Expenditures and the Composition of the Money Supply
Empirical studies of the relationship between money and expenditures frequently seek to explain movements in aggregate expenditures by movements in some appropriate money total. For example, in the most notable recent such study, Friedman and Meiselman 1 conclude that the appropriate money total is currency plus all commercial bank deposits. Past and current changes in this variable better explain expenditure changes than do changes in each of two alternative money totals.2 The assumption implicit in such tests of the money-expenditures relationship is that the behavior of the components of any money total does not matter. Specifically, Friedman and Meiselman estimate: