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THE MARKET FOR LOANABLE
        FUNDS

        MODULE 29
FINANCIAL MARKETS
• . . . are the markets in the economy that help
  to match one person’s saving with another
  person’s investment.
• . . . move the economy’s scarce resources from
  savers to borrowers.
• . . . are opportunities for savers to channel
  unspent funds into the hands of borrowers.
FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS
• Institutions that allow savers and borrowers to
  interact are called financial intermediaries.
• Types of Financial Intermediaries:
• Banks             - Bond Market
• Stock Market       - Mutual Funds
• Other
BANKS
• Banks take in deposits from people who want
  to save and make loans to people who want to
  borrow.
• Banks pay depositors interest and charge
  borrowers higher interest on their loans.
• Banks help create a medium of exchange, by
  allowing people to write checks against their
  deposits.
THE BOND MARKET
• A bond is a certificate of indebtedness that
  specifies obligations of the borrower to the
  holder of the bond.
• Characteristics of a bond:
• Term: the length of time until maturity.
• Credit Risk: the probability that the borrower will
  fail to pay some of the interest or principle.
• Tax Treatment: municipal bonds on which taxes
  are deferred on the interest.
THE STOCK MARKET
• Stock represents ownership in a firm, thus the
  owner has claim to the profits that the firm
  makes.
• Sale of stock infers “equity finance” but offers
  both higher risk and potentially higher return.
• Markets in which stock is traded:
• New York Stock Exchange
• American Stock Exchange
• NASDAQ
MUTUAL FUNDS
• Mutual Funds is an institution that sells shares
  to the public and uses the proceeds to buy a
  selection, or portfolio, of various types of
  stocks, bonds, or both.
• Allows people with small amounts of money
  to diversify.
OTHERS
•   Other financial intermediaries include:
•   Savings and Loans Associations
•   Credit Unions
•   Pension Funds
•   Insurance Companies
•   Loan Sharks
SAVING AND INVESTMENT IN THE
   NATIONAL INCOME ACCOUNTS
• Recall: GDP is both total income in an
  economy and the total expenditure on the
  economy’s output of goods and services:
• Y = C + I + G + NX
• Assume a closed economy:
• Y=C+I+G
• National Saving or Saving is equal to:
• Y-C-G=I=S
SAVING AND INVESTMENT IN THE
     NATIONAL INCOME ACCOUNTS
•   National Saving or Saving is equal to:
•   Y - C - G = I = S or
•   S = (Y - T - C) + (T - G)
•   where “T” = taxes net of transfers
•   Two components of national saving:
•   Private Saving = (Y - T - C)
•   Public Saving = (T - G)
SAVING AND INVESTMENT
• Private Saving is the amount of income that
  households have left after paying their taxes
  and paying for their consumption.
• Public Saving is the amount of tax revenue
  that the government has left after paying for
  its spending.
• For the economy as a whole, saving must be
  equal to investment.
SAVING AND INVESTMENT
• Savers and borrowers are matched up with
  one another through markets governed by
  supply and demand of the loanable funds.
• Economists work with a simplified model in
  which they assume there is just one market
  that brings the ones who want to lend money
  (savers) together with the ones who want to
  borrow (firms with investment projects).
THE EQUILIBRIUM INTEREST RATE
• This hypothetical market is known as the
  loanable funds market.
• The price that is determined in this market is
  the interest rate (r).
• The interest rate is the return a lender
  receives for allowing borrowers the use of a
  dollar for one year, calculated as a percentage
  of the amount borrowed.
THE EQUILIBRIUM INTEREST RATE
• The interest rate can be measured in real or
  nominal terms (with or without the expected
  inflation included).
• However, in real life neither the borrowers nor
  the lenders know what the future inflation rate
  will be when they make a deal, so the loan
  contracts specify a nominal interest rate, and the
  model is drawn with the vertical axis measuring
  the nominal interest rate for a given expected
  future inflation rate.
THE EQUILIBRIUM INTEREST RATE
• The interest rate can be measured in real or
  nominal terms (with or without the expected
  inflation included).
• However, in real life neither the borrowers nor
  the lenders know what the future inflation rate
  will be when they make a deal, so the loan
  contracts specify a nominal interest rate, and the
  model is drawn with the vertical axis measuring
  the nominal interest rate for a given expected
  future inflation rate.
THE EQUILIBRIUM INTEREST RATE
• As long as the expected inflation rate does not
  change, changes in nominal interest rate also
  lead to changes in the real interest rate.
MODEL FOR
    THE LOANABLE FUNDS MARKET
• On the model for the loanable funds
  market, the horizontal axis shows the quantity
  of loanable funds, and the vertical axis shows
  the interest rate (the price of borrowing).
THE MARKET FOR LOANABLE FUNDS
Interest
  Rate




