RIEB Seminar (Jointly supported by: Grant-in-Aid for Scientific Research (A): Deflation, Strong Yen, and Financial Crises / Monetary Economics Seminar of Kobe University)

Date&Time Tuesday, May 28, 2013, 10:30am-
Place Seminar Room at RIEB (Kanematsu Memorial Hall, 1st Floor)
Intended Audience Faculty, Graduate Students and People with Equivalent Knowledge
Language English
Note Copies of the paper will be available at Office of Promoting Research Collaboration.

10:30am-12:00pm

Speaker Markus K. BRUNNERMEIER
Affiliation Department of Economics, Princeton University
Topic The I Theory of Money
Abstract A theory of money needs a proper place for financial intermediaries. Intermediaries create money by taking deposits from savers and investing them in productive projects. The money multiplier depends on the size of intermediary balance sheets, and their ability to take risks. In downturns, as lending contracts and the money multiplier shrinks, the value of money rises. This leads to a Fisher deflation that hurts borrowers and amplifies shocks. An accommodative monetary policy in downturns, focused on the assets held by constrained agents, can mitigate these destabilizing adverse feedback effects. We devote particular attention to interest rate cuts, and study the potential for such policies to create moral hazard.