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Quantity theory of money

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In economics, the velocity of money refers to a key term in the quantity theory of money, which centers on the equation of exchange:

where

is the total amount of money in circulation in an economy at any one time (say, on average during a month).
is the velocity of money, i.e., how often each unit of money is spent during the month. This reflects financial institutions and other economic conditions.
is the average price level for the economy during the month.
is the total number of items purchased during the month with the particular kind of money represented by . For example, if represents Central Bank notes (for example, green paper U.S. dollars) then is the quantity of goods or assets bought with Central Bank notes. If represents Central Bank notes plus checking account balances, then represents the quantity of goods or assets bought with paper or checking account balances. Textbooks carelessly define (or "") as the total quantity of goods produced in the economy (i.e., real gross domestic product). But this can lead to serious errors. For example, if only 30% of goods are bought with paper or checking account balances, and if the quantity of this type of money doubled, then it might happen that the quantity of goods bought with paper or checking account balances would double from 30% to 60%, while real output of goods (and and ) are unaffected. Besides money can be used to buy goods produced in another time period (especially assets).

The left-hand side of the equation above equals the total amount of money spent during the month. The right-hand side equals the amount of money received.

Given this identity, the velocity of money can be measured as

In an early work espousing the quantity theory, velocity is defined as 'the ratio of net national product in current prices to the money stock.'Template:Fn

Historically, the main rival of the quantity theory has been the real bills doctrine, which says that the value of money is determined by the assets and liabilities of the money-issuing entity, rather than by the ratio of money to real GDP.

Principles

The theory is based on the following principles:

  1. The source of inflation is always, fundamentally, derived from the money supply.
  2. The demand for money is a function of wealth, the rate of return and the value of liquidity.
  3. Money demand is stable in the short run.
  4. The long run is what matters most; injection effects are not that important.
  5. The real rate of interest is determined by non-monetary factors (productivity of capital, time preference).
  6. The supply of money is usually exogenous.
  7. Money demand determines the real money supply.
  8. The purchasing power parity doesn't matter for money effects.


Inflation

The equation of exchange can be used as a rudimentary theory of inflation. If the velocity of money is given by financial institutions (such as the role of bank accounts and credit cards) and the amount of production is always at a fixed level (say, at full employment), then any increase in the amount of money leads to rising prices for the economy as a whole, i.e., inflation.

If and are constant, then we can state the equation of exchange in terms of rates of growth:

the rate of growth of the money supply = the inflation rate

Critics

Critics point to several principles presented above. Money supply is endogeneous, as money is created by banks and other financial institutions in relation to a general optimism on the future return of investments. Private supply of money fluctuates in the short and long term and the central bank can only try to level off these fluctuations but has no control on the amount of supply of money. Indeed all central banks have failed in their attempts to target a given monetary growth. There can be huge variation in the stock of goods (especially production goods), goods produced in former period, and held and not consumed by economic agents. Wether economic agents try to add to their stock of goods or to unload it, it has an impact on the number of transactions for a given level of production (flow) and hence on inflation-deflation. Thus money demand also depends on expectations. If consumers expect both a rising consumption and rising prices they tend to add to their stocks, stocks rotate faster, there are more transactions, money demand is higher, and for a given money supply, deflation happens. Expectations are hence crucially important as optimism may lead to both higher money supply and higher money demand and pessimism to both lower money supply and money demand. Private money supply often overreacts to money demand through credit booms and credit bust, just as investment overreacts variation in the demand of final goods in the real sphere, hence the central bankers must try to keep things stable and regulation of he finance industry is to be advocated. Finally, for a given money supply, inflation can happen in consumption good prices or in production good prices (assets), and this depends from the relative strenght of labor and managemetn on the labor market. For instance recent desinflation is less due to monetarist policies than to free trade and anti labor policies which boost profits while depriving labor of their pricing power.

Applying It To Your Personal Life

The “Velocity of Money” is a vital facet to the finance world, as it relates to the world economy. The U.S. Federal Reserve uses this model to gauge the condition of our economy. Every bank in America employs the strategy of the “Velocity of Money” in some form or another in their everyday operations. We can see its power put to use everyday at our local banks. When a bank receives your money, they do not just let it sit there to lay idle. Instead they put it into other investments to generate additional funds using the same initial amount, never using money for only one job.

“If an individual puts one dollar in a savings account at a bank, the bank is going to put that dollar in several places in order to use that same dollar to make the bank more money. Why wouldn’t an individual desire to use that same strategy? Ultimately, the key to applying the velocity of money is to understand how the individual can place their personal investment dollars through something and not simply to something,” Bill Lyonssays.

The “Velocity of Money” approach to building wealth is a time-tested strategy that has been around for many decades. The term was originally coined by mathematical economist Irving Fisher in the 1930s and refers to the circulation of currency in a given economy. Today, the finance and mortgage coaches at LEI Financial implement this approach into their client’s own individual economies, to generate a consistent and reliable cash flow.

See LEI Financial


See also


References

Template:Fnb Friedman, Milton and Schwartz, Anna J. (1965). The Great Contraction 1929–1933. Princeton: Princeton University Press. ISBN 0-691-00350-5.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)

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