1 Market Demand and Supply ©2006 South-Western College Publishing.
Chapter 5 Monetary Theory and Policy © 2001 South-Western College Publishing Company.
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Transcript of Chapter 5 Monetary Theory and Policy © 2001 South-Western College Publishing Company.
![Page 1: Chapter 5 Monetary Theory and Policy © 2001 South-Western College Publishing Company.](https://reader036.fdocuments.net/reader036/viewer/2022071806/56649db35503460f94aa380b/html5/thumbnails/1.jpg)
Chapter 5
Monetary Theory and Policy
© 2001 South-Western College Publishing Company
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Monetary Theories
Developed by John Keynes and his students Initially tried to explain inadequacy of
monetary policy during great depressionEffectiveness of monetary policy depends
upon The sensitivity (elasticity) of economy to changes In interest rates
Advocates fiscal policy
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Monetary Theories
Keynesian theory continuedFocus on how a government surplus or deficit
can influence the economyAdvocates proactive economic policyCan consider the theory using the framework
of loanable funds
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Monetary Theories
Keynesian theory to correct a weak economyTo stimulate the economy the Fed buys securities
in an open market operationFed’s actions increase the supply of loanable
funds Interest rates drop and business investment goes
up Keynesian theory to correct high inflation
Government policy to reduce spending
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Monetary Theories
Keynesian theory and credit crunchesBanks’ willingness to lend affects monetary policyBanks lend based on evaluation of borrower’s
ability to repay, not just availability of fundsMonetary policy to stimulate the economy works
only if banks find enough qualified borrowers Restrictive monetary policy may magnify credit
crunch
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Monetary Theories
Quantity theoryBased on equation of exchangeMV=PGQ
M = amount of money in the economy V = velocity, average number of times each dollar
changes hands during the year PG = weighted average price level of goods and services
in the economy Q = quantity of goods and services sold
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Monetary Theories
MonetaristsVelocity is affected by
• Income levels• Frequency income is received• Use of credit cards• Inflationary expectations
Velocity changes found to be predictable and not related to fluctuations in money supply
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Monetary Theories
Monetarist Let economic
problems resolve themselves
Low growth reduces borrowing and lowers interest rates
Problem: takes time
Keynesian Need to take action to
lower interest rates High money growth to
fix a recession by lowering rates
Problem: Might ignite inflation
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Monetary Theories
Monetarist Low, stable growth in
the money supply Focus on maintaining
low inflation and will tolerate what they call natural unemployment
Keynesian Actively manage the
money supply Willing to tolerate
inflation that helps reduce unemployment
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Tradeoff Faced By The Fed
Goals of the FedSteady GDP growthLow unemploymentMaintain low inflation
TradeoffsLowering unemployment may put pressure on
inflationLowering inflation may increase unemployment
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Tradeoff Faced By The Fed
Tradeoffs between employment and inflation make it difficult to solve both problems simultaneously
Impact of other forcesFactors outside the control of the Fed affect
employment and inflationClassic example of the tradeoff is the summer of
1990 with Gulf War and high oil prices but signals pointing to a possible recession
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Economic Indicators Monitored By The Fed
Indicators of economic growthGross Domestic Product or GDP Industrial productionNational incomeUnemployment
Indicators of InflationProducer price indexesConsumer price IndexesOther indicators
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Integrating Monetary And Fiscal Policies
HistoryExecutive branch usually most concerned
with employment and growthFed and administration may differ on whether
or not inflation or growth needs the most emphasis
Agreement when inflation and unemployment are at relatively low levels
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Integrating Monetary And Fiscal Policies
Combined monetary and fiscal policy effectsFiscal policy usually has a bigger influence on
the demand for loanable fundsMonetary policy usually has a bigger
influence on the supply of loanable funds
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Global Effects On Monetary Policy
Impact on the dollarValue of the dollar relative to other currencies
can affect inflationFor example, a weak dollar stimulates U.S.
exports, discourages imports and stimulates the economy
Fed less likely to stimulate the economy if the dollar is weak