Unit 1: Money and Banking
Unit 1: Money and Banking
Unit 1: Money and Banking
The demand for money is the relationship between the quantity of money
people want to hold and the factors that determine that quantity.
The transactions demand for money is money people hold to pay for goods
and services they anticipate buying.
The precautionary demand for money is the money people hold for
contingencies.
The speculative demand for money, according to John Maynard Keynes, is the
money held in response to concern that bond prices and the prices of other
financial assets might change.
Interest Rates and the Demand for
Money
Interest Rates and the Demand for Money
An increase in the money supply gives people more money than they want
and causes them to buy bonds which drives the price of bonds up and the
interest rate down.
A decrease in the money supply shifts the money supply curve to the left
resulting in a new equilibrium with a higher interest rate.
A decrease in the money supply gives people less money than they want and
causes them to sell bonds which drives the price of bonds down and the
interest rate up.
The Fed sells bonds to reduce the money supply and buys bonds to increase
the money supply.
Quantity theory of money
An economic theory which proposes a positive relationship between changes in
the money supply and the long-term price of goods. It states that increasing the
amount of money in the economy will eventually lead to an equal percentage rise
in the prices of products and services.
The calculation behind the quantity theory of money is based upon Fisher
Equation:
Calculated as:
M .V = P.T
Where:
M represents the money supply.
V represents the velocity of money.
P represents the average price level.
T represents the volume of transactions in the economy.
QTM
The Theorys Calculations
In its simplest form, the theory is expressed as: