Summary The Economics of Money, Banking and Financial Markets Global Edition
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Course
ECS 3701 (ECS3701)
Institution
Oxford University (OX)
The Economics of Money, Banking and Financial Markets Global Edition, written by Frederic S. Mishkin. All The Economics of Money, Banking and Financial Markets Global Edition notes, flashcards, summaries and study guides are written by your fellow students or tutors. Get yourself a The Economics of...
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O n the evening news you have just heard that the Federal Reserve is raising the
federal funds rate by 12 of a percentage point. What effect might this have on the
interest rate of an automobile loan when you finance your purchase of a sleek
new sports car? Does it mean that a house will be more or less affordable in the future?
Will it make it easier or harder for you to get a job next year?
This book provides answers to these and other questions by examining how finan-
cial markets (such as those for bonds, stocks, and foreign exchange) and financial insti-
tutions (banks, insurance companies, mutual funds, and other institutions) work and
by exploring the role of money in the economy. Financial markets and institutions not
only affect your everyday life but also involve flows of trillions of dollars of funds
throughout our economy, which in turn affect business profits, the production of goods
and services, and even the economic well-being of countries other than the United
States. What happens to financial markets, financial institutions, and money is of great
concern to politicians and can even have a major impact on elections. The study of
money, banking, and financial markets will reward you with an understanding of many
exciting issues. In this chapter, we provide a road map of the book by outlining these
issues and exploring why they are worth studying.
WHY STUDY FINANCIAL MARKETS?
Part 2 of this book focuses on financial markets, markets in which funds are trans-
ferred from people who have an excess of available funds to people who have a short-
age. Financial markets such as bond and stock markets are crucial to promoting greater
economic efficiency by channeling funds from people who do not have a productive use
for them to those who do. Indeed, well-functioning financial markets are a key factor
in producing high economic growth, and poorly performing financial markets are one
reason that many countries in the world remain desperately poor. Activities in financial
markets also have direct effects on personal wealth, the behavior of businesses and con-
sumers, and the cyclical performance of the economy.
The Bond Market and Interest Rates
A security (also called a financial instrument) is a claim on the issuer’s future income or
assets (any financial claim or piece of property that is subject to ownership). A bond is
a debt security that promises to make payments periodically for a specified period of
FIGURE 1 Interest Rates on Selected Bonds, 1950–2008
Sources: Federal Reserve Bulletin; www.federalreserve.gov/releases/H15/data.htm.
time.1 The bond market is especially important to economic activity because it enables
corporations and governments to borrow to finance their activities and because it is
where interest rates are determined. An interest rate is the cost of borrowing or the
price paid for the rental of funds (usually expressed as a percentage of the rental of $100
per year). There are many interest rates in the economy—mortgage interest rates, car
loan rates, and interest rates on many different types of bonds.
Interest rates are important on a number of levels. On a personal level, high inter-
est rates could deter you from buying a house or a car because the cost of financing it
would be high. Conversely, high interest rates could encourage you to save because you
can earn more interest income by putting aside some of your earnings as savings. On a
more general level, interest rates have an impact on the overall health of the economy
because they affect not only consumers’ willingness to spend or save but also busi-
nesses’ investment decisions. High interest rates, for example, might cause a corpora-
tion to postpone building a new plant that would provide more jobs.
Because changes in interest rates have important effects on individuals, financial
institutions, businesses, and the overall economy, it is important to explain fluctuations
in interest rates that have been substantial over the past thirty years. For example, the
interest rate on three-month Treasury bills peaked at over 16% in 1981. This interest
rate fell to 3% in late 1992 and 1993, rose to above 5% in the mid- to late 1990s, fell
to below 1% in 2004, rose to 5% by 2007, only to fall to zero in 2008.
Because different interest rates have a tendency to move in unison, economists fre-
quently lump interest rates together and refer to “the” interest rate. As Figure 1 shows,
however, interest rates on several types of bonds can differ substantially. The interest
1
The definition of bond used throughout this book is the broad one in common use by academics, which covers
both short- and long-term debt instruments. However, some practitioners in financial markets use the word bond
to describe only specific long-term debt instruments such as corporate bonds or U.S. Treasury bonds.
, CHAPTER 1 Why Study Money, Banking, and Financial Markets? 5
rate on three-month Treasury bills, for example, fluctuates more than the other interest
rates and is lower, on average. The interest rate on Baa (medium-quality) corporate
bonds is higher, on average, than the other interest rates, and the spread between it and
the other rates became larger in the 1970s, narrowed in the 1990s, and rose briefly in
the early 2000s, narrowed again, only to rise sharply starting in the summer of 2007.
In Chapter 2 we study the role of bond markets in the economy, and in Chapters 4
through 6 we examine what an interest rate is, how the common movements in inter-
est rates come about, and why the interest rates on different bonds vary.
The Stock Market
A common stock (typically just called a stock) represents a share of ownership in a cor-
poration. It is a security that is a claim on the earnings and assets of the corporation.
Issuing stock and selling it to the public is a way for corporations to raise funds to
finance their activities. The stock market, in which claims on the earnings of corpora-
tions (shares of stock) are traded, is the most widely followed financial market in almost
every country that has one; that’s why it is often called simply “the market.” A big swing
in the prices of shares in the stock market is always a major story on the evening news.
People often speculate on where the market is heading and get very excited when they
can brag about their latest “big killing,” but they become depressed when they suffer a
big loss. The attention the market receives can probably be best explained by one sim-
ple fact: It is a place where people can get rich—or poor—quickly.
As Figure 2 indicates, stock prices are extremely volatile. After the market rose in
the 1980s, on “Black Monday,” October 19, 1987, it experienced the worst one-day
drop in its entire history, with the Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA) falling by 22%.
From then until 2000, the stock market experienced one of the greatest bull markets in
its history, with the Dow climbing to a peak of over 11,000. With the collapse of the
high-tech bubble in 2000, the stock market fell sharply, dropping by over 30% by late
2002. It then recovered again and reached the 14,000 level in 2007, only to fall below
the 8,000 level early in 2009. These considerable fluctuations in stock prices affect the
size of people’s wealth and as a result may affect their willingness to spend.
The stock market is also an important factor in business investment decisions,
because the price of shares affects the amount of funds that can be raised by selling
newly issued stock to finance investment spending. A higher price for a firm’s shares
means that it can raise a larger amount of funds, which it can use to buy production
facilities and equipment.
In Chapter 2 we examine the role that the stock market plays in the financial sys-
tem, and we return to the issue of how stock prices behave and respond to information
in the marketplace in Chapter 7.
WHY STUDY FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS AND BANKING?
Part 3 of this book focuses on financial institutions and the business of banking. Banks
and other financial institutions are what make financial markets work. Without them,
financial markets would not be able to move funds from people who save to people
who have productive investment opportunities. Thus they play a crucial role in the
economy.
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