Monetary aggregates are the official measures of the money supply (M1 and M2) that group assets by liquidity, with M1 covering the most spendable forms like currency in circulation and checkable deposits, and M2 adding less-liquid assets like savings deposits and money market funds.
Monetary aggregates are how economists actually count "money" in an economy. Since money is any asset accepted as a means of payment (EK MEA-3.C.1), the Federal Reserve sorts those assets into buckets by liquidity, meaning how quickly and easily they can be spent. M1 is the narrow measure. It includes currency in circulation plus checkable deposits, the stuff you can spend right now. M2 is the broader measure. It includes everything in M1 plus near-money assets like savings deposits and money market funds, which hold value but take an extra step to spend.
Think of the aggregates as nested circles. Each bigger measure contains the smaller one plus slightly less-liquid assets. Sitting underneath both is the monetary base (M0 or MB), which counts currency in circulation plus bank reserves (EK MEA-3.C.4). The base is what the central bank directly controls, while M1 and M2 measure what the public actually holds and spends. One sneaky exclusion to remember is credit cards. A credit card isn't money at all, it's a short-term loan, so it never appears in M1 or M2.
Monetary aggregates live in Topic 4.3 (Definition, Measurement, and Functions of Money) in Unit 4: Financial Sector. They directly support two learning objectives. LO 4.3.A asks you to define money and its functions, and EK MEA-3.C.3 states flat-out that the money supply is measured using monetary aggregates designated M1 and M2. LO 4.3.B asks you to calculate measures of money from data, so this isn't just vocabulary. You need to look at a table of assets (currency, checkable deposits, savings deposits, money market funds) and correctly total up M1 versus M2. Everything later in Unit 4, from money creation by banks to money market equilibrium to monetary policy, assumes you know what "the money supply" actually means. The aggregates are that definition.
Keep studying AP® Macroeconomics Unit 4
Monetary Base (M0 or MB) (Unit 4)
The monetary base is currency in circulation plus bank reserves, and it's the raw material the central bank controls. Monetary aggregates measure the money the public ends up holding after banks turn reserves into deposits. The base is the input; M1 and M2 are the output.
Bank Reserves (Unit 4)
Here's the trick that catches people: reserves sitting in a bank's vault or at the Fed are part of the monetary base but NOT part of M1 or M2. Reserves only show up in the aggregates once they've been lent out and become someone's deposit.
Money Supply and the Money Market (Unit 4)
When you draw the vertical money supply curve in Topic 4.5, the quantity on the horizontal axis is a monetary aggregate. The aggregates are the measurable, real-world version of the MS curve you shift in monetary policy graphs.
Banking and Money Creation (Unit 4)
The money multiplier explains why M1 is bigger than the monetary base. Banks create checkable deposits through lending, and those deposits count in M1, so the aggregates grow as banks lend even though no new currency is printed.
This is mostly a multiple-choice concept, and the questions follow predictable patterns. One pattern gives you a list of assets and asks which belong in the money supply, or in M1 specifically. You sort by liquidity. Another pattern describes an economist measuring "currency in circulation plus checkable deposits" and asks you to name the aggregate (that's M1), then adds savings deposits and money market funds (that's M2). A third pattern is the credit card trap. Credit cards are excluded from M1 and M2 because swiping one creates a loan, not a payment with an existing asset. LO 4.3.B means you may also need to do quick arithmetic, totaling categories from a data table to compute M1 or M2. No released FRQ has asked you to define monetary aggregates verbatim, but FRQs in Unit 4 regularly say "the money supply," and knowing what that phrase actually measures keeps your graphs and explanations precise.
The monetary base counts currency in circulation plus bank reserves, the money the central bank directly creates. Monetary aggregates (M1 and M2) count money held by the public, including checkable deposits that banks create through lending, but they exclude reserves. So the base and M1 overlap on currency but split on the rest. Reserves are base-only; deposits are aggregate-only.
Monetary aggregates are the official measures of the money supply, designated M1 and M2, and they group assets by how liquid they are.
M1 includes the most liquid forms of money, currency in circulation and checkable deposits, while M2 includes all of M1 plus savings deposits and money market funds.
Every dollar in M1 is also in M2, so M2 is always at least as large as M1.
The monetary base (M0 or MB) is a separate concept that counts currency in circulation plus bank reserves, and bank reserves do not count in M1 or M2.
Credit cards are excluded from all monetary aggregates because using one creates a loan rather than transferring an asset you own.
Be ready to calculate M1 and M2 from a data table by sorting assets into the right liquidity bucket.
Monetary aggregates are the official measures of the money supply, labeled M1 and M2, that categorize assets by liquidity. M1 is currency in circulation plus checkable deposits, and M2 adds less-liquid near-money like savings deposits and money market funds.
No. A credit card purchase is a short-term loan from the card issuer, not a payment with an asset you own, so credit cards are excluded from every monetary aggregate. This is one of the most common trick options on AP Macro multiple-choice questions.
Monetary aggregates (M1, M2) measure money held by the public, while the monetary base (M0 or MB) measures currency in circulation plus bank reserves. Reserves count in the base but not in M1 or M2, and checkable deposits count in M1 but not in the base.
M1 covers the most liquid money, currency in circulation and checkable deposits. M2 contains everything in M1 plus near-money assets like savings deposits and money market funds, so M2 is always the larger number.
Yes, LO 4.3.B requires you to calculate measures of money using data. Expect a table of asset values where you total currency plus checkable deposits for M1, then add savings deposits and money market funds for M2.
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