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Saving and Borrowing

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    ♪ [music] ♪
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    [Alex] On September 15, 2008,
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    the world's financial system
    was shaken to its core
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    when the investment bank,
    Lehman Brothers,
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    filed for bankruptcy.
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    The impact was great not simply
    because Lehman was big,
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    but also because it was
    an important financial intermediary,
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    an institution that
    helps bridge the gap
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    between savers and borrowers.
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    The failure of Lehman marked
    the beginning of a series of events
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    that signaled
    the worst economic downturn
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    since the Great Depression.
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    And while there's several
    significant angles
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    to the Great Recession,
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    one of them was
    the decreased efficacy
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    of financial intermediation.
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    Now, some later videos
    are going to go through this
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    in more detail.
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    But for now, we want to start
    with some basic observations
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    as to why financial intermediation
    is so important.
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    We'll start
    with the supply of savings
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    and the demand to borrow,
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    and the market
    which brings them together,
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    the Market for Loanable Funds.
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    So why do people borrow
    and save at all?
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    Well, let's imagine a world
    without borrowing and saving.
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    Most people's incomes
    don't stay flat their entire lives.
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    They change in predictable ways.
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    Here's a typical pattern,
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    showing a person's income
    over their life,
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    with their income
    on the vertical axis
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    and time on the horizontal axis.
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    When you're young
    and still in school,
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    you might make
    a little bit of money,
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    waiting tables
    or occasionally mowing lawns.
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    Your first job out of school,
    it's going to pay more,
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    and after a few years
    of experience
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    and hopefully
    a few raises along the way,
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    you make more than you ever have.
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    Then, as you age,
    you look forward to retirement,
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    when your income falls.
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    But you're no longer working
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    and you could really enjoy
    your golden years.
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    [Estelle from “Seinfeld” TV series]
    “We're moving to Florida!”
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    [George] “What?
    You're moving to Florida?
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    Ah-hah! That's wonderful!
    I'm so happy!
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    For you! I'm so happy for you!”
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    [Alex] Now, let's imagine
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    if your consumption followed
    the same path as your income
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    and you never saved or borrowed.
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    You'd struggle when young,
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    and you'd be unable
    to invest in an education.
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    Then, you'd spend
    every cent you make
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    during your prime working years.
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    Well, that sounds
    like a lot of fun.
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    But without savings,
    your income will drop suddenly
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    when you retire,
    and so will your consumption.
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    Your golden years
    wouldn't be so golden.
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    [Doug from “King of Queens” TV series]
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    [Kevin] If you're so smart,
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    why don't you tell them that
    you live in my basement?
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    [Arthur] Why don't you tell them
    you're enormous?
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    [Doug] Why don't you tell them
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    that your total salary
    last year was $12?
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    [Arthur] That was after taxes.
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    [Alex] So instead,
    people tend to follow
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    a life cycle theory of savings.
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    A person can start out consuming
    more than she makes,
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    borrowing to fill that gap --
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    and to pay for things
    like an education.
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    Then, during
    her prime working years,
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    she makes more than she consumes,
    paying down her debt
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    and saving the extra income
    for retirement.
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    And when retirement comes,
    she can spend those savings
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    and enjoy the golden years
    even without working.
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    Now of course, many people
    deviate from this exact path,
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    depending on details.
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    Most people, for example,
    they consume less in college
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    than they do as professionals.
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    Ramen noodles are no longer
    a staple of my diet.
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    But generally speaking,
    many people follow a pattern
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    of borrowing, saving,
    and dissaving
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    to smooth their consumption path
    over their lifetime.
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    Of course, just like some people
    can't wait until after dinner
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    to reach for that cookie jar,
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    not everyone saves and spends
    in the same way.
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    How much you save and borrow
    depends upon your time preference.
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    Some people -- they're more
    impatient than others.
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    We all know someone
    who spends everything they've got
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    and doesn't save enough.
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    On the other hand,
    if you're keeping to a budget
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    and not spending too much
    so that you can go to college,
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    well that's an example
    of being patient
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    and waiting
    for higher consumption later.
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    We've also learned
    from behavioral economics
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    that saving is not just a matter
    of weighing costs and benefits.
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    Nudges can matter.
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    If your employer automatically
    enrolls you in a retirement plan,
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    or sets a high
    default contribution rate,
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    you'll probably end up saving more
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    than if you have to choose yourself,
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    even if choosing yourself
    would only take a few hours of work
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    once in your lifetime.
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    Another important reason to borrow
    is to make big investments.
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    Just as students borrow
    to invest in education,
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    businesses borrow
    to invest in big projects.
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    Entrepreneurs with great ideas
    but not much money,
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    they may have to borrow
    or sell a stake in their idea
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    just to get their venture
    off the ground.
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    For example, Howard Schultz
    built Starbucks into a global brand
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    by borrowing and raising capital
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    through several different types
    of financial intermediaries.
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    We'll talk more about that
    in upcoming videos.
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    As with any other good,
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    we're going to use
    supply and demand
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    to analyze the market
    for saving and borrowing,
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    known as the Market
    for Loanable Funds.
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    As we've seen, there are
    lots of good reasons
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    to save and to borrow.
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    But we have failed to mention
    one big factor -- price.
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    What's the price
    of saving and borrowing?
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    It's the interest rate.
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    So here's the supply curve
    showing the supply of savings.
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    As the interest rate goes up,
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    the quantity
    of savings supplied increases,
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    and here's the demand curve
    showing the demand to borrow.
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    Lower interest rates
    incentivize borrowing,
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    so as the interest rate falls,
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    the quantity
    of borrowing demanded increases.
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    As with any other
    supply and demand graph,
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    different factors
    will shift the curves.
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    If a lot of people decide
    that it'd be a good idea
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    to increase their savings,
    for example,
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    then the supply of savings
    will shift outward.
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    As you can see, this would
    cause interest rates to fall.
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    This is what we saw in countries
    like South Korea and China,
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    as their populations saved more.
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    On the demand side,
    if investors, say
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    became less optimistic
    for some reason,
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    the demand to borrow
    would shift inward,
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    causing the interest rate to fall.
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    But if, say an investment tax credit
    from the government
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    increased the demand to invest,
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    then the demand curve will shift
    in the opposite direction,
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    up and to the right,
    pushing interest rates up.
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    Thinking about the Market
    for Loanable Funds helps us
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    to see the big picture
    and understand the raw factors
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    that determine interest rates
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    and the quantity
    of borrowing and lending.
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    But there isn't actually
    one market
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    called the Market
    for Loanable Funds.
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    It's not like the New York
    Stock Exchange.
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    Instead, there are many,
    many, many markets
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    for different kinds of borrowers
    and different kinds of lenders.
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    And there are different types
    of institutions like banks,
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    bond markets, and stock markets
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    that connect
    the two sides of the market.
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    We're going to delve more deeply
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    into the different kinds
    of financial intermediaries,
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    [Narrator] If you want
    to test yourself,
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    click "Practice Questions."
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    Or, if you're ready to move on,
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    you can click
    "Go to the Next Video."
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    You can also visit MRUniversity.com
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    to see our entire library
    of videos and resources.
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    ♪ [music] ♪
Title:
Saving and Borrowing
Description:

