Changes in the Money Supply in an Open Economy (Cambridge (CIE) A Level Economics): Revision Note
Exam code: 9708
Factors that change the money supply
The money supply changes when the stock of cash and deposits in the economy rises or falls
In an open economy, five main forces cause this:
commercial bank credit creation
the actions of the central bank
government deficit financing
quantitative easing
changes in the balance of payments
Commercial banks and credit creation
When a commercial bank makes a loan, it does not simply lend out existing deposits — it creates new deposits, expanding the money supply
This happens because banks hold only a fraction of deposits as reserves (see reserve ratio in 9.4.4) and lend the rest
The borrower spends the loan; the funds are deposited at another bank; that bank keeps a fraction as reserves and lends the rest; and so on
The bank credit multiplier
The bank credit multiplier is the factor by which an initial deposit at a commercial bank expands the total money supply through successive rounds of lending and re-depositing.
Worked Example
If the reserve ratio is 10%, calculate by how much an initial £100 deposit can expand the money supply
Step 1: substitute the values into the formula
Step 2:multiply the initial deposit by the multiplier
£100 x 10 = £1,000
Note:
The lower the reserve ratio, the larger the multiplier - and the greater commercial banks' capacity to expand the money supply
In practice the multiplier is rarely at its theoretical maximum because households hold some funds as cash (reducing re-deposits) and banks may hold excess reserves
The role of a central bank
The central bank influences the money supply through four main channels
Monetary policy — setting the base interest rate affects commercial bank lending rates, which influences how much borrowing (and therefore deposit creation) takes place; raising rates contracts the money supply, lowering rates expands it
Lender of last resort — the central bank provides emergency liquidity to commercial banks facing short-term funding pressures, preventing bank failures that would contract the money supply
Banker to the government — the central bank holds government accounts and manages government debt issuance, the mechanism through which deficit financing feeds into the money supply (see below)
Regulating the banking industry — setting minimum reserve and capital ratios constrains how much commercial banks can lend, directly affecting the bank credit multiplier
Worked Example
Central banks can control the money supply. An increase in the money supply will cause inflation, therefore central banks can control inflation. Evaluate this statement. [20 marks]
Indicative answer structure
AO1 Knowledge: Define money supply and inflation; identify the five causes of money supply changes (credit creation, central bank actions, deficit financing, QE, BoP); state the QTM link between M and P
AO2 Analysis: Explain the mechanisms through which central banks influence the money supply (interest rates, reserve requirements, QE, sterilisation of BoP flows); explain the QTM prediction that rising M causes rising P under stable V and T
AO3 Evaluation: Central banks have partial control - commercial bank credit creation, government deficit financing, and BoP flows all change the money supply outside direct central bank control. The link from money supply to inflation is also conditional - V and T are not constant, and post-2008 QE showed that large money supply expansion did not immediately cause inflation because V fell.
Strong answers conclude that central banks can influence both money supply and inflation, but not fully control either
Government deficit financing
Government deficit financing is the process by which a government funds spending that exceeds its tax revenue, usually by borrowing through the issue of government bonds
When the government runs a budget deficit, it sells bonds to raise funds
If bonds are bought by the central bank or commercial banks using newly created reserves, the money supply expands — this is sometimes called "monetising the deficit"
If bonds are bought by the non-bank private sector (households, pension funds), the money supply does not expand — existing money is simply transferred from savers to the government and then back to the economy as government spending
The inflationary impact of deficit financing, therefore, depends on who buys the bonds
Quantitative easing (QE)
Quantitative easing is a monetary policy tool in which the central bank creates new reserves electronically and uses them to buy financial assets (typically government bonds) from commercial banks and other financial institutions, expanding the money supply.
QE is used when conventional monetary policy has reached its limits — typically when interest rates are already near zero
The mechanism
The central bank creates new reserves and credits commercial banks' accounts
Commercial banks' balance sheets now hold more liquid reserves in place of bonds
With more reserves, banks have greater capacity to lend, further expanding the money supply via the bank credit multiplier
QE was used extensively by the Bank of England, US Federal Reserve and European Central Bank after the 2008 financial crisis and during the COVID-19 pandemic
Changes in the balance of payments
In an open economy, flows of money across borders also change the money supply
Current account surplus - exports exceed imports, so foreign buyers' payments for domestic goods increase domestic bank deposits, expanding the money supply
Current account deficit - imports exceed exports, so payments flowing abroad reduce domestic bank deposits, contracting the money supply
Capital inflows (foreign investment into the country) increase the money supply; capital outflows reduce it
Central banks can offset these effects through sterilisation - buying or selling domestic bonds to neutralise the money supply impact of BoP flows, maintaining monetary policy independence
Examiner Tips and Tricks
The five causes listed in the syllabus are not independent - they interact:
Quantitative easing works through the bank credit multiplier
Deficit financing may or may not expand the money supply depending on who buys the bonds
BoP flows can be sterilised by central bank action
Strong answers trace these connections rather than listing the causes in isolation.
For evaluation, the key insight is that no single actor fully controls the money supply in an open economy. Commercial banks, central banks, governments and international flows all contribute. This framing directly contradicts simplistic "the central bank controls money supply" claims that examiners regularly flag.
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