High-Powered Money
High-powered money is sometimes called the monetary base. It
includes all cash, even vault cash at commercial banks, and commercial bank
deposits at Federal Reserve Banks, which are redeemable in cash. These assets
are called reserves because commercial banks hold them to honor checking account
withdrawals during times when withdrawals exceed new deposits. New loans are
also made out of reserves in the sense that a bank with no reserves would have
no funds to loan out. The term high-powered is a reference to the fact
that a $1 increase in the volume of high-powered money will cause the most
narrowly defined measure of the money stock to increase by about $2.50.
High-powered money is important because it represents net wealth to the
private sector. In a contrast, checking account money, called demand deposits,
represents an asset to the owner of the checking account, but represents a
liability from the perspective of the bank, which owes that money to a customer
on demand. The liability cancels out the asset, leaving a net effect of zero on
the net wealth of the private sector. Commercial bank deposits at a central bank
represent a liability to the central bank. However, a central bank is a
government or quasi-government agency that is not considered part of the private
sector.
The narrowest definition of the money stock, called M1, includes checkable
deposits and circulating currency, but not vault cash at commercial banks.
Because M1 includes checking deposits and excludes vault cash, it is possible
for the supply of high-powered money to change without a change in a money stock
measure such as M1. Normally, a 1 percent increase in the supply of high-powered
money will lead to a 1 percent increase in M1, the most narrowly defined measure
of the money supply in the United States.
The concept of high-powered money is important because central banks directly
control high-powered money, and exert only indirect control over measures of the
money supply, which are influenced by the willingness of commercial banks to
make loans out of reserves.
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