                       Loanable Funds
DEMAND FOR LOANABLE FUNDS
• The demand curve for loanable funds slopes
  downward, because the decision for a
  business to borrow money to finance a project
  depends on the interest rate the business
  faces and the rate of return on its project
  (which is the profit earned on the
  project, expressed as a percentage of its cost):
DEMAND FOR LOANABLE FUNDS
DEMAND FOR LOANABLE FUNDS
Interest
  Rate




                                Demand

                          Loanable Funds
SUPPLY OF LOANABLE FUNDS
• The interest rate is also an important factor
  for analyzing the supply of loanable funds.
• Savers incur an opportunity cost when they
  lend to a business (the alternate use of these
  funds).
• Whether an individual decides to become a
  lender or not depends on the interest rate
  received in return.
SUPPLY OF LOANABLE FUNDS
• More people are willing to forgo current
  consumption and make a loan when the
  interest rate is higher.
• Therefore, the hypothetical supply curve of
  loanable funds slopes upward.
SUPPLY OF LOANABLE FUNDS
Interest
  Rate




                          Loanable Funds
THE EQUILIBRIUM INTEREST RATE
• The equilibrium interest rate is the interest
  rate at which the quantity of loanable funds
  supplied equals the quantity of loanable funds
  demanded.
• The market for loanable funds matches up
  desired savings with desired investment
  spending; in equilibrium, the quantity of
  funds that savers want to lend is equal to the
  quantity of funds that firms want to borrow.
EQUILIBRIUM IN THE LOANABLE FUNDS MARKET
Interest
  Rate
                                Supply

                              Movement to
                              equilibrium is
    5%                       consistent with
                           principles of supply
                              and demand.


                                Demand

                $1,200   Loanable Funds
EQUILIBRIUM IN
      THE LOANABLE FUNDS MARKET
• The match-up of savers and borrowers is efficient
  for two reasons:
1. The right investments get made (the investment
   projects that are actually financed have higher
   rates of return than that of the ones that do not
   get financed).
2. The right people do the saving (the potential
   savers who actually lend funds are willing to
   lend for lower interest rates than those who do
   not).
CHANGES IN THE
       EQUILIBRIUM INTEREST RATE
• The equilibrium interest rate changes when
  there is a shift of the demand curve for
  loanable funds, the supply curve for loanable
  funds, or both.
SHIFTS OF THE DEMAND
           FOR LOANABLE FUNDS
• Factors that cause the demand curve for loanable
  funds to shift:
1. Changes in perceived business opportunities
2. Changes in government spending
An increase in the demand for loanable funds
causes the demand curve for loanable funds to shift
to the right, increasing the quantity demanded of
loanable funds to increase at any given interest
rate, and the equilibrium interest rate rises.
THE MARKET FOR LOANABLE FUNDS
Interest
  Rate
                                     Supply


    6%
    5%




                                      Demand

                   $1,200   $1,300   Loanable Funds
THE CROWDING-OUT EFFECT

• An increase in the government’s deficit shifts
  to demand curve for loanable funds to the
  right, which leads to a higher interest rate.
• If the interest rate rises, businesses will cut
  back on their investment spending.
• So, a rise in the government budget deficit
  tends to reduce overall investment spending.
• This negative effect of government budget
  deficits on investment spending is called
  crowding out.
SHIFTS OF THE SUPPLY OF LOANABLE
                 FUNDS
• The factors that can cause the supply of
  loanable funds to shift are:
1. Changes in private savings behavior
2. Changes in capital inflows
An increase in the supply of loanable funds
means that the quantity of funds supplied rises
at any given interest rate, so the supply curve
shifts to the right, and the equilibrium interest
rate falls.
The Market For Loanable Funds
Interest
  Rate
                                Supply




    5%

    4%


                                 Demand

              $1,200   $1,300   Loanable Funds
INFLATION AND INTEREST RATES

• The most important factor affecting interest
  rates over time is changing expectations about
  future inflation, which shift both the supply
  and the demand for loanable funds.
• The distinction between nominal interest rate
  and the real interest rate:
 Real interest rate=Nominal interest rate – Inflation rate
• The true cost of borrowing is the real interest rate,
   not the nominal interest rate.
INFLATION AND INTEREST RATES

