ECON1102 Chapter Notes - Chapter 11: Barter, Commodity Money, Bank Reserves

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17 May 2018
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Chapter 11: Money, Banks and the Reserve Bank of Australia
What is money and why do we need it?
Money: Assets that people are generally willing to accept in exchange for goods and
services or for payment of debts
Asset: Anything of value owned by a person or a firm
Barter and the Invention of Money:
ā€¢ Barter economies ā†’ where goods and services are traded directly for other
goods and services
ā€¢ Requirement of barter economies ā€“ double coincidence of wants
ā€¢ By making money exchange easier ā†’ specialisation in the comparative
advantage and therefore higher productivity
Commodity Money: A good used as money that also has value independent of its
use as money
The Functions of Money:
1. Medium of Exchange
2. Unit of Account
ā€¢ Way to measure value
3. Store of Value
ā€¢ Stored for later use and it is very liquid
ā€¢ Financial assets offer an important benefit relative to holding money
because they generally pay a higher rate of interest or offer the prospect
of gains in value
4. Standard of Deferred Payment
ā€¢ Facilitate exchange at a given point in time by providing a medium of
exchange and a unit of account
ā€¢ Exchange overtime
What Can Serve as Money?
Five Criteria:
1. The good must be acceptable to most people
2. It should be a standardised quality (identical)
3. Should be durable
4. Should be valuable to its weight (amounts large enough to be useful in trade
can be easily transported)
5. Divisible (different goods are valued differently)
Commodity Money:
ā€¢ Money that has ā€œintrinsicā€ value
ā€¢ Value depends on purity
ā€¢ Supply of money is difficult to control
Fiat Money:
ā€¢ No ā€œintrinsicā€ value
ā€¢ Money authorised by central bank
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ā€¢ Doesnā€™t have to be exchanged for commodity money
How Do We Measure Money Today?
ā€¢ Definitions of money supply based on how liquid the assets are
ā€¢ Lowest measure of money is currency
ā€¢ Broader measures ā†’ savings account or cheque account
ā€¢ Defining money supply has become more difficult during the past two
decades (new substitutes for medium of exchange ā€“ e.g. EFTPOS)
Currency: Notes and coins held by the private non-bank sector
M1: The Narrowest Definition of the Money Supply
M1: The narrowest definition of the money supply, which is composed of currency
plus the value of all demand deposits with banks
Demand deposits: Also called current deposits ā€“ financial institutions that are
transferable by cheque, by debit cards at EFTPOS terminals and through electronic
transfer between accounts. They are called demand deposits because they are
available on demand, and are repayable on demand in notes and coins
Broader Definitions of Money:
The M3 Measure of Money Supply:
ā€¢ Certificates of deposit are large saving deposits written in certificate form ā€“
pay high interest and behave like commercial bills
M3: M1, plus all other deposits of the private non-bank sector with domestic and
foreign-owned banks operating in Australia
Broad Money:
Broad Money: M3, plus deposits with non-bank deposit-taking institutions minus
holdings of currency and deposits of non-bank depository corporations
Credit:
ā€¢ Provided to non-ban private sector
Credit: Loans, advances and bills provided to the private non-bank sector (individuals
and firms) by all financial intermediaries
How Do Financial Institutions Create Money?
Bank Balance Sheets:
ā€¢ Firmā€™s assets on lift and liabilities and shareholdersā€™ equity on left
ā€¢ Assets ā†’ anything owned by the firm
ā€¢ Liabilities ā†’ value of anything the firm owes
ā€¢ Shareholdersā€™ equity ā†’ difference between the total value of assets and the
total value of liabilities (value of firm if it had to be closed, all assets sold and
liabilities were paid off) = net worth
Reserves: Deposits that a bank keeps as cash in its vault or on deposit with the
Reserve Bank of Australia
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Document Summary

Chapter 11: money, banks and the reserve bank of australia. Money: assets that people are generally willing to accept in exchange for goods and services or for payment of debts. Asset: anything of value owned by a person or a firm. Commodity money: a good used as money that also has value independent of its use as money. Commodity money: money that has intrinsic value, value depends on purity, supply of money is difficult to control. Fiat money: no intrinsic value, money authorised by central bank, doesn"t have to be exchanged for commodity money. Currency: notes and coins held by the private non-bank sector. M1: the narrowest definition of the money supply. M1: the narrowest definition of the money supply, which is composed of currency plus the value of all demand deposits with banks. Demand deposits: also called current deposits financial institutions that are transferable by cheque, by debit cards at eftpos terminals and through electronic transfer between accounts.

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