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Monetary Policy

Monetary Policy. Control over the money supply is a critical policy tool for altering macroeconomic outcomes. The quantity of money in circulation influences its value in the marketplace. Interest rates and access to credit are basic determinants of spending behavior.

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Monetary Policy

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  1. Monetary Policy • Control over the money supply is a critical policy tool for altering macroeconomic outcomes. • The quantity of money in circulation influences its value in the marketplace. • Interest rates and access to credit are basic determinants of spending behavior. • Therefore, the effectiveness of monetary policy is of significance.

  2. Learning Objectives • 15-01. Explain how interest rates are set in the money market. • 15-02. Describe how monetary policy affects macro outcomes. • 15-03. Summarize the constraints on monetary policy impact. • 15-04. Identify the differences between Keynesian and monetarist monetary theories.

  3. The Money Market • Money is like any other commodity. It is traded in the marketplace. • There is a money supply (controlled by the Fed) and a money demand by the people. • They determine the “price” of money: the interest rate. • At high interest rates, money is expensive to acquire. • At low interest rates, money is cheap to acquire.

  4. The Money Market • If people hold cash as M1, they suffer an opportunity cost: the forgone interest they could have earned. • Money demand: the quantities of money people are willing and able to hold at alternative interest rates, ceteris paribus. • At low interest rates, the opportunity cost of holding money is low, so people will hold more of it, and vice versa.

  5. The Demand for Money • Why would people want to hold money – that is, have a demand for money? • Transactions demand: people need to hold money for the purpose of making everyday market purchases. • Precautionary demand: people also hold money for unexpected market transactions or for emergencies. • Speculative demand: some people also hold money to be able to take advantage of an investment opportunity in the near future.

  6. Money Market Equilibrium • Money demand: the quantity of money people are willing and able to hold (demand) increases as interest rates fall, and vice versa. • Money supply: since the Fed controls the money supply, it is represented by a vertical line.

  7. Money Market Equilibrium • The intersection of money demand and money supply (E1) establishes the equilibrium rate of interest.

  8. Money Market Equilibrium • If interest rates are higher than equilibrium, there is a money surplus. • People must hold more money as M1 than they wish. • They will move money out of M1 into M2 or other assets (such as bonds). • The interest rate will then fall to E1.

  9. Money Market Equilibrium • If interest rates are lower than equilibrium, there is a money shortage. • People must hold less money as M1 than they wish. • They will move money into M1 from M2 or other assets (such as bonds). • The interest rate will then rise to E1.

  10. Changing Interest Rates • The Fed controls the money supply. • By using the Fed policy tools, it can alter the equilibrium rate of interest. • By increasing the money supply (causing a surplus), the Fed tends to lower the equilibrium rate of interest. • By decreasing the money supply (causing a shortage), the Fed tends to raise the equilibrium rate of interest.

  11. Interest Rates and Spending • Lowering interest rates is a tactic of monetary stimulus, the purpose of which is to increase aggregate demand (AD). • Lower interest rates reduce the cost of investment spending (most of which is done with borrowed funds) and the cost of holding inventory. Investment spending will increase. • An investment spending increase is an injection into the circular flow, and will kick off the multiplier effect. AD will shift right because of this.

  12. Interest Rates and Spending • Raising interest rates is a tactic of monetary restraint, the purpose of which is to decrease aggregate demand (AD). • Higher interest rates increase the cost of investment spending (most of which is done with borrowed funds) and the cost of holding inventory. Investment spending will decrease. • An investment spending decrease will kick off a negative multiplier effect. AD will shift left because of this.

  13. Policy Constraints • Short- vs. long-term rates. • The Fed has greater influence on short-term rates (that is, the Fed funds rate) than long-term rates (mortgages and installment loans). • The Fed’s monetary stimulus will be most effective is long-term interest rate changes mirror short-term rate changes. • If not, the AD increase will be less than hoped for.

  14. Policy Constraints • Reluctant lenders. • The banking system must be willing to increase lending activity. • Banks may pile up excess reserves instead of making loans. • They might have concerns about their financial well-being and about making loans to those who might not pay back the money. • They might be uncertain about how new bank regulations may affect profitability.

  15. Policy Constraints • Liquidity trap. • When interest rates are low, the opportunity cost of holding money is also low. • Lowering interest rates further might not elicit the response desired by the Fed because people and firms simply hold the money instead of investing. • This is the liquidity trap: • People are willing to hold unlimited amounts of money at some low interest rate. • The money demand curve becomes horizontal.