• The expectations of borrowers and lenders
  about future inflation rates are normally
  based on recent experience.
• According to the Fisher effect, an increase in
  the expected future inflation drives up the
  nominal interest rate, leaving the expected
  real interest rate unchanged.
INFLATION AND INTEREST RATES

• Both lenders and borrowers base their
  decisions on the expected real interest rate.
  As long as inflation is expected, it does not
  affect the equilibrium quantity of loanable
  funds or the expected real interest rate; all it
  affects is the equilibrium nominal interest
  rate.
RECONCILING
       THE TWO INTEREST RATE MODELS

• Using the liquidity preference model, a fall in
  the interest rate leads to a rise in investment
  spending (I), which then leads to a rise in both
  real GDP and consumer spending (C).
• It also leads to a rise in savings, since at each
  step of the multiplier process, part of the
  increase in DI is saved.
RECONCILING
       THE TWO INTEREST RATE MODELS

• According to the savings-investment spending
  identity, total savings in the economy is
  always equal to investment spending.
• When a fall in the interest rate leads to higher
  investment spending, the resulting increase in
  real GDP generates exactly enough additional
  savings to match the rise in investment
  spending.
RECONCILING THE TWO INTEREST RATE
MODELS: THE LIQUIDITY PREFERENCE MODEL

• According to the liquidity preference model,
  the equilibrium interest rate in the economy is
  the rate at which the quantity of money
  supplied is equal to the quantity of money
  demanded in the money market.
RECONCILING THE TWO INTEREST RATE
   MODELS: THE LOANABLE FUNDS MODEL

• According to the loanable funds model, the
  equilibrium interest rate in the economy is the
  rate at which the quantity of loanable funds
  supplied is equal to the quantity of loanable
  funds demanded in the market for loanable
  funds.
RECONCILING THE TWO INTEREST RATE
                 MODELS

• Both the money market and the market for
   loanable funds are initially in equilibrium with the
   same interest rate.
• This fact will always be true. If the Fed increases
   the money supply:
1. In the liquidity preference model, this pushes the
money supply curve rightward, causing the
equilibrium interest rate in to market to fall, moving
to a new short-run equilibrium interest rate.
RECONCILING THE TWO INTEREST RATE
                 MODELS

2. In the loanable funds market model, in the
   short run, the fall in the interest rate due to
   the increase in the money supply leads to a
   rise in real GDP, which leads to a rise in
   savings through the multiplier process. This
   rise in savings shifts the supply curve for
   loanable funds rightward, and reducing the
   equilibrium interest rate in the loanable
   funds market.
RECONCILING THE TWO INTEREST RATE
                 MODELS

• Since savings rise by exactly enough to match
  the rise in investment spending, so this tells us
  that the equilibrium rate in the loanable funds
  market falls to exactly the same as the new
  equilibrium interest rate in the money market.
EQUILIBRIUM INTEREST RATE IS THE SAME IN
              BOTH MODELS

• In the short run, the supply and demand for
  money determine the interest rate, and the
  loanable funds market follows the lead of the
  money market.
• When a change in the supply of money leads
  to a change in the interest rate, the resulting
  change in real GDP causes the supply of
  loanable funds to change as well.
THE INTEREST RATE IN THE LONG RUN

• In the short run, an increase in the money
  supply leads to a fall in the interest rate, and a
  decrease in the money supply leads to a rise in
  the interest rate.
• In the long run, however, changes in the
  money supply don’t affect the interest rate.
THE INTEREST RATE IN THE LONG RUN

• If the money supply rises, this initially reduces
  the interest rate.
• However, in the long run, the aggregate price
  level will rise by the same proportion as the
  increase in money supply.
• A rise in the aggregate price level increases
  money demand in the same proportion.
• So in the long run, the money demand curve
  shifts rightward, and the equilibrium interest rate
  rises back to its original level.
THE INTEREST RATE IN THE LONG RUN

• In the loanable funds market, an increase in the
  money supply leads to a short-run rise in real
  GDP, and shifts the supply of loanable funds
  rightward.
• In the long run, real GDP falls back to its original
  level as wages and other nominal prices rise.
• As a result, the supply of loanable funds, which
  initially shifted rightward, shifts back to its
  original level.
THE INTEREST RATE IN THE LONG RUN

• In the long run, changes in the money supply
  do not affect the interest rate.
• What determines the interest rate in the long
  run is the supply and demand for loanable
  funds.
• In the long run the equilibrium interest rate is
  the rate that matches the supply of loanable
  funds with the demand for loanable funds
  when the real GDP equals potential output.
CONCLUSIONS
• Financial markets coordinate borrowing and
  lending and thereby help allocate the
  economy’s scarce resources efficiently.
• Financial markets are like other markets in the
  economy. The price in the loanable funds
  market - interest rate - is governed by the
  forces of supply and demand.

