Asset Demand for Money
Asset demand for money is the desire to hold money as a liquid store of value rather than for immediate transactions.
Money-demand terms that connect liquidity preferences, inflation pressure, and monetary disequilibrium.
Money Demand and Monetary Overhang covers central-bank institutions, reserve systems, money aggregates, liquidity facilities, and policy tools that affect interest rates, bank funding, currencies, and financial-market conditions.
Use these pages when a finance question depends on a policy rate, reserve requirement, central-bank balance sheet, liquidity operation, money-supply measure, or official monetary institution. It sits inside Money Demand, Quantity Theory, and Monetarism, so readers can move up when the broader economics context matters.
This landing page points readers toward Asset Demand for Money, Demand for Money, Flight from Money, and Monetary Overhang. Choose the narrower page when the term changes the evidence source, calculation, institution, market convention, risk exposure, or decision being made.
| Area | Use it for |
|---|---|
| Asset Demand for Money | Asset demand for money is the desire to hold money as a liquid store of value rather than for immediate transactions. |
| Demand for Money | The demand for money refers to the cumulative desire to hold cash rather than financial assets. |
| Flight from Money | Flight from Money refers to the phenomenon where people abandon the use of their national currency due to extremely high inflation rates. |
| Monetary Overhang | Monetary overhang occurs when excess money balances build up relative to available goods, prices, or financial outlets. |
Central-bank terms are educational context; they are not rate forecasts or recommendations to borrow, lend, trade, or invest.
Choose a subsection first. Deeper term pages live inside each subsection, which keeps large topic hubs readable.
Asset demand for money is the desire to hold money as a liquid store of value rather than for immediate transactions.
The demand for money refers to the cumulative desire to hold cash rather than financial assets.
Flight from Money refers to the phenomenon where people abandon the use of their national currency due to extremely high inflation rates.
Monetary overhang occurs when excess money balances build up relative to available goods, prices, or financial outlets.