Money Growth and Inflation
Money Growth and Inflation
Money Growth and Inflation
Macroeconomics
N. Gregory Mankiw
Value of Price
Money, 1/P Level, P
As the value of
money rises, the
1 1
price level falls.
¾ 1.33
½ 2
¼ 4
Quantity
of Money
MONEY GROWTH AND INFLATION 6
The Money Supply-Demand Diagram
Value of Price
Money, 1/P MS1 Level, P
1 1
¾ 1.33
$1000 Quantity
of Money
MONEY GROWTH AND INFLATION 7
The Money Supply-Demand Diagram
¾ 1.33
½ 2
¼ 4
MD1
Quantity
of Money
MONEY GROWTH AND INFLATION 8
The Money Supply-Demand Diagram
¾ 1.33
eq’m eq’m
value A
½ 2 price
of
level
money
¼ 4
MD1
$1000 Quantity
of Money
MONEY GROWTH AND INFLATION 9
The Effects of a Monetary Injection
Value of Price
Money, 1/P MS1 MS2 Level, P
Suppose the 1 1
Then the value
Central Bank of money falls,
increases the¾ and P rises.
1.33
money supply.
A
½ 2
eq’m eq’m
value B
¼ 4 price
of MD1 level
money
$1000 $2000 Quantity
of Money
MONEY GROWTH AND INFLATION 10
A Brief Look at the Adjustment Process
Result from graph: Increasing MS causes P to rise.
How does this work? Short version:
▪ At the initial P, an increase in MS causes
excess supply of money.
▪ People get rid of their excess money by spending
it on g&s or by loaning it to others, who spend it.
Result: increased demand for goods.
▪ But supply of goods does not increase,
so prices must rise.
20
ACTIVE LEARNING 1
Answers
Given: Y = 800, V is constant,
MS = $2000 and P = $5 in 2005.
Compute nominal GDP and velocity in 2008.
PxY $4000
V = = = 2
M $2000
21
U.S. Nominal GDP, M2, and Velocity (1960=100)
1960-2007
2500
2000
Nominal GDP
1500
M2
Velocity is fairly
1000 stable over time.
500
Velocity
0
1960 1965 1970 1975 1980 1985 1990 1995 2000 2005
The Quantity Equation
PxY
Velocity formula: V =
M
▪ Multiply both sides of formula by M:
MxV = PxY
▪ Called the quantity equation
25
ACTIVE LEARNING 2
Answers
Given: Y = 800, V is constant,
MS = $2000 and P = $5 in 2008.
For 2009, the Fed increases MS by 5%, to $2100.
a. Compute the 2009 values of nominal GDP and P.
Compute the inflation rate for 2008-2009.
Nominal GDP = P x Y = M x V (Quantity Eq’n)
= $2100 x 2 = $4200
P = P x Y = $4200 = $5.25
Y 800
$5.25 – 5.00
Inflation rate = = 5% (same as MS!)
5.00 26
ACTIVE LEARNING 2
Answers
Given: Y = 800, V is constant,
MS = $2000 and P = $5 in 2005.
For 2009, the Fed increases MS by 5%, to $2100.
b. Suppose tech. progress causes Y to increase 3%
in 2009, to 824. Compute 2008-2009 inflation rate.
First, use Quantity Eq’n to compute P:
MxV $4200
P = = = $5.10
Y 824
$5.10 – 5.00
Inflation rate = = 2%
5.00
27
ACTIVE LEARNING 2
Summary and Lessons about the
Quantity Theory of Money
▪ If real GDP is constant, then
inflation rate = money growth rate.
▪ If real GDP is growing, then
inflation rate < money growth rate.
▪ The bottom line:
▪ Economic growth increases # of transactions.
▪ Some money growth is needed for these extra
transactions.
▪ Excessive money growth causes inflation.
28
Hyperinflation
▪ Hyperinflation is generally defined as inflation
exceeding 50% per month.
▪ Recall one of the Ten Principles from Chapter 1:
Prices rise when the government
prints too much money.
▪ Excessive growth in the money supply always
causes hyperinflation.
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30
40
50
60
1961
1962
1963
1964
1965
1966
1967
1968
1969
1970
1971
1972
1973
1974
1975
1976
1977
1978
1979
1980
Inflation (CPI)
1992
1993
1994
1995
1996
1997
1998
1999
2000
2001
Philippines
2002
2003
2004
2005
Broad Money Growth, %)
2006
2007
2008
2009
2010
2011
2012
2013
2014
2015
2016
Money Growth and Inflation in the
2017
2018
2019
2020
QUESTIONS???