|
How
Much Money Is There?
By
Mike Hewitt
DollarDaze.org
June
26, 2009
There are several different
monetary aggregates used to measure a nation's money supply.
These monetary aggregates can be thought of as forming a continuum
from most liquid (money as a means of exchange) to the least liquid
(money as a store of value).
The following figure indicates compiled data
for the most commonly used measures (M0, M1, M2 and M3) from 102
currencies representing 138 countries.
Three of the five
monetary unions can be clearly seen above. The remaining two are
the IEOM which uses the French Pacific Franc in three member
countries, and the East Caribbean Currency Union which uses the East
Caribbean Dollar in eight member countries.
The following graph shows the growth of money
supply since 1971, a year selected for the reason that the last
remaining currency to be convertible to gold, that being the US
dollar, was made inconvertible on Aug 15, 1971.
Currency in Circulation
Four currencies (EUR, USD, JPY and CNY)
comprise nearly 75% of all circulating banknotes and coins within
the public domain.
| Country/Union |
Currency Code |
Amount
(Billion US$) |
Percent of all Circulating Currency |
| European Union |
EUR |
1035.2 |
24.30% |
| United States |
USD |
850.7 |
19.97% |
| Japan |
JPY |
762.4 |
17.90% |
| China |
CNY |
492.3 |
11.56% |
| India |
INR |
140.3 |
3.29% |
| Russia |
RUR |
110.8 |
2.60% |
| United Kingdom |
GBP |
87.5 |
2.05% |
| Canada |
CAD |
43.8 |
1.03% |
| Switzerland |
CHF |
40.3 |
0.95% |
| Poland |
PLN |
37.7 |
0.89% |
| Brazil |
BRL |
37.3 |
0.88% |
| Mexico |
MXN |
34.3 |
0.81% |
| Australia |
AUD |
32.4 |
0.76% |
| Others (89) |
- |
554.9 |
13.03% |
The following graph shows the historical
outstanding stocks of M0 for currencies analysed in this essay.
It is apparent that the quantities of money
are increasing in an accelerating fashion. In 1990, the total amount
of currency in circulation passed US$1 trillion. Twelve years later,
the total amount exceeded US$2 trillion. This doubled again less
than six years later in early 2008.
The author is of the opinion that while we may
likely experience a continual lowering of asset prices, the
substantial increases to the money supply will lead to continuing
higher prices for consumer goods.
This may lead to a view that both inflation
and deflation are occurring simultaneously, but when one applies the
classical definition of inflation - that being an increase to the
money supply - such apparent discrepancies disappear.
_____
© 2009 DollarDaze
ABOUT
THE AUTHOR
 |
Mike
Hewitt is the editor of DollarDaze.org,
a website pertaining to commentary on the instability of the
global fiat monetary system and investment strategies on
mining companies. His website also provides a no-cost market
data feed service with up-to-date quotes on currency
exchange rates, commodity prices and major indices. Mike can
be emailed at mikehewitt@hotmail.com. |
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