Money Demand and Money Suppy Process: Session 09-10
Money Demand and Money Suppy Process: Session 09-10
Money Demand and Money Suppy Process: Session 09-10
(MONETARY POLICY)
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What is money?
?
Types of money
• Fiat money
• Legal tender money
• ‘Near money’
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Functions of money
• Medium of exchange
• Money is used to pay for goods and services
• Eliminates the need for a “double coincidence of wants”
• Unit of account
• The unit in which prices are quoted
• Store of value
• An asset that maintains value
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The Demand for Money Theory
Demand for money refers to the stock of assets held as cash, checking (SB/current)
accounts, and closely related assets, specifically not generic wealth or income.
The theories correspond to Keynes’s famous three motives for holding money:
The precautionary motive, which is the demand for money to meet unforeseen
contingencies.Mp = k(Y)
Speculative motive, which arises from uncertainties about the money value of
other assets that an individual can hold. Msp= h(r)
Md = L(Y,r)
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The Demand for Money Theory
Md
kY hr
P
k, h 0
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The Demand for Money: Theory
• The demand for money is the demand for real money balances.
– Two implications:
1. Real money demand is unchanged when the price level
increases, and all real variables, such as the interest rate,
real income, and real wealth, remain unchanged.
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The Quantity Theory
• The quantity theory of money provides simple way to think about the
relation between money, prices, and output:
M V P Y
– The equation is the famous quantity equation (equation of exchange), linking
the price level and the level of output to the money stock.
– The quantity equation became the classical quantity theory of money with it
was argued that both V and Y were fixed.
If both V and Y are fixed, it follows that the price level is proportional to the money
stock
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The Quantity Theory
• The classical quantity theory = theory of inflation
V M
P
Y
– If V is constant, changes in the money supply translate into
proportional changes in nominal GDP
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The Income Velocity
• The income velocity of money: the number of times the stock of money is
turned over per year in financing the annual flow of income.
– Equal to the ratio of nominal GDP to the nominal money stock, or:
P Y Y (1)
V
M M
P
Can also be interpreted as the ratio of nominal income to nominal
money stock OR the ratio of real income to real balances
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The Income Velocity
Concept of velocity is important largely because it is a convenient
way of talking about money demand
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Measurement and Components of
Money Supply
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2. Narrow Money (M1)
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Liquidity Ratio (CRR)
Change of money
Change of reserves
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India’s GDP and Money Supply
Velocity Velocity
GDP M0 M1 M3 (M0) (M3) Multiplier M0/GDP
1950-51 104 15 20 24 6.96 4.42 1.57 14.36
1960-61 179 22 29 40 8.01 4.53 1.77 12.48
1970-71 476 48 74 110 9.88 4.32 2.29 10.12
1980-81 1496 195 234 558 7.69 2.68 2.87 13.00
1990-91 5862 878 929 2658 6.68 2.21 3.03 14.97
2000-01 21687 3033 3794 13132 7.15 1.65 4.33 13.99
2010-11 77841 13768 16383 65041 5.65 1.20 4.72 17.69
2015-16 137718 21807 26025 116176 6.32 1.19 5.33 15.83
2016-17 153623 19005 26820 127919 8.08 1.20 6.73 12.37
2017-18 170950 24188 32673 139626 7.07 1.22 5.77 14.15
2018-19 190101 27705 37103 154309 6.86 1.23 5.57 14.57
At current Price in ₹billion GDP/M0 GDP/M3 M3/M0 M0/GDP
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How to control Money Supply?
• Money multiplier
Money supply (M) = money multiplier (m)
monetary base (M0)
M3
Broad Money Multiplier (m)
Monetary Base (M0)
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Monetary Policy
“to regulate the issue of Bank notes and keeping of reserves with a
view to securing monetary stability in India and generally to operate
the currency and credit system of the country to its advantage; to have
a modern monetary policy framework to meet the challenge of an
increasingly complex economy, to maintain price stability while
keeping in mind the objective of growth.”
Monetary Policy: Objectives and Tools
Stable prices
OBJECTIVES Low unemployment
Rapid growth of GDP
(GOALS)
• Open Market Operations
(including Repo & Reverse Repo)
• Marginal Standing Facility (MSF)
• Bank Rate
INSTRUMENTS • Statutory Reserve Requirements(CRR)
• Secondary Reserves (SLR)
• RBI’s Credit to Development Banks
• Moral Suasion
(ULTIMATE)
INFLATION
TARGET
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How Interest Rates are Determined:
Combining the Demand and Supply of Money
(The Liquidity Preference Theory)
Ms Ms Ms Ms0
0 1 1
r0 r1
r1 r0 Md
Md
Money Money
An open market purchase shifts the An open market sale shifts the
supply of money to the right and supply of money to the left and
leads to lower interest rates. leads to higher interest rates.
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Money – Price Relationship
The Money-Supply Growth Rule
• Quantity Theory of Money (QTM)
MV=PY
r1 Interest rate
A B
r2
Md I
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Money I1 I2 Investment
The Monetary Transmission Mechanism
AD>AS, Inflation
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The Interest Rate Channel
Weaker currency
Decline in imports
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The Impossible Trinity
• It is not possible for the central bank to achieve the three objectives viz., manage
exchange rate, free capital flow, and manage interest rate simultaneously.
• Once the doors of capital flows are opened, market forces will determine the
exchange rate and interest rate.
• If central bank wants to have say in both exchange rate and interest rate, it will have
to place restrictions on the capital flow.
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