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figure 29.2


                The Supply of                     Interest
                                                   rate, r
                Loanable Funds
                                                                                        Supply of loanable funds, S
                The supply curve for loanable funds slopes                                                             Section 5 The Financial Sector
                upward: the higher the interest rate, the
                greater the quantity of loanable funds sup-
                plied. Here, increasing the interest rate  12%
                                                                                   Y
                from 4% to 12% increases the quantity of
                loanable funds supplied from $150 billion to
                $450 billion.




                                                       4
                                                                  X



                                                       0       $150              450       Quantity of loanable funds
                                                                                                (billions of dollars)





               Figure 29.2 shows the hypothetical supply of loanable funds. Again, the interest
             rate plays the same role that the price plays in ordinary supply and demand analysis.
             Savers incur an opportunity cost when they lend to a business; the funds could in-
             stead be spent on consumption—say, a nice vacation. Whether a given individual be-
             comes a lender by making funds available to borrowers depends on the interest rate
             received in return. By saving your money today and earning interest on it, you are re-
             warded with higher consumption in the future when your loan is repaid with interest.
             So it is a good assumption that more people are willing to forgo current consumption
             and make a loan when the interest rate is higher. As a result, our hypothetical supply
             curve of loanable funds slopes upward. In Figure 29.2, lenders will supply $150 billion
             to the loanable funds market at an interest rate of 4% (point X); if the interest rate
             rises to 12%, the quantity of loanable funds supplied will rise to $450 billion (point Y).
               The equilibrium interest rate is the interest rate at which the quantity of loanable
             funds supplied equals the quantity of loanable funds demanded. As you can see in Fig-
             ure 29.3 on the next page, the equilibrium interest rate, r E , and the total quantity of
             lending, Q E , are determined by the intersection of the supply and demand curves, at
             point E. Here, the equilibrium interest rate is 8%, at which $300 billion is lent and bor-
             rowed. Investment spending projects with a rate of return of 8% or more are funded;
             projects with a rate of return of less than 8% are not. Correspondingly, only lenders
             who are willing to accept an interest rate of 8% or less will have their offers to lend
             funds accepted.
               Figure 29.3 shows how the market for loanable funds matches up desired savings
             with desired investment spending: in equilibrium, the quantity of funds that savers
             want to lend is equal to the quantity of funds that firms want to borrow. The figure
             also shows that this match -up is efficient, in two senses. First, the right investments get
             made: the investment spending projects that are actually financed have higher rates of
             return than those that do not get financed. Second, the right people do the saving: the
             potential savers who actually lend funds are willing to lend for lower interest rates than
             those who do not. The insight that the loanable funds market leads to an efficient use
             of savings, although drawn from a highly simplified model, has important implica-
             tions for real life. As we’ll see shortly, it is the reason that a well -functioning financial
             system increases an economy’s long -run economic growth rate.

                                                            module 29       The Market for Loanable Funds       279
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