Money in A Modern Economy: By-Sanskriti Kesarwani Roll No. - 22/COM) 120
Money in A Modern Economy: By-Sanskriti Kesarwani Roll No. - 22/COM) 120
Money in A Modern Economy: By-Sanskriti Kesarwani Roll No. - 22/COM) 120
Economy
The quantity theory of money is a theory that variations in price relate to variations in the money supply. It is most
commonly expressed and taught using the equation of exchange and is a key foundation of the economic theory of
monetarism.
The most common version, sometimes called the “neo-quantity theory” or Fisherian theory, suggests there is a mechanical
and fixed proportional relationship between changes in the money supply and the general price level. This popular, albeit
controversial, formulation of the quantity theory of money is based upon an equation by American economist Irving Fisher.
The Fisher equation is calculated as:
M×V=P×T
where:
M=money supply
V=velocity of money
P=average price level
T=volume of transactions in the economy
Generally speaking, the quantity theory of money explains how increases in the quantity of money tends to create
inflation, and vice versa. In the original theory, V was assumed to be constant and T is assumed to be stable with
respect to M, so that a change in M directly impacts P. In other words, if the money supply increases then the average
price level will tend to rise in proportion (and vice versa), with little effect on real economic activity.
Liquidity Preference and Rate of
Interest
Liquidity Preference Theory is a model that suggests that an investor should
demand a higher interest rate or premium on securities with long-term
maturities that carry greater risk because, all other factors being equal,
investors prefer cash or other highly liquid holdings.
Money Supply and Credit Creation
Demand deposits are an important constituent of money supply and the expansion of demand
deposits means the expansion of money supply. The entire structure of banking is based on credit.
Credit basically means getting the purchasing power now and promising to pay at some time in the
future. Bank credit means bank loans and advances.
A bank keeps a certain part of its deposits as a minimum reserve to meet the demands of its
depositors and lends out the remaining to earn income. The loan is credited to the account of the
borrower. Every bank loan creates an equivalent deposit in the bank. Therefore, credit creation
means expansion of bank deposits.
The two most important aspects of credit creation are:
Liquidity – The bank must pay cash to its depositors when they exercise their right to demand cash
against their deposits.
Profitability – Banks are profit-driven enterprises. Therefore, a bank must grant loans in a manner
which earns higher interest than what it pays on its deposits.
The bank’s credit creation process is based on the assumption that during any time interval, only
a fraction of its customers genuinely need cash. Also, the bank assumes that all its customers
would not turn up demanding cash against their deposits at one point in time.
Banks must hold in cash reserves for meeting the depositors’ demand for cash.
Excess Reserves – The reserves over and above the cash reserves are the excess
reserves. These reserves are used for loans and credit creation.
Credit Multiplier – Given a certain amount of cash, a bank can create multiple
times credit. In the process of multiple credit creation, the total amount of
derivative deposits that a bank creates is a multiple of the initial cash
reserves.
Credit creation by a single bank
There are two ways of analyzing the credit creation process:
Credit creation by a single bank
Credit creation by the banking system as a whole
Monetary Policy