Superneutrality of Money

Categories: Econ

See: Neutrality of Money.

The theory of superneutrality says that, not only does the level of money not matter, but the rate of supply change doesn't matter either. Add money fast, or add it slow. It doesn't impact things like output or unemployment.

As for your money's preference for breakfast foods or TV shows...well, you may never get an answer. Just don't ask whether it prefers DC or Marvel. Your money may never shut up.

Related or Semi-related Video

Econ: What are the Neutrality and Supern...18 Views

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And finance Allah Shmoop What are the neutrality and super

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neutrality of money All right people your money just doesn't

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care You let your money pick whatever it wants to

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have for breakfast Hey cash stack Waffles or pancakes Yeah

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it doesn't care Timeto unwind in front of the TV

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Well you ask your money Do you wanna watch game

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of thrones or Black mirror Your money shrugs It just

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doesn't care That's the neutrality of money But there's another

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kind of neutrality of money as well Here in an

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economic sense the term neutrality of money means that changes

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in the money supply You know the amount of money

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in the system sloshing around out there doesn't impact the

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rial variables in the economy Stuff like underlying supply and

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demand or the unemployment rate or the amount of output

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in the economy Those things don't get fundamentally changed by

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the amount of cash floating around Well the amount of

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money can affect what's called nominal variables Things like prices

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and wages But it doesn't impact the rial variables So

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it isn't that your money doesn't care about you It's

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that the economy doesn't care about money Wait isn't money

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what the economy is all about We goto work to

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get money right That's the reason we work We spend

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money on everything we need to buy money Is the

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purpose of the economy right Well no not really The

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economy is about Resource is in labor You take stuff

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like a tree or some iron or from the ground

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You add a little human ingenuity and the elbow grease

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and boom You get a house you know or a

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car or a flying pizza delivery drone or something like

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that Well money is just a way to move things

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along efficiently It makes it so that we don't have

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to barter for everything Like say there's not much money

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in the economy not a lot of cash Prices are

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low You can buy a brand new taffy pulling machine

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for one hundred bucks Okay now let's dump a whole

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bunch of extra money into the system Now there's ten

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times as much cash as there was before That's going

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to cause a lot of disruption right Massive inflation It'll

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take some time to adjust but once the economy gets

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used to all that additional cash well everything evens out

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the price you pay for your taffy puller is now

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much higher Numerically it costs a thousand dollars instead of

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one hundred dollars But the basic factors of the economy

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stay the same People want the same amount of taffy

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as they did before Demand is the same You can

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still get the taffy puller you wanted Supply stays the

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same on ly prices changed with the money that was

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added to the system there So that's the neutrality of

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money Nominal prices and nominal wages are influenced by the

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amount of money in the system but the underlying conditions

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remain the same Well that's the theory anyway However not

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everyone agrees with this theory Working in practice One example

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While the United States government is a neutrality of money

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skeptic how do we know Well because if the theory

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is true then the Fed or Federal Reserve can't do

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anything to manage the economy Nothing It does boost long

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term economic growth and it can't do anything to increase

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employment There is also a class of economists who hold

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a middle position They argue that changes in the amount

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of money can have a short term In fact a

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surge of cash will prompt spending in the short term

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Give people a bunch of fat stacks of cash and

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well they'll spend him You know instant demand boost But

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the's economists don't think the effect last too long Eventually

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people get used to the new amounts of cash Prices

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go up The extra money they have doesn't come with

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any additional buying power and it kind of settles into

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a groove there Right things eventually settle into the same

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underlying patterns as they were in before But during the

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transition period there can be a measurable albeit fleeting impact

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So what is super neutrality than money that really doesn't

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care Well the theory of super neutrality says that not

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only does the level of money not matter but the

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rate of supply change doesn't matter either That is add

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money faster added slow It doesn't impact things like output

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or unemployment And as for your money's preference for breakfast

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foods or TV shows while you may never get an

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answer just don't ask whether it prefers D C or

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marvel Your money may never shut up Been there done

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that

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