Economics Test #3

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expansionary monetary policy

Federal reserve system actions to increase the money supply lower interest rates and expand real GDP; an easy money policy

restrictive monetary policy

Federal reserve system actions to reduce the money supply, increase interest rates, and reduce inflation; a tight money policy

Near monies

Financial assets, the most important of which are non checkable savings accounts, time deposits, and US short term securities and savings bonds, which are not a medium of exchange but can readily be converted into money

public investments

Government expenditures on public capital such as roads, highways, bridges, mass transit systems, and electric power facilities, and on human capital such as education training and health

Government Spending

Government purchases are the third determinant of aggregate demand. An increase in government purchases will shift aggregate demand curve to right.

Demand Pull Inflation

Increases in the price level (inflation) resulting from an excess of demand over output at the existing price level...caused by an increase in aggregate demand.

Cost Push Inflation

Increases in the price level (inflation) resulting from an increase in resource costs (for example raw material prices) and hence in per unit production costs; inflation caused by reductions in aggregate supply

Money market mutual fund

Interest-bearing accounts offered by investment companies, which pool depositors funds for the purchase of short term securities. Depositors can write checks in minimum amounts or more against their accounts

vault cash

The currency a bank has in its vault and cash drawers

liquidity

The ease with which an asset can be converted quickly into ash with little or no loss of purchasing power. Money is said to be perfectly liquid, whereas other assets have a lesser degree of liquidity

reserve ratio

The fraction of checkable deposits that a bank must hold as reserves in a federal reserve bank or in its own bank vault; also called the reserve requirement

required reserves

The funds that banks and thrifts must deposit with the federal reserve bank or hold as vault cash to meet the legal reserve requirement; a fixed percentage of the bank's or thrifts checkable deposits

Equilibrium real output

The gross domestic product at which the total quantity of final goods and services purchased (aggregate expenditures) is equal to the total quantity of final goods and services produced (the real domestic output); the real domestic output at which the aggregate demand curve intersects the aggregate supply curve

cyclical asymmetry

The idea that monetary policy may be more successful in slowing expansions and controlling inflation than in extracting the economy from a sever recession

federal funds rate

The interest rate banks and other depository institutions charge one another an overnight loans made out of their excess reserves

federal funds rate

The interest rate banks and other depository institutions charge one another on an overnight loans made out of their excess reserves

term auction facility

The monetary policy procedure used by the Federal Reserve, in which commercial banks anonymously bid to obtain loans being made available by the Fed as a way to expand reserves of the banking system.

M1

The most narrowly defined money supply, equal to currency in the hands of the public and the checkable deposits of commercial banks and thrift institutions

monetary multiplier

The multiple of its excess reserves by which the banking system can expand checkable deposits and thus the money supply by making new loans (or buying securities); equal to 1 divided by the reserve ratio

mortgage debt criss

The period beginning in late 2007 when thousands of homeowners defaulted on mortgage loans when they experienced a combination of higher mortgage interest rates and falling home prices.

External Public Debt

The portion of the public debt owed to foreign citizens, firms, and institutions.

Equilibrium Price Level

The price level at which the aggregate demand curve intersects the aggregate supply curve

Investment spending

The purchase of capital goods. The second major determinant of aggregate demand

Board of governors

The seven member group that supervises and controls the money and banking system of the United States; the board of governors of the federal reserve system; the federal reserve board.

total demand for money

The sum of the transactions demand for money and the asset demand for money

public debt

The total amount owed by the federal government to the owners of government securities; equal to the sum of past government budget deficits less government budget surpluses

Consumer wealth

The total dollar value of all assets owned by consumers in the economy less the dollar value of their liabilities (debts)

Real balances effect

This is a result of a change in the price level. A higher price level reduces the real value or purchasing power of the public's accumulated savings balances. The value of assets with fixed money values (savings accounts or bonds) diminishes. A higher price level erodes the purchasing power of such assets and the public is poorer and will reduce the spending.

Per Unit Production cost

Total input cost divided by units of output

Productivity

Total output over total inputs

U.S. Securities

US treasury bills, notes and bonds used to finance budget deficits; the components of the public debt

Federal Reserve Notes

Paper money issued by the federal reserve banks

electronic payments

Purchases made by transferring funds electronically. Examples: fedwire transfers, automated clearing house transactions (ACH's) payments via the PayPal system, and payments through stored value cards

Federal Reserve Banks

The 12 banks chartered by the US government to control the money supply and perform other functions

Federal open market committee

The 12 member group that determines the purchase and sale policies of the Federal Reserve Banks in the market for US government securities.

Federal reserve system

The US central bank, consisting of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve and the 12 Federal Reserve banks which controls the lending activity of the nations banks and thrifts and thus the money supply; commonly referred to as the fed

Interest rate effect

The aggregate demand curve slopes downward because of this. The tendency for increases in the price level to increase the demand for money, raise interest rates, and, as a result, reduce total spending and real output in the economy (and the revers for price level decreases)

monetary policy

A central banks changing of the money supply to influence interest rates and assist the economy in achieving price stability, full employment and economic growth.

standardized budget

A comparison of the government expenditures and tax collections that would occur if the economy operated at full employment throughout the year; the full employment budget

Savings account

A deposit in a commercial bank or thrift institution on which interest payments are received; generally used for saving rather than daily transactions; a component of the M2 money supply

cyclical deficit

A federal budget deficit that is caused by a recession and the consequent decline in tax revenues

Commercial banks

A firm that engages in the business of banking (accepts deposits, offers checking accounts, and make loans)

Counsel of Economic Advisors

A group of three persons that advises and assists the president of the United States on Economic matters (including the preparation of the annual economic report of the president.

legal tender

A legal designation of a nation's official currency (bills and coins). Payment of debts must be accepted in this monetary unit, but creditors can specify the form of payment, for example, cash only or check or credit card only

Built in stabilizer

A mechanism that increases government's budget deficit (or reduces its surplus) during a recession and increases an expansion without any action by policymakers. The tax system is one such mechanism

Taylor Rule

A modern monetary rule proposed by economist John Taylor that would stipulate exactly how much the Federal Reserve should change real interest rates in response to divergences of real GDP from potential GDP and divergences of actual rates of inflation from a target rate of inflation

M2

A more broadly defined money supply, equal to M1 plus non checkable savings accounts (including money market deposit accounts), small time deposits (deposits of less than 100,000) and individual money market mutual fund balances.

