Economics 311 Handout 1 Professor Tom K. Lee

Section I: Review of basic economic concepts and relations

Part 1: Basic economic concepts of prices and money

CH 2

Barter economy is an economy where goods & services are exchanged

for goods & service.

Monetary economy is an economy where goods & services are exchanged

for money.

Relative price is the exchange rate of goods & services with goods

and services.

Absolute price is the exchange rate of goods & services with money.

Advantages of monetary economy -remove double coincidence of wants

-allows specialization

-economize on price information

Functions of money -medium of exchange

-unit of account

-store of value

-standard for deferred payments

Characteristics of money -general acceptance

-portable

-divisible

-identifiable

-durable

-liquidity: marketability & reversibility

-optimal scarcity

-relative stability of supply

Types of money -Commodity money is money with intrinsic value.

-Fiat money is money with no intrinsic value.

Gresham Law states that bad money drives out good money.

Measures of money supply: M1 andM2

Part 2: Economic relations of money supply growth rate and

inflation rate, nominal interest rate, business cycle

and federal government budget deficit

CH 1

Inflation rate is the rate of change of general price level.

Money growth rate and inflation rate

Money growth rate and nominal interest rate

Fisherian Theory of Interest Rate: 1 + nominal interest rate =

(1 + real interest rate) x (1 + expected inflation rate)

Money growth rate and business cycle

Federal government budget constraint

Money supply and the federal gov't budget deficit

Part 3: Circular flow of a monetary economy

Circular flow of a 3-sector 3-market economy

Three sectors: gov't, households & firms

Three markets: product, asset(money) & resource(labor) mkt.

Two national income identities

-flow of product (expenditures) approach to measure real GDP

-disposal of income approach to measure real GDP

Economics 311 Handout 2 Professor Tom K. Lee

Part 4: The importance of financial intermediation

CH 3 pp 60-61, CH 11

Financial intermediation is the process whereby small amounts of

savings funds are collected from the households and transformed

into the hands of firms and gov't for investment

Flows of funds: from savings-surplus units to savings-deficit units

Investment opportunity frontier is the income today and tomorrow

that can be achieved when one invests efficiently.

Indifference curve is the combinations of consumption today and

tomorrow that give a consumer the same level of satisfaction .

Capital market & discounting: present value vs future value

Optimal investment point is the maximum present value income point

on the investment opportunity frontier.

Intertemporal budget constraint & present value income maximization

Consumption opportunity curve is the combinations of consumption

today and tomorrow that a consumer can afford when she uses up

all her maximum present value income.

Utility maximization and optimal consumption point

Functions of financial intermediaries

-facilitate intertemporal consumption choice & equalize marginal

investment returns,

-reduce transaction costs,

-produce information,

-pool resources to provide divisibility & flexibility,

-diversification of risk,

-participate in money supply creation process,

-provide expertise & convenience.

Diversification is the holding of assets with less than positively

perfectly correlated returns.

A portfolio is a collection of assets.

The Insurance Principle states that diversification provides risk

reduction, and if sufficient number of assets with uncorrelated

returns are included in a diversified portfolio, then the risk

of the portfolio can be practically reduced to zero.

Section II: Institutional facts of financial institutions and

financial markets

Part 5: Facts of financial institutions

CH 3 pp 61-64, CH 13 pp 323-338

Different types of financial institutions

-Depository institutions: Commercial banks

Savings & loans associations

Mutual savings banks

Credit unions

-Contractual savings institutions: Life insurance

Pension funds

Fire & casualty insurance

-Investment intermediaries: Mutual funds

Money market mutual funds

Finance company

Economics 311 Handout 3 Professor Tom K. Lee

Primary liabilities(sources of funds) & primary assets(uses of

funds) of different financial institutions

Part 6: Four major financial markets and four major forms of

a financial market

CH 3 pp 50-60, CH 9

Money mkt, bond mkt, stock mkt and foreign exchange mkt.

Spot mkt, forward mkt, futures mkt and options mkt.