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Module 29 the market for loanable funds

  • 1. THE MARKET FOR LOANABLE FUNDS MODULE 29
  • 2. FINANCIAL MARKETS • . . . are the markets in the economy that help to match one person’s saving with another person’s investment. • . . . move the economy’s scarce resources from savers to borrowers. • . . . are opportunities for savers to channel unspent funds into the hands of borrowers.
  • 3. FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS • Institutions that allow savers and borrowers to interact are called financial intermediaries. • Types of Financial Intermediaries: • Banks - Bond Market • Stock Market - Mutual Funds • Other
  • 4. BANKS • Banks take in deposits from people who want to save and make loans to people who want to borrow. • Banks pay depositors interest and charge borrowers higher interest on their loans. • Banks help create a medium of exchange, by allowing people to write checks against their deposits.
  • 5. THE BOND MARKET • A bond is a certificate of indebtedness that specifies obligations of the borrower to the holder of the bond. • Characteristics of a bond: • Term: the length of time until maturity. • Credit Risk: the probability that the borrower will fail to pay some of the interest or principle. • Tax Treatment: municipal bonds on which taxes are deferred on the interest.
  • 6. THE STOCK MARKET • Stock represents ownership in a firm, thus the owner has claim to the profits that the firm makes. • Sale of stock infers “equity finance” but offers both higher risk and potentially higher return. • Markets in which stock is traded: • New York Stock Exchange • American Stock Exchange • NASDAQ
  • 7. MUTUAL FUNDS • Mutual Funds is an institution that sells shares to the public and uses the proceeds to buy a selection, or portfolio, of various types of stocks, bonds, or both. • Allows people with small amounts of money to diversify.
  • 8. OTHERS • Other financial intermediaries include: • Savings and Loans Associations • Credit Unions • Pension Funds • Insurance Companies • Loan Sharks
  • 9. SAVING AND INVESTMENT IN THE NATIONAL INCOME ACCOUNTS • Recall: GDP is both total income in an economy and the total expenditure on the economy’s output of goods and services: • Y = C + I + G + NX • Assume a closed economy: • Y=C+I+G • National Saving or Saving is equal to: • Y-C-G=I=S
  • 10. SAVING AND INVESTMENT IN THE NATIONAL INCOME ACCOUNTS • National Saving or Saving is equal to: • Y - C - G = I = S or • S = (Y - T - C) + (T - G) • where “T” = taxes net of transfers • Two components of national saving: • Private Saving = (Y - T - C) • Public Saving = (T - G)
  • 11. SAVING AND INVESTMENT • Private Saving is the amount of income that households have left after paying their taxes and paying for their consumption. • Public Saving is the amount of tax revenue that the government has left after paying for its spending. • For the economy as a whole, saving must be equal to investment.
  • 12. SAVING AND INVESTMENT • Savers and borrowers are matched up with one another through markets governed by supply and demand of the loanable funds. • Economists work with a simplified model in which they assume there is just one market that brings the ones who want to lend money (savers) together with the ones who want to borrow (firms with investment projects).
  • 13. THE EQUILIBRIUM INTEREST RATE • This hypothetical market is known as the loanable funds market. • The price that is determined in this market is the interest rate (r). • The interest rate is the return a lender receives for allowing borrowers the use of a dollar for one year, calculated as a percentage of the amount borrowed.
  • 14. THE EQUILIBRIUM INTEREST RATE • The interest rate can be measured in real or nominal terms (with or without the expected inflation included). • However, in real life neither the borrowers nor the lenders know what the future inflation rate will be when they make a deal, so the loan contracts specify a nominal interest rate, and the model is drawn with the vertical axis measuring the nominal interest rate for a given expected future inflation rate.
  • 15. THE EQUILIBRIUM INTEREST RATE • The interest rate can be measured in real or nominal terms (with or without the expected inflation included). • However, in real life neither the borrowers nor the lenders know what the future inflation rate will be when they make a deal, so the loan contracts specify a nominal interest rate, and the model is drawn with the vertical axis measuring the nominal interest rate for a given expected future inflation rate.
  • 16. THE EQUILIBRIUM INTEREST RATE • As long as the expected inflation rate does not change, changes in nominal interest rate also lead to changes in the real interest rate.
