🔍
Saving and Borrowing - YouTube
Channel: Marginal Revolution University
[0]
♪ [music] ♪
[14]
[Alex] On September 15, 2008,
[16]
the world's financial system
was shaken to its core
[20]
when the investment bank,
Lehman Brothers,
[22]
filed for bankruptcy.
[24]
The impact was great, not simply
because Lehman was big,
[27]
but also because it was
an important financial intermediary,
[31]
an institution that
helps bridge the gap
[34]
between savers and borrowers.
[37]
The failure of Lehman marked
the beginning of a series of events
[41]
that signaled
the worst economic downturn
[44]
since the Great Depression.
[46]
And while there's several
significant angles
[48]
to the Great Recession,
[49]
one of them was
the decreased efficacy
[52]
of financial intermediation.
[55]
Now, some later videos
are going to go through this
[57]
in more detail.
[58]
But for now, we want to start
with some basic observations
[62]
as to why financial intermediation
is so important.
[66]
We'll start
with the supply of savings
[68]
and the demand to borrow,
[69]
and the market
which brings them together --
[72]
the Market for Loanable Funds.
[74]
And then we'll work our way up
[76]
to an examination
of The Great Recession.
[80]
So why do people borrow
and save at all?
[84]
Well, let's imagine a world
without borrowing and saving.
[88]
Most people's incomes
don't stay flat their entire lives.
[92]
They change in predictable ways.
[95]
Here's a typical pattern,
[97]
showing a person's income
over their life,
[99]
with their income
on the vertical axis
[101]
and time on the horizontal axis.
[104]
When you're young
and still in school,
[106]
you might make
a little bit of money,
[108]
waiting tables
or occasionally mowing lawns.
[111]
Your first job out of school --
it's going to pay more,
[114]
and after a few years
of experience
[116]
and hopefully
a few raises along the way,
[118]
you make more than you ever have.
[120]
Then, as you age,
you look forward to retirement,
[123]
when your income falls.
[124]
But you're no longer working,
[126]
and you could really enjoy
your golden years.
[130]
[Estelle from “Seinfeld” TV series]
“We're moving to Florida!”
[132]
[George] “What?
You're moving to Florida?
[135]
Ah-hah! That's wonderful!
I'm so happy!
[140]
For you! I'm so happy for you!”
[143]
[Alex] Now, let's imagine
[144]
if your consumption followed
the same path as your income
[149]
and you never saved or borrowed.
[152]
You'd struggle when young,
[154]
and you'd be unable
to invest in an education.
[157]
Then, you'd spend
every cent you make
[159]
during your prime working years.
[161]
Well, that sounds
like a lot of fun.
[163]
But without savings,
your income will drop suddenly
[166]
when you retire,
and so will your consumption.
[170]
Your golden years
wouldn't be so golden.
[172]
[Doug from “King of Queens” TV series]
If you're so smart,
[174]
why don't you tell them that
you live in my basement?
[175]
[Arthur] Why don't you tell them
you're enormous?
[177]
[Doug] Why don't you tell them that
your total salary last year was $12?
[181]
[Arthur] That was after taxes.
[184]
[Alex] So instead,
people tend to follow
[187]
a life-cycle theory of savings.
[189]
A person can start out consuming
more than she makes,
[194]
borrowing to fill that gap --
[197]
and to pay for things
like an education.
[200]
Then, during
her prime working years,
[202]
she makes more than she consumes,
paying down her debt
[206]
and saving the extra income
for retirement.
[210]
And when retirement comes,
she can spend those savings
[214]
and enjoy the golden years
even without working.
[218]
Now of course, many people
deviate from this exact path,
[221]
depending on details.
[223]
Most people, for example --
they consume less in college
[226]
than they do as professionals.
[228]
Ramen noodles are no longer
a staple of my diet.
[233]
But generally speaking,
many people follow a pattern
[236]
of borrowing, saving,
and dissaving
[240]
to smooth their consumption path
over their lifetime.