Organized exchange as broker-specialist system

Over-the-counter exchange as dealership system

Mark-to-market arrangement

Part 7: Money market instruments and capital market instruments

CH 3 pp 43-50

Money market instruments -U.S. Treasury bills

-Negotiable bank CD

-Commercial papers

-Bankers' acceptance

-Repurchase agreements

-Federal funds

-Eurodollars

Capital market instruments -Stocks

-Corporate bonds and notes

-Mortgages

-U.S. Treasury bonds & notes

-State and local gov't bonds

-U.S. gov't agency securities

-Consumer loans & Commercial loans

Foreign bonds, Eurobonds & Euroequities

Section III: Theories of interest rate

Part 8: Types of loan and concepts of investment returns

CH 6 pp126-133

Types of loans: Simple & fixed payment loans, coupon bonds,

discount bonds & consols

Yield to maturity is the discount rate that equates the present

value of future stream of cash inflows to current cash outflows.

Bonds prices are inversely related to market interest rate.

Current yieldyield on a discount basis

Holding yield = current yield + rate of capital gains

Bid vs asked bond prices

Bond ratings , junk bonds and risk premium

Part 9: Mirror image of bond market and loanable funds market

CH 6 pp 133-142

Supply of bonds, demand of bonds & the bond market equilibrium

Determinants of the demand for bonds -wealth

-expected returns

-expected inflation

-risk

-liquidity

Economics 311 Handout 4 Professor Tom K. Lee

Determinants of the supply of bonds -profitability of investment

-expected inflation

-gov't budget deficits

Loanable funds market: supply, demand & equilibrium interest rate

Part 10: Why are there so many market interest rates?

CH 6 pp 123-130

Why do interest rates differ -differences in time to maturity

-differences in risk

-differences in tax treatment

-difference in administrative cost

-differences in bond features

A callable bond is a bond that the issuer can prepay the principal

before the time to maturity of the bond.

A convertible bond a bond that the holder of the bond can

exchange the bond for some specify number of corporate shares

some time within the time to maturity.

Part 11: The term structure of interest rate

CH 7

The term structure of interest rate is the relation between

yield to maturity & time to maturity.

The yield curve is the graph for term structure of interest rate.

Theories of the term structure of interest rates

-Liquidity Preference Hypothesis & liquidity premium

-Unbiased Expectations Hypothesis & forward interest rate

-Segmented Market Hypothesis

-Preferred Habitat Hypothesis

Section IV: Management of depository institutions

Part 12: Balance sheet of depository institutions

CH 12 pp 284-296

The balance sheet identity: Total assets=total liabilities

ASSETS LIABILITIES

Reserves Checkable deposits 22%

Cash items in process of collection Nontransaction deposits 48%

Deposits with other banks Borrowings 23%

Securities Bank capital 7%

Loans

Other assets

Off balance sheet activities -foreign exchange transactions

e.g. Franklin National Bank in 1974

-loan guarantees/bankers acceptance

-lines of credit

Economics 311 Handout 5 Professor Tom K. Lee

Part 13: Four problems of depository institution management

CH 12 pp 296-308

Four primary problems of depository institution management

- Liquidity management is to provide sufficient funds to meet

depository withdrawals,

-Asset management is to maximize returns of bank assets

subject to a level of risk tolerance,

-Liability management is to raise funds for a bank in a timelymanner,

-Interest rate risk management is to minimize risk exposure of

bank assets & liabilities due to interest ratefluctuations.

To solve liquidity problems, banks can engage in

-asset approach: call back loans

sell secondary reserves

sell loans

repurchase agreements

-liability approach: borrow from other banks

issue CD/commercial papers

borrow from the FED

attract more deposits

Part 14: Asset management and portfolio theory

CH 5

Expected value, variance, standard deviation & covariance

Minimum variance opportunity set is the combinations of expected

returns & risk that minimize risk subject to a required

expectedreturn among the set of risky assets.

Efficient set is the combinations of expected returns and risk

that maximizes expected returns subject to risk among the set

ofrisky assets.

Risk-free assetmarket portfolio

Capital market line is the combinations of expected returns and

risk that maximizes expected returns subject to risk among the

set of risky assets and the risk-free asset.

Indifference curve is the combinations of expected returns and

risk that yield the same level of satisfaction to an investor.

Optimal portfolio point is the point of tangency of anindifference

curve with the capital market line.

Price of risk is the marginal rate of substitution of expected

returns per unit of risk(= slope of the capital market line).