  • 17. MODEL FOR THE LOANABLE FUNDS MARKET • On the model for the loanable funds market, the horizontal axis shows the quantity of loanable funds, and the vertical axis shows the interest rate (the price of borrowing).
  • 18. THE MARKET FOR LOANABLE FUNDS Interest Rate Loanable Funds
  • 19. DEMAND FOR LOANABLE FUNDS • The demand curve for loanable funds slopes downward, because the decision for a business to borrow money to finance a project depends on the interest rate the business faces and the rate of return on its project (which is the profit earned on the project, expressed as a percentage of its cost):
  • 21. DEMAND FOR LOANABLE FUNDS Interest Rate Demand Loanable Funds
  • 22. SUPPLY OF LOANABLE FUNDS • The interest rate is also an important factor for analyzing the supply of loanable funds. • Savers incur an opportunity cost when they lend to a business (the alternate use of these funds). • Whether an individual decides to become a lender or not depends on the interest rate received in return.
  • 23. SUPPLY OF LOANABLE FUNDS • More people are willing to forgo current consumption and make a loan when the interest rate is higher. • Therefore, the hypothetical supply curve of loanable funds slopes upward.
  • 24. SUPPLY OF LOANABLE FUNDS Interest Rate Loanable Funds
  • 25. THE EQUILIBRIUM INTEREST RATE • The equilibrium interest rate is the interest rate at which the quantity of loanable funds supplied equals the quantity of loanable funds demanded. • The market for loanable funds matches up desired savings with desired investment spending; in equilibrium, the quantity of funds that savers want to lend is equal to the quantity of funds that firms want to borrow.
  • 26. EQUILIBRIUM IN THE LOANABLE FUNDS MARKET Interest Rate Supply Movement to equilibrium is 5% consistent with principles of supply and demand. Demand $1,200 Loanable Funds
  • 27. EQUILIBRIUM IN THE LOANABLE FUNDS MARKET • The match-up of savers and borrowers is efficient for two reasons: 1. The right investments get made (the investment projects that are actually financed have higher rates of return than that of the ones that do not get financed). 2. The right people do the saving (the potential savers who actually lend funds are willing to lend for lower interest rates than those who do not).
  • 28. CHANGES IN THE EQUILIBRIUM INTEREST RATE • The equilibrium interest rate changes when there is a shift of the demand curve for loanable funds, the supply curve for loanable funds, or both.
  • 29. SHIFTS OF THE DEMAND FOR LOANABLE FUNDS • Factors that cause the demand curve for loanable funds to shift: 1. Changes in perceived business opportunities 2. Changes in government spending An increase in the demand for loanable funds causes the demand curve for loanable funds to shift to the right, increasing the quantity demanded of loanable funds to increase at any given interest rate, and the equilibrium interest rate rises.
  • 30. THE MARKET FOR LOANABLE FUNDS Interest Rate Supply 6% 5% Demand $1,200 $1,300 Loanable Funds
  • 31. THE CROWDING-OUT EFFECT • An increase in the government’s deficit shifts to demand curve for loanable funds to the right, which leads to a higher interest rate. • If the interest rate rises, businesses will cut back on their investment spending. • So, a rise in the government budget deficit tends to reduce overall investment spending. • This negative effect of government budget deficits on investment spending is called crowding out.
  • 32. SHIFTS OF THE SUPPLY OF LOANABLE FUNDS • The factors that can cause the supply of loanable funds to shift are: 1. Changes in private savings behavior 2. Changes in capital inflows An increase in the supply of loanable funds means that the quantity of funds supplied rises at any given interest rate, so the supply curve shifts to the right, and the equilibrium interest rate falls.
  • 33. The Market For Loanable Funds Interest Rate Supply 5% 4% Demand $1,200 $1,300 Loanable Funds
  • 34. INFLATION AND INTEREST RATES • The most important factor affecting interest rates over time is changing expectations about future inflation, which shift both the supply and the demand for loanable funds. • The distinction between nominal interest rate and the real interest rate: Real interest rate=Nominal interest rate – Inflation rate • The true cost of borrowing is the real interest rate, not the nominal interest rate.
  • 35. INFLATION AND INTEREST RATES • The expectations of borrowers and lenders about future inflation rates are normally based on recent experience. • According to the Fisher effect, an increase in the expected future inflation drives up the nominal interest rate, leaving the expected real interest rate unchanged.
