The models so far have not included the concept of money. This is unsatisfactory because money clearly plays a part in economics. A complete macroeconomics theory must be capable of explaining the historical behavior of the price level. In addition, money may have an importance beyond the simple measure of prices, because monetary factors may influence “real” values such as output, income and employment.
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Coins
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Notes
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Bank
deposits
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A
medium of exchange: Without money, goods and services could only be traded
through bartering, which is wasteful and difficult, particularly in a highly
specialized modern economy. Money is used as a universally acceptable barter
substitute. To be useful for this purpose, money must posess the following
characteristics:
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it
must be widely acceptable;
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it
must have a high value to weight ratio;
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it
must be divisible to settle debts of differing values;
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it
must be difficult to reproduce, counterfeit or debase in value.
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A
unit of account or measure of value: Money provides a standard by which the
value of any good or service can be measured. If a car costs $25,000 and a
hamburger costs $2, then a car is worth, and can be exchanged for, 12,500
hamburgers.
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A
store of wealth: A household (or firm) can sell its factor services or goods
for money, and then keep the money until it has decided what to do with it.
Almost every household and firm holds some amount of money. To act as a
satisfactory store of wealth, the value of money must be reasonably stable over
time.