the money supply process

32 3.2K 7
the money supply process

Đang tải... (xem toàn văn)

Tài liệu hạn chế xem trước, để xem đầy đủ mời bạn chọn Tải xuống

Thông tin tài liệu

Central bank (Bank of Canada) Banks (depository institutions; financial intermediaries) Depositors (individuals and institutions) Monetary Liabilities Notes in circulation—in the hands of the public Reserves - bank deposits at Bank of Canada and vault cash Assets Government securities - holdings by the Bank of Canada that affect money supply and earn interest Advances to banks - provide reserves to banks and earn the discount rate

Copyright 2011 Pearson  Canada Inc. 16- 1 Chapter 16 The Money Supply Process Copyright 2011 Pearson  Canada Inc. 16- 2 Players in the Money Supply Process • Central bank (Bank of Canada) • Banks (depository institutions; financial intermediaries) • Depositors (individuals and institutions) Copyright 2011 Pearson  Canada Inc. 16- 3 Bank of Canada’s Balance Sheet I • Monetary Liabilities – Notes in circulation—in the hands of the public – Reserves - bank deposits at Bank of Canada and vault cash • Assets – Government securities - holdings by the Bank of Canada that affect money supply and earn interest – Advances to banks - provide reserves to banks and earn the discount rate Bank of Canada Assets Liabilities Government securities Notes in circulation Advances to banks Reserves Copyright 2011 Pearson  Canada Inc. 16- 4 Bank of Canada’s Balance Sheet II • Monetary liabilities of the Bank = Notes in circulation + Settlement balances • Monetary base = Bank of Canada’s monetary liabilities + Royal Canadian Mint’s monetary liabilities (coins in circulation) Copyright 2011 Pearson  Canada Inc. 16- 5 Bank of Canada’s Balance Sheet III • Define: – Currency = Notes + Coins – Reserves = Vault cash + Settlement balances • Banks hold desired reserves to manage their short term liquidity requirements and respond to clearing drains and currency drains • Reserves above that desired are known as excess reserves Copyright 2011 Pearson  Canada Inc. 16- 6 Monetary Base • MB = C + R – MB: monetary base (high-powered money) – C: currency in circulation (notes and coins held by the public outside banks) – R: total reserves in the banking system (vault cash + settlement balances) • The Bank of Canada controls the monetary base through open market operations and advances to banks Copyright 2011 Pearson  Canada Inc. 16- 7 Open Market Purchase from a Bank • Net result is that reserves have increased by $100 • No change in currency • Monetary base has risen by $100 Banking System Bank of Canada Assets Liabilities Assets Liabilities Securities -$100 Securities +$100 Reserves +$100 Reserves +$100 Bank of Canada purchases $100 of bonds from a bank and pays them with a $100 cheque Copyright 2011 Pearson  Canada Inc. 16- 8 Open Market Purchase from Nonbank Public I • Person selling bonds to the Bank of Canada deposits the Bank’s cheque in the bank • Identical results as the purchase from a bank Banking System Bank of Canada Assets Liabilities Assets Liabilities Reserves +$100 Chequable deposits +$100 Securities +$100 Reserves +$100 Non bank public sells $100 of bonds to the Bank of Canada and deposits the Bank’s cheque in the local bank Copyright 2011 Pearson  Canada Inc. 16- 9 Open Market Purchase from Nonbank Public II • Reserves are unchanged • Currency in circulation increases by the amount of the open market purchase • Monetary base increases by the amount of the open market purchase Nonbank Public Bank of Canada Assets Liabilities Assets Liabilities Securities -$100 Securities +$100 Currency in circulation +$100 Currency +$100 The person selling the bonds cashes the Bank’s cheque Copyright 2011 Pearson  Canada Inc. 16- 10 Open Market Purchase: Summary • The effect of an open market purchase on reserves depends on whether the seller of the bonds keeps the proceeds from the sale in currency or in deposits • The effect of an open market purchase on the monetary base (MB) always increases the base by the amount of the purchase [...]