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Monetary Policy

Monetary Policy

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Monetary Policy. The Price Level is determined by:. The relationship between the amount of money in circulation and the amount of goods and services in the economy. MV = PQ. Banks lend $5 which will buy a basket of goods and services. $5. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Monetary Policy

Monetary Policy

Page 2: Monetary Policy

The Price Level is determined by:The relationship between the amount of money in

circulation and the amount of goods and

services in the economy.

MV = PQ

Page 3: Monetary Policy

$5

Banks lend $5 which will buy a basket of goods and services

Page 4: Monetary Policy

Borrowers repay $5 which no longer buys the same basket of goods and services.

$500

Page 5: Monetary Policy

$500

IOU $5

Lenders hate inflation!

Page 6: Monetary Policy

How does soft money affect prices?

• The supply of silver or greenbacks is greater than the supply of gold.

• The greater the money supply, the less the price/value of each dollar.

• If the supply of money increases, prices go up, each dollar buys less.

• With inflation, lenders are repaid in less valuable dollars. They lose.

Page 7: Monetary Policy

Winners and Losers

Lenders

lose purchasing power because dollars they are repaid are less powerful than those they loaned

Borrowers

gain purchasing power because dollars they repay are less powerful than those they borrowed

Page 8: Monetary Policy

The Money Supply

• Coins, currency, demand deposits, and other negotiable accounts in the hands of the NON-BANK public.

Page 9: Monetary Policy

FED actions

• To stimulate the economy, increase the

money supply

• To contract the economy, decrease the

money supply

Page 10: Monetary Policy

Three tools of monetary policy

• Discount rate

• Reserve requirement

• Open market operations

Page 11: Monetary Policy

How the FED influences the money supply

• Increase the money supply– Lower the discount

rate

– Lower the reserve requirement

– Buy bonds

• Decrease the money supply– Raise the discount rate

– Raise the reserve requirement

– Sell bonds

Page 12: Monetary Policy

Jefferson and Hamilton

• Jefferson’s political philosophy

• Hamilton’s political philosophy

• Why would Jefferson be against a central bank?

• Why would Hamilton be for a central bank?

Page 13: Monetary Policy

Oz and the Election of 1896

Page 14: Monetary Policy

Bryan and McKinley

• The Cross of Gold

• Greenbacks or silver

Page 15: Monetary Policy

Hard vs Soft Money

• Hard Money

– gold

– prevents inflation

– benefits lenders

– Republicans favor it

• Soft Money

– silver or greenbacks

– causes inflation

– benefits borrowers

– Democrats favor it

Page 16: Monetary Policy

The Logic

• Soft Money (greenbacks or silver) causes inflation

• Hard money (gold) causes price stability or deflation

• Borrowers (farmers and workers)like soft money Lenders (bankers) like hard money

Page 17: Monetary Policy

Helped and Hurt by Unanticipated Inflation

• The eastern bankers - lenders

• Western farmers - borrowers

• Industrial workers - borrowers

Page 18: Monetary Policy

Measurements of Inflation

• Consumer Price Index

• Producer Price Index

• Implicit Price Deflator

Page 19: Monetary Policy

Main Points

• The price level is determined by the relationship between the amount of goods and services in the economy and the amount of money

• Unanticipated inflation helps debtors and hurts creditors

• The FED influences the money supply through the discount rate, reserve requirement, and open market operations.

• Changes in the money supply influence aggregate demand.