Dictionary of Meaning
<<Back
Please select a letter:
A |
B |
C |
D |
E |
F |
G |
H |
I |
J |
K |
L |
M |
N |
O |
P |
Q |
R |
S |
T |
U |
V |
W |
X |
Y |
Z |
0-9
Click here for Shopping
Money Supply
*** Shopping-Tip: Money Supply
{{globalize}}
'''Money supply''' ("monetary aggregates", "money stock"), a
macroeconomics macroeconomic concept, is the quantity of
money available within the economy to purchase
good (economics) goods,
services, and
security (finance) securities.
Introduction
The monetary sector, as opposed to the
real sector, concerns the money ''market''. The same tools of analysis can be applied as to other markets: supply and demand result in an equilibrium price (the
interest rate) and quantity (of real money balances).
When thinking about the "supply" of money, it is natural to think of the total of
banknotes and
coins in an economy. That, however, is incomplete. In the
United States, coins are ''minted'' by the
United States Mint, part of the
United States Department of the Treasury Department of the Treasury, ''outside of'' the
Federal Reserve. Banknotes are ''printed'' by the Mint ''on behalf of'' the Federal Reserve as symbolic tokens of electronic credit-based money that has already been created or more precisely, ''issued'' by
bank private banks{{mn|footnote_1|1}} through
fractional reserve banking.
In this respect, all banknotes in existence are systematically linked to the expansion of the electronic credit-based money supply. However, coinage can be increased or decreased outside this system by Legal Mandate or Legislative Acts. However, at present the coin base is held in check and used as a complementary system rather than a competitive system with private bank issue of electronic credit-based money. The common practice is to include printed and minted money supply in the same metric '''M0'''.
The more accurate starting point for the concept of money supply is the total of all electronic credit-based deposit balances in bank (and other financial) accounts (for more precise definitions, see below) plus all the minted coins and printed paper. The M1 money supply is M0, plus the total of all non-paper or coin deposit balances. The relationship between the M0 and M1 money supplies is the '''money multiplier''' — basically, the ratio of cash and coin in people's wallets and bank vaults and ATMs to Total balances in their financial accounts. The gap and lag between the two (M0 and M1 - M0) occurs because of the system of fractional reserve banking.
Scope
Because (in principle) money is anything that can be used in settlement of a
debt, there are varying measures of money supply. The narrowest (i.e., most restrictive) measures count only those forms of money available for immediate transactions, while broader measures include money held as a store of value. The most common measures are named M0 (narrowest), M1, M2, and M3. In the United States they are defined by the Federal Reserve as follows:
* '''M0''': The total of all physical
currency, plus accounts at the central bank which can be exchanged for physical currency.
* '''M1''': M0 + the amount in
demand accounts ("checking" or "current" accounts).
* '''M2''': M1 + most
savings accounts,
money market accounts, and
certificate of deposit accounts (CDs) of under $100,000.
* '''M3''': M2 + all other CDs, deposits of
eurodollars and
repurchase agreements.
As of March 23, 2006, information regarding M3 will no longer be published by the Federal Reserve. The other three money supply measures will continue to be provided in detail. On March 7th, 2006, Congressman
Ron Paul introduced H.R. 4892 in an effort to reverse this change [http://thomas.loc.gov/cgi-bin/query/z?c109:H.R.4892:].
Link with inflation
Monetary exchange equation
Money supply is important because it is directly linked to
inflation by the "monetary exchange equation":
where:
*
income velocity of money velocity = the number of times per year that money changes hands (if it is a number it is always simply GDP / money supply)
*real GDP = nominal
Gross Domestic Product / GDP deflator
*
GDP deflator = measure of inflation. Money supply may be less than or greater than the demand of money in the economy
In other words, if the money supply grows faster than real GDP (unproductive debt expansion), inflation must follow ("inflation is always and everywhere a monetary phenomenon"). This statement must be qualified slightly, due to changes in velocity. While the
monetarists maintain that velocity is relatively stable, in fact velocity exhibits variability at business-cycle frequencies, so that the velocity equation is not particularly useful as a short run tool. Moreover, in the US, velocity has grown at an average of slightly more than 1% a year between 1959 and 2005.
Percentage
In terms of percentage changes (to a small approximation, the percentage change in a product, say XY is equal to the sum of the percentage changes %X + %Y). So:
%P + %Y = %M + %V
That equation rearranged gives the "
basic inflation identity":
%P = %M + %V - %Y
Inflation (%P) is equal to the rate of money growth (%M), plus the change in velocity (%V), minus the rate of output growth (%Y).