Risk premium = Price of risk x quantity of risk

Part 15: Interest rate risk management

Fixed rate vs interest-rate sensitive assets(liabilities)

Measure of interest rate risk

-gap analysis

-maturity bucket approach

-standardized gap analysis

-duration analysis(Macaulay's duration)

Economics 311 Handout 6 Professor Tom K. Lee

Strategies of interest rate risk management (interestimmunization)

-matching maturity & amount of assets & liabilities

-matching duration & present values of assets & liabilities

-interest-rate swap

-hedge with futures & options on debt instruments

Section V: Financial regulatory agencies and money supply

Part 16: Financial regulatory agencies

CH 14

Financial regulatory agencies

-Securities & Exchange Commission(SEC)

-Commodities Futures Trading Commission(CFTC)

-Office of the Comptroller of Currency(OCC)

-Federal Reserve Bank(FED)

-Federal Depository Insurance Corporation(FDIC)

-State Banking Commissions

-Office of Thrift Supervision(OTS)

Two primary methods for FDIC to handle failed banks

-payoff method

-purchase and assumption method

Part 17: Fractional reserve banking and money supply

CH 13 pp320-333, CH 14 pp347-367

Fractional reserve banking system is a banking system that legally

allow banks to hold less than 100% of their deposits as bank

reserves.

Bank reserve is the sum of the cash in the vault of the bank

and the bank's deposits at the FED.

Required reserve ratio is the percentage of bank deposits that has

to be held as required reserves.

Money creation & destruction processes

Potential money supply multiplier is the change in money supplydue

to a dollar increase in reserve under the assumptions thatthere is no excess reserves and coins & currency remains constant.

High-powered money(Monetary base) is the sum of coins & currency

in the public hand and bank reserves.

Excess reserve is bank reserves minus required reserves.

Currency demand-deposit ratio

Actual money supply multiplier is the change in money supply dueto

a dollar increase in high-powered money under the assumptions

that there may be excess reserve, and currency demand-deposit

ratio is constant.

Part 18: Financing of Federal government spending

Financing of gov't spending: tax financing

debt financing

inflation financing

Menetizing the debt is when the FED buys gov't securities from

the general public converting gov't debt into money in the

geberal public's hand.

Economics 311 Handout 7 Professor Tom K. Lee

Part 19: The Federal Reserve Bank

CH 15, CH 17 pp 422-427

The Federal Reserve Bank and the Federal Reserve Act of 1913

Consolidated balance sheet of the FED(in billions of US dollars)

ASSETS LIABILITIES

S1US gov't securities 779.6 U1 Federal Reserve notes 778.2

S2 Discount loans 10.6 U2 Bank deposits 20.7

S3 Gold & SDR certificates 13.2 S5 US Treasury deposits 4.3

U3 Coin 1.3 S6 Foreign & other deposits 0.9

S8 Cash items in process of S9 Deferred availability cash

collection 2.2 items 3.0

S4 Other Federal Reserve assets S7 Other Federal Reserve

42.2 liabilities& capital

accounts 41.8

Uses of monetary base = U1+U2-U3+Treasury currency outstanding

-Cash held by the Treasury

Sources of monetary base = S1+S2+S3+S4-S5-S6-S7+(S8-S9)

+Treasury currency outstanding

-Cash held by the Treasury

Float = S8 - S9

Goals of the FED -Price stability

-economic growth

-full employment

-interest rate stability/affordability

-financial market stability

-foreign exchange mkt stability

Part 20: Tools of the Federal Reserve Bank in controlling money

supply

CH 17 pp 428-446, CH18

Open market operation(OMO) is the buying and selling of gov't

securities by the FED to control money supply.

The Banking Act of 1933

Two types of OMO -dynamic OMO

-defensive OMO

Two means of OMO -purchase or sale of gov't securities

-repo & reverse repo

Advantages of OMO -complete control

-flexible

-reversible

-no administrative delay

Discount policy and the Federal Reserve Act of 1913

Three types of discount loans -adjustment credit loans

-seasonal loans

-extended credit loans

Four costs of discount loans -interest cost at the discount rate

-raise chances/frequency of audit

-reduces chances of future loans

-may not do reverse repo

Advantages of discount policy -lender of last resort

-signal FED intention

Economics 311 Handout 8 Professor Tom K. Lee

Disadvantages of discount policy -announcement effect

-spread of i vs d & money supply

-incomplete control

-not easily reversible

Reserve requirement and the Banking Act of 1935

The Depository Institutions Deregulation & Monetary Control Act

of 1980

Disadvantages of required reserve regulation -sensitivity

-liquidity of banks

Contemporaneous reserve requirements is the implementation of the required reserve regulation through a seven-week cycle with transaction deposit daily averages calculated over a reserve computation period and reserve daily average calculated over a reserve maintenance period.