  16. Policy Constraints • Low expectations: • Investment decisions are influenced by expectations. • In a recession, firms have little incentive to expand production capability. • There would be little expectation of future profit, or “payoff,” from new investment. • Consumers may be reluctant to take on added debt when future income prospects are uncertain. • Thus AD does not increase when interest rates are reduced.

  17. Policy Constraints • Time lags: • It takes time to develop and implement new investments in response to lower interest rates. • Consumers also may take time to decide to increase their borrowing. • It may take 6 to 12 months before market behavior responds to monetary policy.

  18. The Monetarist Perspective • The Keynesian view of monetary policy says that changes in the money supply affect macro outcomes primarily through changes in interest rates. • The monetarist view is different. They believe that only the price level is affected by Fed policy … and then only by changes in the money supply. • They say monetary policy is not effective for fighting recession, but is a powerful tool for managing inflation.

  19. The Equation of Exchange • The equation of exchange is • In this equation, total spending is price (P) times quantity (Q). This spending is financed by the money supply (M) times the velocity of its circulation (V). • Velocity (V): the number of times per year, on average, that a dollar is used to purchase final goods and services. MV = PQ where M is the money supply, V is its velocity in circulation, P is the average price, and Q is the quantity of goods sold.

  20. The Equation of Exchange MV = PQ • PQ is the same as nominal GDP. • The quantity of money in circulation and the velocity with which it exchanges hands will always be equal to the value of nominal GDP. • Monetarist view: If M increases, P or Q must rise, or V must fall.

  21. The Equation of Exchange MV = PQ • Assume V is stable – that is, does not change. • V is a function of how people handle their money and the institutions they use to do so. Neither should change much in the short run. • Thus total spending (PQ) must rise if money supply (M) grows and velocity (V) is stable, regardless of interest rates.

  22. Money Supply Focus • If spending increases when the money supply grows, then the Fed should focus on the money supply, not interest rates. • Fed policy should not be to manipulate interest rates. • Fed policy should focus on the size and growth of the money supply.

  23. “Natural” Unemployment MV = PQ • Monetarists insert another perspective: • Q is stable also. It is a function of productive capacity, labor efficiency, and other “structural” forces. • This leads to a “natural” rate of unemployment that is fairly immune to short-run policy intervention. • Natural rate of unemployment: the long-term rate of unemployment determined by structural forces. • Thus if both V and Q are stable, any increase in M in the long run only increases P.

  24. “Natural” Unemployment MV = PQ • If both V and Q are stable, any increase in M in the long-run only increases P. • If prices rise, costs of production will rise also, so there is no profit incentive to increase Q. • In the long run, the aggregate supply is vertical. • Any increase in AD directly increases the price level.

  25. Monetarist: Fighting Inflation • The policy goal is to reduce aggregate demand. • Keynesians: shrink the money supply and drive up interest rates. • Monetarists: interest rates are likely to be high already. A decrease in the money supply will lower nominal interest rates, not raise them.

  26. Monetarist: Fighting Inflation • Interest rates are likely to be high already. A decrease in the money supply will lower nominal interest rates, not raise them. • Nominal interest rate: the interest rate we actually see and pay. • Real interest rate: the nominal rate minus the anticipated inflation rate. • As the money supply shrinks, the price level falls and anticipated inflation decreases, so nominal interest rates fall, not rise.

  27. Monetarist: Fighting Inflation • To close an inflationary GDP gap using monetary policy, reduce the money supply. • Keynesians: interest rates rise, reducing spending. • Monetarists: once the people are convinced the Fed is reducing money supply, anticipated inflation falls and nominal interest rates will fall. Short-term rates will rise in response to the Fed action, but long-term rates will react more slowly. • Monetarists advise steady and predictable changes in the money supply, to reduce uncertainty and thus stabilize both long-term interest rates and GDP growth.

  28. Monetarist: Fighting Unemployment • The policy goal is to increase aggregate demand. • Keynesians: expand the money supply and drive down interest rates. • Monetarists: increased money supply leads to higher prices, immediately raising people’s inflationary expectations. Long-term interest rates might actually rise, defeating the purpose of monetary stimulus. • Monetarists conclude that expansionary monetary policy can’t lead us out of recession.

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