Money Supply and Cash
In the U.S., as of
July 28,
2005, M1 was about $1.4 trillion, M2 about $6.5 trillion, and M3 about $9.7 trillion. If you split all of the money equally per person in the United States, each person would end up with roughly $30,000 ($9,700,000M/300M). The amount of actual physical cash M0 was $688 billion in 2004, roughly double the $328 billion in cash and cash equivalents on
deposit at
Citigroup as of the end of that year. ([http://finance.yahoo.com/q/bs?s=C&annual])
The Central Bank
The supply of money outside of coins minted by the Mint can ONLY increase if the private banks issue more by loaning into circulation through Fractional Reserve Bank Lending Practices. Subsequently paper notes are increased ONLY as they are printed by the BEP on behalf of the Federal Reserve Fractional Banking System and are swapped at par value by the Federal Reserve Bank with Private Banks for their already issued electronic credits, which are then expunged (some believe retained) from the system by the Federal Reserve Bank. Thus, these printed money tokens (notes) merely replace already issued electronic credits on a one-for-one basis.
The larger definitions of the money supply, M1, M2, and M3, are types of
deposit accounts. The first balance sheet item in a bank is usually deposits. Of the money in a bank deposit, depending on
reserve requirements, either the whole sum or some fraction of it can immediately be lent out. The borrower can buy an asset and the seller of that asset can place the proceeds in another money supply constituent
deposit. The money supply has just increased, because both the original and secondary deposits count as part of the money supply. That money can therefore continue to increase many times over. The
Federal Reserve decides the level of "
reserves of depository institutions".
Monetary policy has effects on employment and output in the short run, but in the long run, it primarily affects prices.
The balance sheets
This is what money supply growth may look like starting with 1 new dollar of
deposits. The money is moving from left to right. The Central Bank injects money from its reserve into the economy by buying a government bond from Bank 1 for $1, Bank 1 lends the proceeds to Person 1, who buys an asset from Person 2, who deposits the proceeds at Bank 2, who loans it to Person 3, who buys a service from Person 4, who deposits the proceeds in Bank 1, and the money supply becomes $3.
{| border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="2" align="center" width="" height=""
|-
|
{| border="1" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0" align="center" width="140px"
|+''' Central Bank '''
|-
! style="background:#efefef;" colspan="2" | Assets
|-
| Gov. debt (to B1) || align="right"| $1
|-
! style="background:#efefef;" colspan="2" | Liabilities
|-
| - || align="right"| -
|}
||
{| border="1" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0" align="center" width="140px"
|+'''Bank 1'''
|-
! style="background:#efefef;" colspan="2" | Assets
|-
| Loan (to P1) || align="right"| $1
|-
! style="background:#efefef;" colspan="2" | Liabilities
|-
| Deposit (from P4) || align="right"| $1
|}
||
{| border="1" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0" align="center" width="140px"
|+''' Person 1'''
|-
! style="background:#efefef;" colspan="2" | Assets
|-
| Investment (to P2) || align="right"| $1
|-
! style="background:#efefef;" colspan="2" | Liabilities
|-
| Loan (from B1) || align="right"| $1
|}
||
{| border="1" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0" align="center" width="140px"
|+''' Person 2'''
|-
! style="background:#efefef;" colspan="2" | Assets
|-
| Deposit (to B2) || align="right"| $1
|-
! style="background:#efefef;" colspan="2" | Liabilities
|-
| - || align="right"| -
|}
||
{| border="1" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0" align="center" width="140px"
|+'''Bank 2'''
|-
! style="background:#efefef;" colspan="2" | Assets
|-
| Loan (to P3) || align="right"| $1
|-
! style="background:#efefef;" colspan="2" | Liabilities
|-
| Deposit (from P2) || align="right"| $1
|}
|}
See, for example, the
balance sheet from
Citigroup Inc. at [http://www.citigroup.com/citigroup/fin/ar.htm].
Bank reserves at Central Bank
When a
central bank is "easing", it triggers an increase in money supply by purchasing
government bond government securities on the open market thus increasing available funds for private banks to loan through fractional reserve banking (the issue of new money through loans) and thus grows the money supply. When the central bank is "tightening", it slows the process of private bank issue by selling securities on the open market and pulling money (that could be loaned) out of the private banking sector. It reduces or increases the supply of short term government debt, and inversely increases or reduces the supply of lending funds and thereby the ability of private banks to issue new money through debt.
The operative notion of easy money is that the central bank creates new
bank reserves (in the US known as "
federal funds"), which let the banks lend out more money. These loans get spent, and the proceeds get deposited at other banks. Whatever is not required to be held as reserves is then lent out again, and through the magic of the "money multiplier", loans and bank deposits go up by many times the initial injection of reserves.
