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MONEY, INTEREST, REAL GDP, AND THE PRICE LEVEL

MONEY, INTEREST, REAL GDP, AND THE PRICE LEVEL. The demand for money Fed influences over interest rates Effect of Fed actions on AD, real GDP, and the price level in the short run & long run Quantity theory of money. The Demand for Money. The Determinants of Money Demand

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MONEY, INTEREST, REAL GDP, AND THE PRICE LEVEL

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  1. MONEY, INTEREST, REAL GDP, AND THE PRICE LEVEL • The demand for money • Fed influences over interest rates • Effect of Fed actions on AD, real GDP, and the price level in the short run & long run • Quantity theory of money.

  2. The Demand for Money • The Determinants of Money Demand • The quantity of money that people plan to hold depends on four main factors • The price level • The interest rate • Real incomes (Real GDP) • Financial innovation

  3. The Demand for Money • The price level • A rise in the price level • increases the nominal quantity of money demanded • doesn’t change the real quantity of money that people plan to hold. • The quantity of nominal money demanded is proportional to the price level • a 10 percent rise in the price level increases the quantity of nominal money demanded by 10 percent.

  4. The Demand for Money • The interest rate • the opportunity cost of holding wealth in the form of money rather than an interest-bearing asset. • A rise in the interest rate decreases the quantity of money that people plan to hold. • Real GDP • An increase in real GDP increases the volume of expenditure, which increases the quantity of real money that people plan to hold.

  5. The Demand for Money • Financial innovation • That lowers the cost of switching between money and interest-bearing assets decreases the quantity of money that people plan to hold.

  6. The Demand for Money • The Demand for Money Curve • Shows the relationship between the quantity of real money demanded (M/P) and the interest rate when all other influences on the amount of money that people wish to hold remain the same.

  7. The Demand for Money • The demand for money curve slopes downward

  8. The Demand for Money • Shifts in the Demand for Money Curve • Real GDP • Financial innovation

  9. Interest Rate Determination • An interest rate is the percentage yield on a financial security such as a bond or a loan. • The price of a bond and the interest rate are inversely related. • If the price of a bond falls, the interest rate on the bond rises. • If the price of a bond rises, the interest rate on the bond falls.

  10. The Bond Market. • Bond features • Maturity date is the specific future date on which the maturity value will be paid to the bond holder. • Bond maturity dates when issued generally range from 3 months up to 30 years. • Coupon rate • Between the date of issuance and the maturity date, annual interest payment equals the coupon rate times the maturity value.

  11. The Bond Market. • Yield to maturity • the effective interest rate that the bond-holder earns if the bond is held to maturity. • Bond price • If P=maturity value, bond sells at “par”. • If P>maturity value, bond sells above “par”. • Example: • Bond that matures 20 years from today with a maturity value of $1000 and a coupon rate of 10% will pay: • $100 per year for 20 years • $1000 at maturity • The bond could be sold at any point in time for a price above or below its maturity value.

  12. The Bond Market. • Computing yields on one year bonds • coupon rate = cr, maturity value =mv, price = P • Yield = (MV+cr(MV))/P -1 = MV(1+cr)/P -1 • As P rises, yield (interest rate) falls. • If P=MV (par), yield=cr • If P>MV (above par), yield<cr • What is the yield on a one year bond that has a maturity value of 1000 and coupon rate of 8% if price equals • $900 $950 $1050 • As bond prices rise, yields (interest rates) fall.

  13. The Bond Market. • Computing yields on Zero Coupon Bonds. • No interest payments are made between the sale of the bond and its maturity. • yield = (MV/P)1/T – 1 • If you buy a zero coupon bond today for $1000 and it has a maturity value of $1500 in 10 years • yield = (1500/1000)1/10 -1 = .0414 = 4.14% • As the price paid for a bond increases, the yield (interest rate) falls.

  14. The Bond Market. • Determinants of bond yields • Risk • Debt rating agencies: • Moody’s & Standard and Poors • AAA=superior quality • C=imminent default • Inflation risk. • Term • Longer term bonds have greater inflation and default risk.

  15. The Bond Market. • Yield curve • Shows relationship between yield and term on government bonds • Slope of yield curve reflects • Expectations of future short term interest rates • Greater risk of long term bonds • If short term interest rates are expected to be constant in the future, yield curve will slope upward reflecting risk premia for longer term bonds. • A steepening of the yield curve suggests that financial markets believe short term interest rates will be rising in the future. • The dynamic yield curve • The bond market

  16. Interest Rate Determination • Money Market Equilibrium • The Fed determines the quantity of money supplied and on any given day, that quantity is fixed. • The supply of money curve is vertical at the given quantity of money supplied. • Money market equilibrium determines the interest rate.

  17. Interest Rate Determination

  18. Interest Rate Determination • If the Fed increases the money supply, interest rates will fall. • As money supply increases, banks have more loanable funds, interest rates are reduced. • Fed has better control over short term than long term rates.

  19. Short-Run Effects of Money onReal GDP, and the Price Level • Ripple Effects of Monetary Policy • If the Fed increases the interest rate, three events follow: • Investment and consumption expenditures decrease. • The value of the $ rises and net exports decrease. • A multiplier process unfolds.

  20. Short-Run Effects of Money onReal GDP, and the Price Level • The Fed tightens the money supply to reduce inflationary pressure. Real GDP decreases and the price level falls.

  21. Short-Run Effects of Money onReal GDP, and the Price Level • Effects of an Increase in the money supply to recover from recession.

  22. Short-Run Effects of Money onReal GDP, and the Price Level • Limitations of Monetary Stabilization Policy • The impact depends on the sensitivity of expenditure plans to the interest rate. • The effects of monetary policy can take a long time be realized. • These effects are variable and hard to predict.

  23. LR Effects of Money on Real GDP and the Price Level • An increase in the money supply will increase AD. • SR Effects: • Real wage falls • Unemployment falls • Real GDP increases. • Price level rises.

  24. LR Effects of Money on Real GDP and the Price Level • Movement to new LR equilibrium • the money wage rate rises • SAS decreases. • RGDP decreases • P rises • Compared to original LR equil. • No change in RGDP, unempl, real wage • Higher prices, nominal GDP & nominal wage

  25. Quantity Theory of Money • Equation of exchange • MV = Py • M=money supply • V=velocity of money • P=price level • y=real GDP

  26. Quantity Theory of Money • MV = PY • Q-theory assumes that velocity and potential GDP are not affected by the quantity of money. • P = (MV/Y) • Because (V/Y) does not change when M changes, a change in M brings a proportionate change in P.

  27. Quantity Theory of Money

  28. Quantity Theory of Money • P = (V/Y)M • Divide this equation by • P = (V/Y)M • and the term (V/Y) cancels to give • P/P = M/M • P/P is the inflation rate • M/M is the growth rate of the quantity of money.

  29. Quantity Theory of Money • Historical Evidence on the Quantity Theory of Money • U.S. money growth and inflation are correlated • more so in the long run than the short run • broadly consistent with the quantity theory.

  30. Quantity Theory of Money

  31. Quantity Theory of Money Decade averages show stronger relationship

  32. Quantity Theory of Money • International Evidence

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