slide 6
Money: functions
1. medium of exchange
we use it to buy stuf
2. store of value
transfers purchasing power from
the present to the future
3. unit of account
the common unit by which
everyone measures prices and
values
CHAPTER 4
slide 7
Money: types
1.fiat money
has no intrinsic value
example: the paper currency we
use
2.commodity money
has intrinsic value
examples: gold coins,
CHAPTER 4
slide 8
Discussion Question
Which of these are money?
a. Currency
b. Checks
c. Deposits in checking accounts
(called demand deposits)
d. Credit cards
e. Certificates of deposit
(called time deposits)
CHAPTER 4
slide 9
CHAPTER 4
slide 10
slide 11
Currency
Amount (billions)_
$598.7
M1
C + demand deposits, 1174.0
travelers checks,
other checkable deposits
M2
M1 + small time deposits,
savings deposits,
money market mutual funds,
money market deposit accounts
5480.1
M3
M2 + large time deposits,
repurchase agreements,
institutional money market
mutual fund balances
8054.4
CHAPTER 4
slide 12
CHAPTER 4
slide 13
Velocity
basic concept: the rate at which money
circulates
example: In 2003,
$500 billion in transactions
money supply = $100 billion
The average dollar is used in five
transactions in 2003
So, velocity = 5
CHAPTER 4
slide 14
Velocity, cont.
This suggests the following definition:
M
V
T
where
V = velocity
T = value of all transactions
M = money supply
CHAPTER 4
slide 15
Velocity, cont.
Use nominal GDP as a proxy for total
transactions.
Then,
M
V
PY
where
P = price of output
Y = quantity of output
(GDP deflator)
(real GDP)
CHAPTER 4
slide 16
It is an identity:
it holds by definition of the variables.
CHAPTER 4
slide 17
CHAPTER 4
slide 18
(M/P )d = k Y
quantity equation: M V = P Y
The connection between them: k = 1/V
When people hold lots of money
relative to their incomes (k is high),
money changes hands infrequently (V
is low).
CHAPTER 4
slide 19
VV
MVPY
CHAPTER 4
slide 20
slide 21
MVPY
The
V
is constant,
quantityso
theory
= 0.of money assumes
CHAPTER 4
slide 22
MPY
CHAPTER 4
slide 23
CHAPTER 4
slide 24
slide 25
International data on
inflation and money growth
Inflation rate10,000
(percent,
logarithmic
scale)
1,000
Democratic Republic
Nicaragua of Congo
Angola
Brazil
Georgia
100
Bulgaria
10
Germany
Kuwait
1
USA
Oman
0.1
0.1
CHAPTER 4
Japan
10
Canada
100
1,000
10,000
Money supply growth (percent, logarithmic sca
slide 26
1965
1970
1975
Inflation rate
CHAPTER 4
1980
1985
1990
1995
2000
slide 28
1965
1970
1975
Inflation rate
CHAPTER 4
1980
1985
1990
1995
2000
slide 29
1965
1970
Inflation rate
CHAPTER 4
1975
M2 growth rate
1980
1985
1990
1995
2000
slide 30
1965
1970
Inflation rate
CHAPTER 4
1975
M2 growth rate
1980
1985
1990
1995
2000
slide 31
Seigniorage
To spend more without raising taxes or
selling bonds, the govt can print money.
slide 32
CHAPTER 4
slide 33
i =r +
Chap 3: S = I determines r .
Hence, an increase in
causes an equal increase in i.
CHAPTER 4
slide 34
Nominal
interest rate
Inflation
rate
2
0
-2
1950 1955 1960 1965 1970 1975 1980 1985 1990 1995 2000
Year
CHAPTER 4
slide 35
100
Nominal
interest rate
(percent,
logarithmic
scale)
Kazakhstan
Kenya
Uruguay
Armenia
Italy
France
10
Nigeria
United Kingdom
United States
Japan
Germany
Singapore
CHAPTER 4
10
100
1000
Inflation rate (percent, logarithmic scal
slide 36
Exercise:
Suppose V is constant, M is growing 5% per
year, Y is growing 2% per year, and r = 4.
a. Solve for i (the nominal interest rate).
b. If the Fed increases the money growth rate
by
2 percentage points per year, find i .
c. Suppose the growth rate of Y falls to 1% per
year.