Section VI: Macroeconomic theories of the effect of changes in

money supply on the economy

Part 21: Classical model and the neutrality of money

CH 20 pp 515-526

Velocity of money is the number of times money changes hand in

an economy in one year.

The equation of exchange: MV = Py

The Simple Quantity Theory of Money assumes that velocity of money

is constant.

Assumptions of -flexible interest rates

the Classical -flexible product prices

Model -flexible wages

-certainty

-competitive labor market

-production function is the mapping of inputs to

output when inputs are used efficiently.

-Say's Law: supply creates its own demand.

-Simple Quantity Theory of Money

-Classical savings function: real saving is

positively related to real interest rate.

-investment function: real investment is inversely

related to real interest rate.

-competitive loanable funds market

-7 endogenous variables: W/P, N, y, P, i, S & I

Neutrality is that changes in money supply have no effect on

equilibrium real income(GDP).

Dichotomy is that the determination of the equilibrium levels of

real variables is separated from the determination of the

equilibrium levels of nominal variables.

Crowding-out effect is that an increase in gov't expenditures

drives up interest rate & reduces investment.

Ricardian Equivalence Theorem states that government budget deficit

due to a tax cut financed by borrowings has no effect on real

interest rate and investment but increases savings.

Economics 311 Handout 9 Professor Tom K. Lee

Part 22: Second generation Keynesian model

CH 20 pp526-539

Assumptions of -flexible interest rates

the 2nd generation -fixed product prices and fixed wages

Keynesian Model -certainty

-product market and money market equilibria

-production function

-investment function

-Keynesian savings function: real saving is

positively related to real income.

-5 endogenous variables: i, y, N, I & S

IS curve is the combinations of real interest rate and real income

that yield an equilibrium in the product market.

Why is the IS curve downward sloping?

Motives for money demand -transactional and precautionary

-speculative

LM curve is the combinations of real interest rate and real income

that yield an equilibrium in the money market.

Why is the LM curve upward sloping?

Simultaneous equilibrium in the product and the money market

determines the equilibrium real interest rate and real income.

Part 23: Monetary transmission mechanisms

CH 23pp 607-617

Monetary Transmission Mechanism is the process through which

changes in money supply affect equilibrium real income in an

economy.

8 Monetary transmission mechanisms -Classical

-Keynesian

-Availability Hypothesis

-Tobin's q

-Consumer durable expenditures

-Wealth effect

-Liquidity effect

-Exchange rate effect

Part 24: Fourth generation Keynesian model

CH 21

Assumptions of -flexible interest rates

the 4th generation -flexible product prices

Keynesian Model -flexible wages

-uncertainty

-adaptive expectations

-product market equilibrium

-money market equilibrium

-investment function

-Keynesian savings function

-labor market equilibrium

-production function

-7 endogenous variables: P, y, i, I, S, N & W

Economics 311 Handout 10 Professor Tom K. Lee

Aggregate demand is the combinations of general price level &

real income that yield simultaneous equilibria in the product

and money market.

Why is the aggregate demand curve downward sloping?

Determinants of aggregate demand

-investment

-gov't expenditures

-savings

-taxes

-money supply

-transactional demand for money

-speculative demand for money

Aggregate demand management policies are gov't policies that try

to shift the AD curve to affect equilibrium real income,

e.g. fiscal & monetary policies

Aggregate supply is the combinations of general price level &

real income that yield an equilibrium in the labor market.

Why is the aggregate supply curve upward sloping?

Determinants of aggregate supply -labor demand

-labor supply

-price expectations

-production function

Aggregate supply management policies are gov't policies that

try to shift the AS curve to affect equilibrium real income.

e.g. labor market policy and research & development policy.

Supply side shocks, stagflation vs deflationary growth

Demand side shocks, recession vs inflationary growth

Short-run vs long-run aggregate supply curve

Section VII: Determinants of foreign exchange rates