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Course: Macroeconomics > Unit 4
Lesson 5: The money marketEquilibrium nominal interest rates in the money market
How are nominal real interest rates determined? In the money market! Learn about the money market in this video.
Want to join the conversation?
- If the central bank sells bonds on the open market, would that shift the vertical money supply line to the left since there is less money in the econony?(2 votes)
- If the central bank sells bonds on the open market, that would indeed shift the vertical money supply line to the left because there is now less money. This is because when the central bank sells bonds those banks are buying those bonds and the money used to buy the bonds leaves the system. Also if the central bank lowers or raises the money supply it will always shift the vertical money supply line.(2 votes)
- If we make the money supply smaller, the n.i.r will decrease. However, which direction will the curve of the money supply shift?(2 votes)
- Actually, the n.i.r. won't decrease (at least, according to this graph)
If the money supply is smaller, than the vertical line on the graph will shift to the left (or, in mathematical terms, it will shift towards the origin). This will cause the intersection between the money supply line and the money demand curve to shift to the left, indicating a higher nominal intrest rate.(1 vote)
- What is the electrical grid?(1 vote)
- Can anyone explain why the model considers the unwillingness of an individual to lend money to be a form of demand? So, if X decides to keep money under his mattress because the opportunity cost of lending it is too low then he is said to have a high demand for money? It's not like doing so brings more money in, and money by itself doesn't have any real value, so what feature of money is satisfied by keeping it under the bed?(1 vote)
- If people want to hoard money (say, if people lose trust in banks), then they'll want more money to hoard. They also won't want to loan out money, since that would reduce their money supply temporarily (and they might not trust they'd even get it back).(1 vote)
Video transcript
- [Instructor] So we've spent
a lot of time justifying why we have this downward-sloping
demand curve for money. But you're probably asking,
well, this is a market, what, we didn't think about
an equilibrium point. And to do that, we need to
think about the supply of money. And in previous videos, we've started thinking
about the supply of money, and we'll think more in future videos about different monetary policies. But in a classical model, we assume a perfectly
inelastic supply of money. So we draw it as a vertical line, which is another way of saying
that the supply of money is not impacted by the
nominal interest rate. So this is the supply of money. I'll call that money supply one. Where it intersects the quantity of money, I'll just call that M
sub one right over here. And so this point where it intersects is the equilibrium point
in our money market. The equilibrium nominal
interest rate right over here, we could call R one. This would be the opportunity
cost for holding money. Now I have to give a
little bit of a disclaimer. This is a classical model here, and we'll talk more about
it in future videos. And most introductory economics class talk about this classical model where the central bank might
set the supply of money, and that doesn't change according to the nominal interest rate. And then the nominal
interest rate gets set essentially by this equilibrium point. Now, in the world that we live in, it actually goes the other way around. Central banks actually target
a nominal interest rate. And if the central bank is able to achieve that target interest rate, well, that's going to impact
the actual quantity of money. So keep that little disclaimer
in the back of your mind. But in an introductory economics class, we assume this world. So now that we have this neat little model for our money market, let's think about what would
happen in different situations. Let's think about a situation
where, for whatever reason, people lose confidence
in the electrical grid. What would happen to the
demand curve for money? And let's call this the MD sub one. Pause this video, and think about it. Well, if people lose trust
in the electrical grid, then this precautionary motive for holding money becomes stronger. Regardless of what the opportunity
cost is of holding money, people would want to
hold more of it because, like, hey, you know, I
don't know if I'll be able to access money if the
lights go out again. I'm not gonna be able to go to an ATM, or the banks are gonna close. And so at any nominal
interest rate, I would or, and in aggregate, people are going to want to hold more money. And so that would shift the
demand curve for money to the right. I could've drawn it a little
less hairy, but there you go. That would be MD sub two. We have this shift to the right. And then if that happened, if you had this demand for money increase, well, then what happens to the actual equilibrium
nominal interest rate? If you look at this point right over here, assuming that the quantity
of money has not changed, you have a new equilibrium interest rate, nominal interest rate. It has gone up, and that makes sense. If more people want to hold money, in order to get people
to part with that money, you have to offer them more. The opportunity cost of holding
that money has to go up. And you could imagine
the reverse scenario. If, for some reason, people
thought it's a lot less likely that the lights are gonna go
out, or they said, you know, I don't need as much cash
around for transactions or I'm not really into speculation, well, then the demand curve for money would shift to the left. And in that situation,
you would have a decrease in the equilibrium nominal interest rate. I will leave you there. Always keep these models
with a grain of salt. They're simplifications of the
real world, especially here, where we're assuming a perfectly
inelastic supply of money, which actually isn't the
case in the real world. But we can go with this for just, for the purposes of starting
to study the money market.