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12.2: Money and its Role Within the Income Circular-Flow

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    287994
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    Within the income-circular flow example, economic activity consists of two types of transactions in two different markets (see figure 1):  

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    Figure 1

    Our ability to produce and consume is made easier and more efficient when a globally accepted unit of exchange is present.  Workers are willing to accept money from firms in exchange for their labor.  And firms are willing to accept money from consumers in exchange for their goods and services. Money is the oil within the economic machine.   

    Money is not a new idea. Cast bronze coinage first appeared in China around 650 B.C. and the first paper money in Europe was issued in Sweden in 1661.

    During money’s long history there have been times when an economy’s currency collapsed and became worthless.  And without a generally accepted medium of exchange, market transactions in these economies suddenly became more complicated and this led to market failure.  

    What could cause money to lose its value and its usefulness as a medium of exchange?  Inflation (i.e., an increase in the average price level) is the primary cause of money losing its value.  After all, one dollar today buys you half as much tomorrow if the price level doubles.

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    A German woman burns worthless Marks in a stove to keep warm in the winter since that was cheaper than using the money to buy fuel.

    Image Source: Woman burning German marks for fuel during hyperinflation in the Weimar Republic, 1923. Courtesy of the U.S. National Archives and Records Administration (NARA), Photo No. 111-SC-83636. Public domain.

    During the aftermath of World War I, in the 1920’s, the German economy saw the value (purchasing power) of its currency plummet.  To meet the Allies’ demands for war reparations, the German government simply printed more and more marks.  And without any sort of reserves (like gold) to back up each additional mark, the money supply lost more and more of its value.  Each day it took more money to buy the same amount of goods and services.  Between May and June in 1923 consumer prices quadrupled. Prices were rising so rapidly that workers were paid two to three times a day so that they could buy goods in the morning before prices increased that afternoon. Throughout that year inflation continued to skyrocket and by November a loaf of bread cost 140 billion marks!  By that time, the mark became worthless.  The German people were forced to barter for what they needed in the product and input markets.  Needless to say, the German economy was thoroughly disrupted. 


    This page titled 12.2: Money and its Role Within the Income Circular-Flow is shared under a CC BY-NC-SA 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Martin Medeiros.

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