Functions of Money
13-4
The Four Jobs of Money
• Medium of exchange
• Standard of value
• Store of value
• Standard of deferred
payment
Copyright ©2002 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Medium of Exchange
• The most important job of money is to serve
as a medium of exchange
– When any good or service is purchased, people
use money
– Money makes it easier to buy and sell because
money is universally accepted
– Money, then, provides us with a shortcut in
doing business
• By acting as a medium of exchange, money
performs its most important function
13-5Copyright ©2002 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Money as a Medium of
Exchange
• Money facilitates exchange by reducing
the cost of trading.
• Without money, we would have to
barter.
Money As a Medium of
Exchange
• Money does not have to have any
inherent value to function as a medium of
exchange.
• All that is necessary is that everyone
believes that other people will exchange it
for their goods.
Standard of Value
13-6
• Money is a common denominator
in which the relative value of
goods and services can be
expressed
– A job that pays $2 an hour would be
nearly impossible to fill, while one paying
$50 an hour would be swamped with
application
Copyright ©2002 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Money as a Unit of
Account
• Money is used as a common denominator to
measure the relative values of goods and
services.
• Without money, we would have to measure
the value of goods and services in terms of
other goods and services.
• Money is a useful unit of account only if its
value relative to the average of all other
prices doesn’t change too quickly.
Store of Value
13-7
• If you could buy 100 units of goods and
services with $100 in 1982, how many
units could you buy with $100 in 2000?
– Answer: you could have bought just 51 units
– During this period, inflation robbed the dollar
of almost half of its purchasing power
• Over the long run, particularly since World
War II, money has been a very poor store
of value
– However, over relatively short periods of time,
say, a few weeks or months, money does not
lose much of its value
Copyright ©2002 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Money as a Store of Value
• Money is a financial asset that can be
used to store wealth (income that you
have saved and not consumed).
• As a store of wealth, money pays no
interest, but is perfectly liquid.
• Money’s usefulness as a store of
wealth depends on how will it maintains
its value.
Standard of Deferred
Payment
13-8
• Many contracts promise to pay fixed
sums of money well into the future
– A couple of examples are 30-year
corporate bonds and a 20-year
mortgage
Copyright ©2002 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Standard of Deferred
Payment
13-9
• When Dave Winfield signed a 10-year,
$23 million contract with the New York
Yankees in 1980, he really got stuck
– Because over the next 10 years the
consumer price index went up by almost 59%
– Today when a professional ballplayer,
entertainer, or virtually anyone else signs a
long-term contract, she or he is generally
protected by an escalator clause, which calls
for increased payments to compensate for
any future inflation
Standard of Deferred
Payment
13-10
• How well does money do its job as a
standard of deferred payment?
– About as well as it does as a store of
value
– Usually quite well in the short run, but
not well at all over the long run of, say,
three years or more
Copyright ©2002 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Money versus Barter
• Without money, the only way to do
business is by bartering
• For barter to work, I must want what you
have and you must want what I have
– This makes it pretty difficult to do business
• “Everything, then, must be assessed in
money: for this enables men always to
exchange their services, and so makes
society possible”
– Aristotle, Nicomachean Ethics
13-11
Functions of money

Functions of money

  • 1.
  • 2.
    13-4 The Four Jobsof Money • Medium of exchange • Standard of value • Store of value • Standard of deferred payment Copyright ©2002 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
  • 3.
    Medium of Exchange •The most important job of money is to serve as a medium of exchange – When any good or service is purchased, people use money – Money makes it easier to buy and sell because money is universally accepted – Money, then, provides us with a shortcut in doing business • By acting as a medium of exchange, money performs its most important function 13-5Copyright ©2002 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
  • 4.
    Money as aMedium of Exchange • Money facilitates exchange by reducing the cost of trading. • Without money, we would have to barter.
  • 5.
    Money As aMedium of Exchange • Money does not have to have any inherent value to function as a medium of exchange. • All that is necessary is that everyone believes that other people will exchange it for their goods.
  • 6.
    Standard of Value 13-6 •Money is a common denominator in which the relative value of goods and services can be expressed – A job that pays $2 an hour would be nearly impossible to fill, while one paying $50 an hour would be swamped with application Copyright ©2002 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
  • 7.
    Money as aUnit of Account • Money is used as a common denominator to measure the relative values of goods and services. • Without money, we would have to measure the value of goods and services in terms of other goods and services. • Money is a useful unit of account only if its value relative to the average of all other prices doesn’t change too quickly.
  • 8.
    Store of Value 13-7 •If you could buy 100 units of goods and services with $100 in 1982, how many units could you buy with $100 in 2000? – Answer: you could have bought just 51 units – During this period, inflation robbed the dollar of almost half of its purchasing power • Over the long run, particularly since World War II, money has been a very poor store of value – However, over relatively short periods of time, say, a few weeks or months, money does not lose much of its value Copyright ©2002 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
  • 9.
    Money as aStore of Value • Money is a financial asset that can be used to store wealth (income that you have saved and not consumed). • As a store of wealth, money pays no interest, but is perfectly liquid. • Money’s usefulness as a store of wealth depends on how will it maintains its value.
  • 10.
    Standard of Deferred Payment 13-8 •Many contracts promise to pay fixed sums of money well into the future – A couple of examples are 30-year corporate bonds and a 20-year mortgage Copyright ©2002 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
  • 11.
    Standard of Deferred Payment 13-9 •When Dave Winfield signed a 10-year, $23 million contract with the New York Yankees in 1980, he really got stuck – Because over the next 10 years the consumer price index went up by almost 59% – Today when a professional ballplayer, entertainer, or virtually anyone else signs a long-term contract, she or he is generally protected by an escalator clause, which calls for increased payments to compensate for any future inflation
  • 12.
    Standard of Deferred Payment 13-10 •How well does money do its job as a standard of deferred payment? – About as well as it does as a store of value – Usually quite well in the short run, but not well at all over the long run of, say, three years or more Copyright ©2002 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
  • 13.
    Money versus Barter •Without money, the only way to do business is by bartering • For barter to work, I must want what you have and you must want what I have – This makes it pretty difficult to do business • “Everything, then, must be assessed in money: for this enables men always to exchange their services, and so makes society possible” – Aristotle, Nicomachean Ethics 13-11