However in the 1970s the reserve requirements on deposits started to fall with the emergence of
money market funds, which require no reserves. Then in the early 1990s, reserve requirements were dropped to zero on
savings deposits,
Certificate of deposit CDs, and
Eurocurrency deposits. At present, reserve requirements apply only to "
transactions deposits" - essentially
checking accounts. The vast majority of funding sources used by Private Banks to create loans have nothing to do with bank reserves and in effect create what is known as "moral hazard" and speculative bubble economies.
These days,
commercial and industrial loans are financed by issuing large denomination
Certificate of deposit CDs.
Money market deposits are largely used to lend to corporations who issue
commercial paper. Consumer loans are also made using
savings deposits which are not subject to reserve requirements. These loans can be bunched into securities and sold to somebody else, taking them off of the bank's books.
The point is simple. Commercial, industrial and consumer loans no longer have any link to bank reserves. Since 1995, the volume of such loans has exploded, while bank reserves have declined.
In recent years, the irrelevance of open market operations has also been argued by academic economists renown for their work on the implications of
rational expectations, including
Robert Lucas, Jr.,
Thomas Sargent,
Neil Wallace,
Finn E. Kydland,
Edward C. Prescott and
Scott Freeman.
Arguments and criticism
One of the principal jobs of
central banks (such as the
Federal Reserve, the
Bank of England and the
European Central Bank) is to keep money supply growth in line with real GDP growth. Central banks do this primarily by setting the "
federal funds rate" through
open market operations.
A very common criticism of this policy, originating with the creators of GDP as a measure, is that "real GDP growth" is in fact meaningless, and since GDP can grow for many reasons including manmade disasters and crises, is not correlated with any known means of
measuring well-being. This use of the GDP figures is considered by its own creators to be an abuse, and dangerous. The most common solution proposed by such critics is that money supply (which determines the value of all
financial capital, ultimately, by diluting it) should be kept in line with some more ecological and social and human means of
measuring well-being. In theory, money supply would expand when well-being is improving, and contract when well-being is decreasing, giving all parties in the economy a direct interest in improving well-being.
This argument must be balanced against what is nearly
dogma among economists: that the control of
inflation is the main (or only) job of a central bank, and that any introduction of non-financial means of
measuring well-being has an inevitable
domino effect of increasing
government spending and diluting
capital (economics) capital and the rewards of gainfully employing capital.
Currency integration is thought by some economists --
Robert Mundell, for example -- to alleviate this problem by ensuring that currencies become less competitive in the
commodity markets, and that a wider political base be employed in the setting of currency and inflation and well-being policy. This thinking is in part the basis of the
Euro currency integration in the
European Union.
Money supply remains one of the most controversial aspects of economics itself.
United States monetary base
United States monetary base at the end of September 2004.
{| border="1" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0" align="center" width="400px"
|+''' Monetary base (billions of dollars) (not seasonally adjusted) '''
|-
! style="background:#efefef;" colspan="6" | Monetary Base
|-
|
Reserves of depository institutions || align="right"| 46.4
|-
|
Reserve balances with F.R. Banks || align="right"| 13.0
|-
|
Vault cash surplus || align="right"| 11.4
|-
|
Currency 1 || align="right"| 688.2
|- style="background:#efefef;font-weight:bold;" |
! Sum || align="right"| 759.0
|}
United States money supply
This table shows the
United States money supply at the end of September 2004.
{| border="1" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0" align="center" width="400px"
|+''' Money Supply (billions of dollars)
(not seasonally adjusted) '''
|-
! style="background:#efefef;" colspan="6" | M1
|-
|
Currency 1 || align="right"| 688.2
|-
|
Demand Deposits
2 || align="right"| 321.0
|-
|
Other checkable deposits Other Checkable Deposits 3 || align="right"| 319.5
|-
! style="background:#efefef;" colspan="6" | M2
|-
|
Savings deposits
4 || align="right"| 3,472.5
|-
|
Small-denomination time deposits 5 || align="right"| 795.6
|-
|
Retail money funds
6 || align="right"| 729.5
|-
! style="background:#efefef;" colspan="6" | M3
|-
|
Institutional money funds || align="right"| 1,071.6
|-
|
Large-denomination time deposits 7 || align="right"| 1,018.2
|-
|
Repurchase agreements
8 || align="right"| 537.3
|-
|
Eurodollars
9 || align="right"| 322.2
|- style="background:#efefef;font-weight:bold;" |
! Sum || align="right"| 9,311.7
|}
:
1. Currency outside U.S. Treasury, Federal Reserve Banks and the vaults of depository institutions.
:
2. Demand deposits at domestically chartered commercial banks, U.S. branches and agencies of foreign banks, and Edge Act Corporations (excluding those amounts held by depository institutions, the U.S. government, and foreign banks and official institutions) less cash items in the process of collection and Federal Reserve float.
