Gold standard/Tutorials: Difference between revisions

From Citizendium
Jump to navigation Jump to search
imported>Nick Gardner
No edit summary
imported>Nick Gardner
Line 22: Line 22:
and
and


:the ratio M1/BASE - the "money multiplier" is greater than 1 in a fractional reserve banking system
:the ratio M1/BASE - the "money multiplier" is greater than 1 in a fractional reserve banking system ''(see the addendum to the article on banking [[http://en.citizendium.org/wiki/Banking/Tutorials]])'';
 
:the ratio BASE/RES is also greater than 1 where the central bank holds domestic assets as well as gold: and,
 
:the ratio RES/GOLD is greater than 1 in a gold exchange system under which foreign exchange that is convertible to gold is counted as gold in a central bank's reserves.
 
Where - as was usually the case - those ratios were greater than 1, fluctuations in the gold reserves of a country's central bank led to larger fluctuations in its money supply - often many times as large.

Revision as of 05:41, 17 February 2009

This article is a stub and thus not approved.
Main Article
Discussion
Related Articles  [?]
Bibliography  [?]
External Links  [?]
Citable Version  [?]
Tutorials [?]
 
Tutorials relating to the topic of Gold standard.

The effect of gold stocks upon the money supply

Under the gold standard the effect of variations in a country's central bank stock of gold upon that country's money supply is governed by the identity:

M1 = (M1/BASE) x (BASE/RES) x (RES/GOLD) x PGOLD x QGOLD

where

M1 = money supply (money in circulation plus retail bank deposits);
BASE = monetary base (money in circulation plus retail bank reserves);
RES = international reserves of the central bank (foreign assets plus gold reserves);
GOLD =  gold reserves of the central bank, - PGOLD x QGOLD;
PGOLD = the price of gold per unit of quantity aat which the central bank is required to buy and sell gold; and,
QGOLD = the size (quantity) of the central bank's gold reserve;

and

the ratio M1/BASE - the "money multiplier" is greater than 1 in a fractional reserve banking system (see the addendum to the article on banking [[1]]);
the ratio BASE/RES is also greater than 1 where the central bank holds domestic assets as well as gold: and,
the ratio RES/GOLD is greater than 1 in a gold exchange system under which foreign exchange that is convertible to gold is counted as gold in a central bank's reserves.

Where - as was usually the case - those ratios were greater than 1, fluctuations in the gold reserves of a country's central bank led to larger fluctuations in its money supply - often many times as large.