This week: New Macroeconomics section! Get started with a video that asks -- what caused the Great Recession?

Next week: A closer look at one type of financial intermediary: banks.

On September 15, 2008, Lehman Brothers filed for bankruptcy, and signaled the start of the Great Recession. One key cause of that recession was a failure of financial intermediaries, or, the institutions that link different kinds of savers to borrowers.

We’ll get to intermediaries in the next video, but for now, we’ll first look at the market intermediaries are involved in.

This market is the combination of savers and borrowers—what we call the “market for loanable funds.”

To start, we’ll represent the market, using two curves you know well—supply and demand. The quantity supplied in the market comes from savings, and the quantity demanded comes from loans. But as you know, we have to factor in price. In the case of the market for loanable funds, the price is the current interest rate.

What happens to the supply of savings when the interest rate goes up? When are borrowers compelled to borrow more? Or less? We’ll cover these scenarios in this video.

One quick note: there’s not really one unified market for loanable funds. Instead, there are many small markets, with different sorts of lenders, lending to different sorts of borrowers. As we said in the beginning, it’s financial intermediaries, like banks, bond markets, and stock markets, which link these different sides of the market.

We’ll get a better understanding of these intermediaries in our next video, so stay tuned!

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Video Language:
English
Team:
Marginal Revolution University
Project:
Macro
Duration:
08:20
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Retired user edited English subtitles for Saving and Borrowing
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Retired user edited English subtitles for Saving and Borrowing
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