TAILIEUCHUNG - Lecture Financial institutions, markets, and money (9th Edition): Chapter 4 - Kidwell, Blackwell, Whidbee, Peterson
Chapter 4 - The level of interest rates. This chapter explains the role of interest rates in the economy and provides a basic explanation of the fundamental determinants of interest rates. The chapter serves as a foundation for chapters 5 and 6, which also deal with interest rates. | Power Point Slides for: Financial Institutions, Markets, and Money, 9th Edition Authors: Kidwell, Blackwell, Whidbee & Peterson Prepared by: Babu G. Baradwaj, Towson University And Lanny R. Martindale, Texas A&M University CHAPTER 4 THE LEVEL OF INTEREST RATES What are Interest Rates? Rental price for money. Penalty to borrowers for consuming before earning. Reward to savers for postponing consumption. Expressed in terms of annual rates. As with any price, interest rates serve to allocate resources. The Real Rate of Interest Producers seek financing for real assets. Expected ROI is upper limit on interest rate producers can pay for financing. Savers require compensation for deferring consumption. Time value of consumption is lower limit on interest rate at which savers will provide financing. Real rate occurs at equilibrium between desired real investment and desired saving. Loanable Funds Theory Supply of loanable funds— All sources of funds available to invest in financial claims Demand for loanable funds— All uses of funds raised from issuing financial claims Equilibrium interest rate Supply of loanable funds— All sources of funds available to invest in financial claims: Consumer savings Business savings Government budget surpluses Central Bank Action Demand for Loanable Funds All uses of funds raised from issuing financial claims: Consumer credit purchases Business investment Government budget deficits Equilibrium Interest Rate If competitive forces operate in financial sector, laws of supply and demand will bring rates into equilibrium. Equilibrium is temporary or dynamic: Any force that shifts supply or demand will tend to change interest rates. Price Expectations and Interest Rates Unanticipated inflation benefits borrowers at expense of lenders. Lenders charge added interest to offset anticipated decreases in purchasing power. Expected inflation is embodied in nominal interest rates: The Fisher Effect. Expectations ex ante v. Experience ex post Realized rates of return reflect impact of inflation on past investments. As inflation increases, expected inflation premiums, Pe, may lag actual rates of inflation, Pa, yielding low or even negative actual returns. Interest Rate Movements and Inflation Historically, interest rates tend to change with changes in the rate of inflation, substantiating the Fisher equation. Short-term rates are more responsive to changes in inflation than long-term rates.
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