Equation of Exchange
The equation of exchange identifies the exact mathematical
relationship that exists between the money supply, the price level, and the
volume of economic activity. The economist Irving Fisher (1867–1947) first
formulated the equation of exchange, and his version took the following
form:
MV + M′V′ = PT.
Here M stands for the stock of currency in a given year, V
stands for the velocity or number of times a dollar bill changes hands during a
year, M′ measures the quantity of checkable deposits, and V′ the
velocity of checkable deposits. P stands for the price involved in a
typical transaction, and T represents the number of transactions.
Contemporary economists make use of a simplified equation of exchange that
takes the following form:
MV = PY
Here M stands for a measure of the money stock that includes, at a
minimum, currency in circulation plus checkable deposits. Time deposits and
other highly liquid assets may also be included. V stands for the income
velocity of money, defined as being equal to the money value of income and
output divided by the money stock. P stands for the price level and
Y stands for real output. In practice PY stands for Gross Domestic
Product (GDP) unadjusted for inflation, called nominal GDP, and Y stands
for GDP adjusted for inflation, called real GDP. P is a factor standing
for the price level and is calculated by dividing nominal GDP by real GDP.
Velocity is calculated by dividing nominal GDP by the money stock.
Nominal GDP divided by M equals V, which can be converted to
the form MV = nominal GDP. Furthermore, nominal GDP divided by real GDP
(Y) equals the price index (P), which is mathematically equivalent
to saying that nominal GDP = PY. There fore MV = PY is what is called an identity in
mathematics, true by definition.
The equation of exchange is often converted to a percentage change form,
expressed as:
% change in M + % change in V = % change in P + % change in Y
A school of economists called quantity theorists assumes that velocity is
relatively stable, suggesting that the percentage change in V is always
zero. They also assume that the percentage change in Y is at the
long-term growth rate of real GDP, approximately 3 percent. With these
assumptions the inflation rate (percentage change in P) will always be 3
percent less than the growth rate of the money stock (percentage change in
M). If the money stock grows at 10 percent a year, the inflation rate
will be 7 percent a year. Therefore, inflation is an exact mathematical function
of the money stock growth rate, and the equation of exchange furnishes us with a
theory of inflation.
Empirical evidence bears out the close correspondence between money stock
growth and inflation, but there is still room for some economists to argue that
increases in the inflation rate force authorities to increase monetary growth,
instead of the other way around. These issues still stand to benefit from
further study.
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