[245]
Of course, just like some people
can't wait until after dinner
[248]
to reach for that cookie jar,
[250]
not everyone saves and spends
in the same way.
[253]
How much you save and borrow
depends upon your time preference.
[257]
Some people -- they're more
impatient than others.
[261]
We all know someone
who spends everything they've got
[263]
and doesn't save enough.
[265]
On the other hand,
if you're keeping to a budget
[268]
and not spending too much
so that you can go to college,
[272]
well, that's an example
of being patient
[274]
and waiting
for higher consumption later.
[278]
We've also learned
from behavioral economics
[280]
that saving is not just a matter
of weighing costs and benefits.
[285]
Nudges can matter.
[287]
If your employer automatically
enrolls you in a retirement plan,
[291]
or sets a high
default contribution rate,
[295]
you'll probably end up saving more
[296]
than if you have to choose yourself,
[298]
even if choosing yourself
would only take a few hours of work
[302]
once in your lifetime.
[304]
Another important reason to borrow
is to make big investments.
[308]
Just as students borrow
to invest in education,
[311]
businesses borrow
to invest in big projects.
[315]
Entrepreneurs with great ideas
but not much money,
[319]
they may have to borrow
or sell a stake in their idea
[322]
just to get their venture
off the ground.
[325]
For example, Howard Schultz
built Starbucks into a global brand
[330]
by borrowing and raising capital
[332]
through several different types
of financial intermediaries.
[335]
We'll talk more about that
in upcoming videos.
[339]
As with any other good,
[340]
we're going to use
supply and demand
[342]
to analyze the market
for saving and borrowing,
[345]
known as the Market
for Loanable Funds.
[347]
As we've seen, there are
lots of good reasons
[349]
to save and to borrow.
[351]
But we have failed to mention
one big factor -- price.
[356]
What's the price
of saving and borrowing?
[359]
It's the interest rate.
[362]
So here's the supply curve
showing the supply of savings.
[366]
As the interest rate goes up,
[367]
the quantity
of savings supplied increases.
[371]
And here's the demand curve
showing the demand to borrow.
[374]
Lower interest rates
incentivize borrowing,
[377]
so as the interest rate falls,
[379]
the quantity
of borrowing demanded increases.
[383]
As with any other
supply and demand graph,
[386]
different factors
will shift the curves.
[389]
If a lot of people decide
that it'd be a good idea
[392]
to increase their savings,
for example,
[394]
then the supply of savings
will shift outward.
[398]
As you can see, this would
cause interest rates to fall.
[401]
This is what we saw in countries
like South Korea and China
[405]
as their populations saved more.
[407]
On the demand side,
if investors, say,
[411]
became less optimistic
for some reason,
[413]
the demand to borrow
would shift inward,
[416]
causing the interest rate to fall.
[419]
But, if, say an investment tax credit
from the government
[423]
increased the demand to invest,
[425]
then the demand curve will shift
in the opposite direction,
[428]
up and to the right,
pushing interest rates up.
[431]
Thinking about the Market
for Loanable Funds helps us
[434]
to see the big picture
and understand the raw factors
[438]
that determine interest rates
[440]
and the quantity
of borrowing and lending.
[443]
But there isn't actually
one market
[445]
called the Market
for Loanable Funds.
[447]
It's not like the New York
Stock Exchange.
[450]
Instead, there are many,
many, many markets
[453]
for different kinds of borrowers
and different kinds of lenders.
[457]
And there are different types
of institutions, like banks,
[461]
bond markets, and stock markets
[463]
that connect
the two sides of the market.
[466]
We're going to delve more deeply
[468]
into the different kinds
of financial intermediaries,
[470]
and why they're so important, next.
[475]
[Narrator] If you want
to test yourself,
[477]
click "Practice Questions."
[479]
Or, if you're ready to move on,
[480]
you can click
"Go to the Next Video."
[486]
You can also visit MRUniversity.com
[488]
to see our entire library
of videos and resources.
[491]
♪ [music] ♪
Most Recent Videos:
You can go back to the homepage right here: Homepage