:
3. NOW and ATS balances.
:
4. Savings deposits include money market deposit accounts.
:
5. Small-denomination time deposits are those issued in amounts of less than $100,000. All Individual Retirement Account IRA and Keogh account balances at commercial banks and thrift institutions are subtracted from small time deposits.
:
6. IRA and Keogh account balances at money market mutual funds are subtracted from retail money funds.
:
7. Large-denomination time deposits at domestically chartered commercial banks, U.S. branches and agencies of foreign banks, and Edge Act Corporations, excluding those amounts held by depository institutions, the U.S. government, foreign banks and official institutions, and money market mutual funds.
:
8. Repurchase agreement RP liabilities of depository institutions, in denominations of $100,000 or more, on U.S. government and federal agency securities, excluding those amounts held by depository institutions, the U.S. government, foreign banks and official institutions, and money market mutual funds.
: 9. Eurodollars held by U.S. addressees at foreign branches of U.S. banks worldwide and at all banking offices in the United Kingdom and Canada, excluding those amounts held by depository institutions, the U.S. government, foreign banks and official institutions, and by money market mutual funds.
{| border="1" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0" align="center" width="400px"
|+''' Comparable numbers (billions of dollars) (not seasonally adjusted) '''
|- style="background:#efefef;" |
! GDP (seasonally adjusted) ([http://www.federalreserve.gov/Releases/Z1/Current/accessible/f6.htm]) || align="right"| 11,643.0
|- style="background:#efefef;" |
! Credit market Debt Outstanding ([http://www.federalreserve.gov/Releases/Z1/Current/accessible/l1.htm]) || align="right"| 35,181.7
|- style="background:#efefef;" |
! Derivative (finance) Derivatives (notional) ([http://www.occ.treas.gov/deriv/deriv.htm]) || align="right"| 79,400.0
|}
The only deposits that have "reserve requirements" are the M1 "checking deposits".
Discontinuance of publication of US M3
The Federal Reserve will [http://www.federalreserve.gov/releases/h6/discm3.htm discontinue to publish M3 figures] after March 23, 2006.
Latest US M3 numbers
According to the [https://research.stlouisfed.org/fred2/data/M3.txt last published data] from 16 March, 2005, M3 has been growing at an annual rate of over 8.22%. As of 16th March 2006 M3 was $10'336.3 billion. One year earlier, on 14th March 2005 the M3 was $9'550.5 billion.
Controlling money supply by issuing debt
The government can control the growth of M3 through the issuance of new debt. Money which is re-invested back into US Government debt such as treasury bonds and bills ceases to be part of M3. Thus if a government wishes to slow the growth of M3, and thus prevent the economy from overheating, it can raise interest rates thus withdrawing money from M3 into Government debt. Between 14th March 2005 and 16th March 2006 total US National debt rose by 6.71% from $7'750.79 billion to $8'271.01 billion. These figures inform us that the actual issuance of money exceeded the increase in M3.
ECB Target
The [http://www.ecb.int/home/html/index.en.html European Central Bank ] has set a target rate of 4.5% for M3 growth but has overshot that target by almost double since the inception of the Euro.
See also
*Bank regulation
*Debt levels and flows
*Economics
*FDIC
*Financial capital
*Float (money supply) Float
*Fractional-reserve banking
*Full reserve banking
*Inflation
*Monetarism
*Money market
*Money with zero maturity (MZM)
*Seignorage
Footnote
*{{mnb|footnote_1|1}} The term ''private bank'' is here used as a bank that is not government owned, not as a bank for high net worth individuals.
External links
Data
- Trailing Five-Year U.S. Money Supply Chart
- Trailing Five-Year U.S. Money Supply Rate of Change Chart
- Aggregate Reserves Of Depository Institutions And The Monetary Base (H.3)
- U.S. M1,M2, M3 Money Supply Historical Table
- Money Stock Measures (H.6)
- Top 50 Bank Holding Companies by Total Domestic Deposits
- Data on Monetary Aggregates in Australia
Articles
- Do all banks hold reserves, and, if so, where do they hold them? (11/2001)
- What effect does a change in the reserve requirement have on the money supply? (08/2001)
- St. Louis Fed: Monetary Aggregates
- A Brief Economics Primer By John P. Hussman, Ph.D.
- Why the Federal Reserve is Irrelevant By John P. Hussman, Ph.D. August 2001
- Anna J. Schwartz on money supply
- Popular History of Money and Economics articles
- "What Has Government Done to Our Money?" by Murray N. Rothbard
- Peak Behind the curtain? Why is Fed hiding the M3?
Category:Money
de:Geldmenge
es:Oferta de dinero
fi:Rahavaranto
fr:Masse monétaire
id:Persediaan uang
it:Base monetaria
ja:マ�ーサプライ
see Money supply
*** Shopping-Tip: Money Supply