... Canada 16- Factors that Determine the Money Supply II • Changes in the Desired Reserve Ratio, r – The money supply is negatively related to the desired reserve ratio • Changes in Currency Holdings – The money supply is negatively related to the currency holdings 16- The Money Multiplier • Define money as currency plus chequable deposits: M1 • The Bank of Canada can control the monetary base better than... Banks may not use all of their excess reserves to buy securities or make loans 16- Factors that Determine the Money Supply • Changes in the Non-borrowed monetary base (MBn) - the money supply is positively related to the non-borrowed monetary base (MBn) • Changes in advances from the Bank of Canada - the money supply is positively related to the level of borrowed reserves (BR) from the Bank of Canada 16-... Link the money supply (M) to the monetary base (MB) and let m be the money multiplier M = m x MB 16- Deriving the Money Multiplier I • Assume the desired level of currency (C) and excess reserves (ER) grows proportionately with chequable deposits (D) Then: c = (C/D) = currency ratio e = (ER/D) = excess reserve ratio 16- Deriving the Money Multiplier II • The total amount of reserves (R) equals the sum... The Money Multiplier in Terms of the Currency Ratio • • • • • • • MB = (C x D) + (r x D) = (c + r) x D D = 1/(c+r) x MB M=C+D M = (c x D) + D = (1 + C)D M = (1+c)/(1+r) x MB M = (1+c)/(1+r) While there is a multiple expansion of deposits, there is no such expansion for currency 16- Money Supply Response to Changes in the Factors Split the monetary base into two components M = m x (MBn + BR) • The money. .. excess reserves (ER) R = DR + ER • The total amount of desired reserves equals the desired reserve ratio times the amount of chequable deposits DR = r x D • Substituting for DR R = (r x D) + ER The banks set r to be less than 1 16- Deriving the Money Multiplier III • The monetary base (MB) equals currency (C) plus reserves (R) MB = R + C = (r x D) + ER + C • Shows the monetary base needed to support... is more stable 16- Bank of Canada Advances When the Bank makes a $100 loan to the First Bank, the bank, the bank is credited with $100 of reserves (settlement balances) from the proceeds of the loan Banking System Assets Reserves Bank of Canada Liabilities +$100 Advances +$100 Assets Advances Liabilities +$100 Reserves +$100 • Monetary liabilities of the Bank of Canada have increased by $100 • Monetary... sells $100 of bonds to a bank or the nonbank public Nonbank Public Assets Bank of Canada Liabilities Securities +$100 Currency Assets Securities Liabilities -$100 Currency in circulation -$100 -$100 • Reduces the monetary base by the amount of the sale • Reserves remain unchanged • The effect of open market operations on the monetary base is much more certain than the effect on reserves 16- Shifts... increase First Bank Assets Liabilities Securities -$100 Loans +$100 +$100 Bank loans out the excess reserves Creates a chequing account Borrower make purchases The money supply has increased 16- Deposit Creation: The Banking System $100 of deposits created by First Bank’s loan is deposited at Bank A This bank and all other banks hold no excess reserves Bank A Assets Reserves Bank A Liabilities +$100 Chequable... Off a Loan from the Bank of Canada A loan is from the Bank of Canada is paid off by a bank Banking System Assets Reserves Bank of Canada Liabilities -$100 Advances -$100 Assets Advances Liabilities -$100 Reserves -$100 • Net effect on monetary base is a reduction • Monetary base changes one-for-one with a change in the borrowings from the Bank of Canada 16- Other Factors Affecting the Monetary Base... Deriving the Formula : R = RR = r x D 1 D= xR r 16- Multiple Deposit Creation: The Banking System Desired reserve ratio = 10% If reserves increase by $100, chequable deposits rise to $1000 in order for total desired reserves to also increase by $100 Banking System Assets Liabilities Securities - $100 Deposits + $1000 Reserves + $100 Loans + $1000 16- Critique of the Simple Model • Holding cash stops the process . Pearson  Canada Inc. 16- 1 Chapter 16 The Money Supply Process Copyright 2011 Pearson  Canada Inc. 16- 2 Players in the Money Supply Process • Central bank. depends on whether the seller of the bonds keeps the proceeds from the sale in currency or in deposits • The effect of an open market purchase on the monetary

Ngày đăng: 05/01/2014, 16:57

Từ khóa liên quan

Tài liệu cùng người dùng

Tài liệu liên quan