  • 36. INFLATION AND INTEREST RATES • Both lenders and borrowers base their decisions on the expected real interest rate. As long as inflation is expected, it does not affect the equilibrium quantity of loanable funds or the expected real interest rate; all it affects is the equilibrium nominal interest rate.
  • 37. RECONCILING THE TWO INTEREST RATE MODELS • Using the liquidity preference model, a fall in the interest rate leads to a rise in investment spending (I), which then leads to a rise in both real GDP and consumer spending (C). • It also leads to a rise in savings, since at each step of the multiplier process, part of the increase in DI is saved.
  • 38. RECONCILING THE TWO INTEREST RATE MODELS • According to the savings-investment spending identity, total savings in the economy is always equal to investment spending. • When a fall in the interest rate leads to higher investment spending, the resulting increase in real GDP generates exactly enough additional savings to match the rise in investment spending.
  • 39. RECONCILING THE TWO INTEREST RATE MODELS: THE LIQUIDITY PREFERENCE MODEL • According to the liquidity preference model, the equilibrium interest rate in the economy is the rate at which the quantity of money supplied is equal to the quantity of money demanded in the money market.
  • 40. RECONCILING THE TWO INTEREST RATE MODELS: THE LOANABLE FUNDS MODEL • According to the loanable funds model, the equilibrium interest rate in the economy is the rate at which the quantity of loanable funds supplied is equal to the quantity of loanable funds demanded in the market for loanable funds.
  • 41. RECONCILING THE TWO INTEREST RATE MODELS • Both the money market and the market for loanable funds are initially in equilibrium with the same interest rate. • This fact will always be true. If the Fed increases the money supply: 1. In the liquidity preference model, this pushes the money supply curve rightward, causing the equilibrium interest rate in to market to fall, moving to a new short-run equilibrium interest rate.
  • 42. RECONCILING THE TWO INTEREST RATE MODELS 2. In the loanable funds market model, in the short run, the fall in the interest rate due to the increase in the money supply leads to a rise in real GDP, which leads to a rise in savings through the multiplier process. This rise in savings shifts the supply curve for loanable funds rightward, and reducing the equilibrium interest rate in the loanable funds market.
  • 43. RECONCILING THE TWO INTEREST RATE MODELS • Since savings rise by exactly enough to match the rise in investment spending, so this tells us that the equilibrium rate in the loanable funds market falls to exactly the same as the new equilibrium interest rate in the money market.
  • 44. EQUILIBRIUM INTEREST RATE IS THE SAME IN BOTH MODELS • In the short run, the supply and demand for money determine the interest rate, and the loanable funds market follows the lead of the money market. • When a change in the supply of money leads to a change in the interest rate, the resulting change in real GDP causes the supply of loanable funds to change as well.
  • 45. THE INTEREST RATE IN THE LONG RUN • In the short run, an increase in the money supply leads to a fall in the interest rate, and a decrease in the money supply leads to a rise in the interest rate. • In the long run, however, changes in the money supply don’t affect the interest rate.
  • 46. THE INTEREST RATE IN THE LONG RUN • If the money supply rises, this initially reduces the interest rate. • However, in the long run, the aggregate price level will rise by the same proportion as the increase in money supply. • A rise in the aggregate price level increases money demand in the same proportion. • So in the long run, the money demand curve shifts rightward, and the equilibrium interest rate rises back to its original level.
  • 47. THE INTEREST RATE IN THE LONG RUN • In the loanable funds market, an increase in the money supply leads to a short-run rise in real GDP, and shifts the supply of loanable funds rightward. • In the long run, real GDP falls back to its original level as wages and other nominal prices rise. • As a result, the supply of loanable funds, which initially shifted rightward, shifts back to its original level.
  • 48. THE INTEREST RATE IN THE LONG RUN • In the long run, changes in the money supply do not affect the interest rate. • What determines the interest rate in the long run is the supply and demand for loanable funds. • In the long run the equilibrium interest rate is the rate that matches the supply of loanable funds with the demand for loanable funds when the real GDP equals potential output.
  • 49. CONCLUSIONS • Financial markets coordinate borrowing and lending and thereby help allocate the economy’s scarce resources efficiently. • Financial markets are like other markets in the economy. The price in the loanable funds market - interest rate - is governed by the forces of supply and demand.