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Money and Interest Rates. Choosing between consumption and savings. The Market Interest Rate. What determines the equilibrium interest rate in financial markets? A financial market is any market in which borrowers and lenders interact
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Money and Interest Rates Choosing between consumption and savings
The Market Interest Rate • What determines the equilibrium interest rate in financial markets? • A financial market is any market in which borrowers and lenders interact • The supply of funds being forwarded by lenders and the demand for funds by borrowers determines both the quantity of lending/borrowing and the interest rate at which these loans are made. • One way to analyze this market would be to directly examine the supply and demand for bonds (loans). • An alternative method would be to examine the supply and demand for money
The Liquidity Preference Framework • There are essentially two things you can do with your wealth: • Spend it using money • Save it by purchasing bonds • Breaking down wealth into these two broad asset categories yields the following identity: • BS + MS = BD + MD • Equilibrium in the bond market will be achieved when BS = BD. • The interest rate will adjust until the quantity of bonds supplied is equal to the quantity of bonds demanded. • At the equilibrium interest rate, BS = BD • Rearranging the identity above: BS – BD = MD – MS • At equilibrium, BS – BD = 0, so… • MS = MD • When the bond market is in equilibrium, the supply of money is equal to the demand for money • We can find the equilibrium interest rate by looking only at the money market!
The Demand for Money and Interest Rates • We assume that if you hold your wealth as money, you earn no interest, while you do earn interest if you hold your wealth as bonds. • How does your demand for money change when the interest rate rises? • The opportunity cost of each dollar held as money is the foregone interest that could have been earned had you held that dollar in bonds • As the interest rate rises, so too does the opportunity cost of money • The quantity of money demanded is inversely related to the interest rate on bonds.
The Supply of Money and Interest Rates • The current monetary system in just about every country has a single central bank responsible for issuing currency • In the U.S., the only entity that can issue dollars is the Federal Reserve. • In other words, private banks cannot issue their own currency • Because the supply of money is controlled by the central bank and no one else, we assume that the money supply is invariant to the interest rate • In other words, the supply of money will stay the same regardless of whether the interest rate is 1%, 5% or even 1000%. • This is operationalized by drawing the money supply curve as a vertical line at the current money supply.
The Money Market Nominal Interest Rate (i) MS 7% 5% 3% MD 400 1000 Quantity of Money ($ billions) 700 Money Shortage Money Surplus
Changes in Equilibrium Interest Rates • One of the most useful features of the liquidity preference framework is that it allows us to see how changes in the demand and supply of money affect interest rates. • Equilibrium interest rates will increase if there is a… • Increase in money demand (+) • Decrease in money supply (+) • Equilibrium interest rates will decrease if there is a… • Decrease in money demand (-) • Increase in money supply (-)
Shifts in Money Demand • In Keynes original analysis, two things would cause the demand for money to change: • An Increase in Income/Wealth • With more income, people would like to consume more. To increase consumption, you need more money. • Money demand shifts right, causing interest rates to rise • An Increase in Prices • With higher prices, the same quantity of money held buys fewer goods and services. To maintain consumption, people need to hold more money. • We can also consider several other factors that increase money demand: • An increase in the risk of non-monetary assets (i.e. bonds) • A decrease in the liquidity of non-monetary assets • An increase in the nominal interest rate on money
Interest Rates Rise when Income Rises Nominal Interest Rate (i) MS 7% 5% MD2 MD1 900 Quantity of Money ($ billions) 700
Interest Rates Fall when Bonds become less Risky Nominal Interest Rate (i) MS 5% 3% MD1 MD2 Quantity of Money ($ billions) 400 700
Shifts in Money Supply • Since the central bank is the sole issuer of money, any changes in the money supply must come directly from central bank policy (monetary policy) • At its most basic level, an increase in the money supply is just the central bank printing up more money • Operationally, the central bank changes the money supply through three channels (much more on this later) • Buying and selling bonds from the public in exchange for money • Changing banks reserve requirement • Changing the discount rate at which banks borrow from the central bank at. • Using these tools, the central bank can lower interest rates by raising the money supply and increase rates by cutting the money supply. • Note that this analysis only considers the short run and not the long term consequences of changes to the money supply.
Friedman’s Challenge to Liquidity Preference • Milton Friedman argued that while Keynes’ analysis was technically correct, he failed to consider the longer term effects of monetary policy. • Friedman argued that increasing the money supply may actually cause interest rates to go up! • An increase in the money supply will cause income to rise, spurring an increase in money demand and interest rates • An increase in the money supply will stimulate spending, which will then cause prices to rise. Higher prices will increase money demand and raise interest rates. • If the increase in money supply is continuous, then people will expect higher inflation. This causes the nominal interest rate to rise • Fisher effect: i = r + πe
Interest Rates and an Increase in the Money Supply Growth Rate • So what happens to interest rates if the central bank increases the rate at which the money supply grows? • The liquidity preference theory argues a decrease in interest rates as people will hold excess cash balances • People will try to convert their excess cash into bonds. • Doing so will increase the number of people offering loans, which must push interest rates down. • Friedman’s theory argues an increase in interest rates as the expansion in the money supply growth rate will cause income, price levels, and expected inflation to all rise.