Alisis Permintaan Akan Uang Kas Di Indonesia 1975-1996
ABSTRACT Before deregulation 1983 the monetary sector was dominated by the government Controlling money supply is directly influenced by Bank Indonesia, so as the t rate and commercial bank ceiling credit. About 85% of banking assets was mated by the state bank Banking deregulation 1983 resulted in...
Saved in:
Main Author: | |
---|---|
Format: | Article NonPeerReviewed |
Published: |
[Yogyakarta] : Universitas Gadjah Mada
1998
|
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | https://repository.ugm.ac.id/26261/ http://i-lib.ugm.ac.id/jurnal/download.php?dataId=9281 |
Tags: |
Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
|
Institution: | Universitas Gadjah Mada |
Summary: | ABSTRACT
Before deregulation 1983 the monetary sector was dominated by the government Controlling money supply is directly influenced by Bank Indonesia, so as the t rate and commercial bank ceiling credit. About 85% of banking assets was mated by the state bank
Banking deregulation 1983 resulted in a more flexible banking sector. Ceiling
was abolished and interest rates become market determined As a result funds
ilization increasers more variety of banking product and competition is getting
The banking development has led a dramatic change in the demand for money mg a fairly standard money demand model, this study attempt to analize:
Whether there is a liquidity trap (as indicated by high interest elasticity of money demand)
Whether there is also an economies of scale of holding money
Stability of the demand for money
Using data for the period 1975 - 1996 and then disagregated into before and r deregulation, the empirical results are:
For the periode 1975 - 1996 interest rate was significance factor affecting demand for money and the elasticity is greater than one especially after deregulation. This indicate that there is a liquidity trap, so that fiscal policy is more effective.
b) There is also an economies of scale as indicated by less elastic demand for money
with respect to income. The reason is that a rapid development in the payment
system, such as the use of credit card.
Finally, using Chow-test shows that the demand for money is unstable. The
implication is that real sector policy is more appropriate than monetary policy. |
---|