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geldvolume

Geldvolume refers to the total quantity of money available in an economy at a given time, encompassing currency in circulation outside banks plus deposits at banks and other liquid assets. In Dutch and German-speaking contexts the term is used to describe the money stock or money supply and is often used interchangeably with that concept.

The components of geldvolume can include physical cash (banknotes and coins) held by the public as well

Measurement and data: Central banks and statistical agencies publish regular geldvolume data, typically on a monthly

Significance and limitations: Geldvolume is a key indicator of monetary conditions that can influence interest rates,

as
reserve
balances,
demand
deposits,
savings
and
time
deposits,
and
other
liquid
instruments
that
can
be
readily
converted
to
cash.
The
exact
composition
depends
on
country
and
on
the
monetary
aggregate
defined
(for
example
M0,
M1,
M2,
or
M3)
by
the
central
bank.
or
quarterly
basis.
In
the
euro
area,
the
European
Central
Bank
reports
M1,
M2,
and
M3
aggregates;
in
the
United
States,
M1
and
M2
are
common,
and
M3
was
discontinued
in
2006.
Analysts
use
these
series
to
gauge
monetary
conditions,
liquidity,
and
potential
inflationary
pressures.
credit
creation,
and
inflation
expectations.
However,
it
does
not
fully
capture
the
total
monetary
base
or
the
demand
for
money,
and
rapid
financial
innovation
can
alter
liquidity
without
large
changes
in
the
official
aggregates.