What will happen to ?
What must the Fed do if it wishes to
keep constant?
CHAPTER 4
slide 37
Answers:
Suppose V is constant, M is growing 5% per
year, Y is growing 2% per year, and r = 4.
a. First, find = 5 2 = 3.
Then, find i = r + = 4 + 3 = 7.
b. i = 2, same as the increase in the
slide 38
CHAPTER 4
slide 39
CHAPTER 4
slide 40
positively on Y
higher Y more spending
so, need more money
slide 41
rY
L
e
(,)
When people are deciding whether to
hold money or bonds, they dont know
what inflation will turn out to be.
Hence, the nominal interest rate
relevant for money demand is r + e.
CHAPTER 4
slide 42
Equilibrium
LrY
M
e
(,)
The supply of
real money
balances
CHAPTER 4
Real money
demand
slide 43
variable
adjusts to make S = I
Y
P
CHAPTER 4
YFKL
(,)
LiY
M
(,)
P
adjusts to make
slide 44
How P responds to M
LrY
M
e
(,)
CHAPTER 4
slide 45
slide 46
How P responds to e
LrY
M
e
(,)
to make
?
PMP
to re-establish
fall
eq'm
CHAPTER 4
slide 47
Discussion Question
CHAPTER 4
slide 48
A common misperception
Common misperception:
inflation reduces real wages
CHAPTER 4
slide 49
Hourly
Hourlyearnings
earnings
inin2001
2001dollars
dollars
16
16
14
14
12
12
22
200
200
175
175
150
150
125
125
10
10
88
Average
Average
$$per
hour
per
66 hourhourly
hourly
earnings
earnings
44
250
250
225
225
Consumer
Consumer
Price
PriceIndex
Index
100
100
75
75
(1983
(198
CPI
CPI
50
50
25
25
00
00
1964
1964 1968
1968 1972
1972 1976
1976 1980
1980 1984
1984 1988
1988 1992
1992 1996
1996 2000
2000
CHAPTER 4
slide 50
CHAPTER 4
slide 51
CHAPTER 4
slide 52
i
real money balances
CHAPTER 4
slide 53
CHAPTER 4
slide 54
Example:
Suppose a firm issues new catalog each
January. As the general price level rises
throughout the year, the firms relative price
will fall.
slide 55
Starbucks stock
Dec 31: you sold the stock for $11,000,
Suppose
slide 56
CHAPTER 4
slide 57
slide 58
slide 59
Inflation
Inflationallows
allowsthe
thereal
realwages
wagesto
toreach
reach
equilibrium
equilibriumlevels
levelswithout
withoutnominal
nominalwage
wage
cuts.
cuts.
Therefore,
Therefore,moderate
moderateinflation
inflationimproves
improves
the
thefunctioning
functioningof
oflabor
labormarkets.
markets.
CHAPTER 4
slide 60
Hyperinflation
def: 50% per month
All the costs of moderate inflation described
above become
HUGE
under hyperinflation.
CHAPTER 4
slide 61
CHAPTER 4
slide 62
slide 63
slide 64
slide 66
Chapter summary
1. Money
the stock of assets used for transactions
serves as a medium of exchange, store
slide 67
Chapter summary
3. Nominal interest rate
equals real interest rate + inflation rate.
Fisher effect: nominal interest rate moves
4. Money demand
depends on income in the Quantity
Theory
more generally, it also depends on the
nominal interest rate;
if so, then changes in expected inflation
affect the current price level.
CHAPTER 4
slide 68
Chapter summary
5. Costs of inflation
Expected inflation
CHAPTER 4
slide 69
Chapter summary
6. Hyperinflation
caused by rapid money supply
CHAPTER 4
slide 70
Chapter summary
7. Classical dichotomy
In classical theory, money is neutral--
CHAPTER 4
slide 71
CHAPTER 4
slide 72