Fractional reserve banking system

A reserve requirement that is less than 100 percent of the checkable deposit liabilities of a commercial bank or thrift institution.

crowding out effect

A rise in interest rates and a resulting decrease in planned investment caused by the Federal government's increased borrowing to finance budget deficits and refinance debt.

Thrift Institutions

A savings and loan association, mutual savings bank, or credit union

Aggregate supply

A schedule or curve showing the relationship between the price level and the amount of real domestic output that firms in the economy produce. Varies depending on the time horizon and how quickly output prices and input prices can change.

Aggregate Demand

A schedule or curve that shows the amounts of real output (real gdp) that buyers collectively desire to purchase at each possible price level

Units of account

A standard unit in which prices can be stated and the value of goods and services can be compared; one of three functions of money

balance sheet

A statement of the assets liabilities, and net worth of a firm or individual at some given time.

Regressive tax system

A tax whose average tax rate decreases as the tax payers income increases and increases as the taxpayers income decreases

Proportional tax system

A tax whose average tax rate remains constant as the taxpayer's income increases or decreases

Progressive Tax System

A tax whose average tax rate remains constant as the taxpayers income increases or decreases

Long run aggregate supply curve

The aggregate supply curve associated with a time period in which input prices (especially nominal wages) are fully responsive to changes in the price level

Political business cycles

The alleged tendency of congress to destabilize the economy by reducing taxes and increasing government expenditures before elections and to raise taxes and lower expenditures after the election

excess reserves

The amount by which a bank's or thrift's actual reserves exceed its required reserves; actual reserves minus required reserves

Budget Surplus

The amount by which the revenues of the federal government exceed its expenditures in any year

transactions demand

The amount of money people want to hold for use as a medium of exchange (to make payments); varies directly with nominal GDP

financial services industry

The broad category of firms that provide financial products and services to help households and businesses earn interest, received dividends, obtain capital gains, insure against losses, and plan for retirement. Includes commercial banks, thrifts, insurance companies, mutual fund companies, pension funds, investment banks, and security firms.

open market operations

The buying and selling of US government securities by the federal reserve banks for purposes of carrying out monetary policy

Fiscal Policy

changes in government spending and tax collections designed to achieve a full employment and noninflationary domestic output

Budget Deficit

the amount by which the expenditures of the federal government exceed its revenues in any year

asset demand

the amount of money people want to hold as a store of value; this amount varies inversely with the interest rate

prime interest rate

the bench mark interest rate that banks use as a reference point for a wide range of loans to businesses and individuals

actual reserves

the funds that a bank has on deposit at the federal reserve bank of its distrcit

discount rate

the interest rate that the federal reserve banks charge on the loans they make to commercial banks and thrift institutions

Money Market deposit account

Bank and thrift provided interest bearing accounts that contain a variety of short term securities; such accounts have minimum balance requirements and limits on the frequency of withdrawals

Token money

Bills or coins for which the amount printed on the currency bears no relationship to the value of the paper or metal embodied within it; for currency circulating, money for which the face value exceed the commodity value.

Immediate short run aggregate supply curve

An aggregate supply curve for which real output, but not the price level, changes when the aggregate demand curve shifts; a horizontal aggregate supply curve that implies an inflexible price level

Short run Aggregate Supply Curve

An aggregate supply curve relevant to a time period in which input prices (particularly nominal wages) do not change in response to changes in the price level

store of value

An asset set aside for future use; one of the three functions of money

Expansionary Fiscal Policy

An increase in government purchases of goods and services, a decrease in net taxes, or some combination of the two for the purpose of increasing aggregate demand and expanding real output

Time deposits

An interest earning deposit in a commercial bank or thrift institution that the depositor can withdraw without penalty after the end of a specific time period

Reverse Wealth Effect

An unexpected decline in asset values will cause an unanticipated reduction in consumer wealth at each price level, consumers tighten their belts and increase savings and reduce consumption, shifting aggregate demand curve to left.

Wealth Effect

An unforseen increase in the stock market is a good example: The increase in wealth prompts pleasantly surprised consumers to save less and buy more out of their current incomes than they had previously been planning.

Foreign Purchases Effect

Another reason why the aggregate demand curve slopes downward. The inverse relationship between the net exports of an economy and its price level relative to foreign price levels

Checkable deposits

Any deposit in a commercial bank or thrift institution against which a check may be written

Medium of exchange

Any item sellers generally accept and buyers generally use to pay for a good or service; money; a convenient means of exchanging goods and services without engaging in barter

Substitution Effect

As price falls the consumer wants to buy more of the product because it becomes relatively less expensive than other goods

Aggregate Supply and Aggregate Demand Model

Enables us to analyze changes in real GDP and the price level simultaneously

Determinants of aggregate demand (aggregate demand shifters)

Factors such as consumption spending, investment, government spending, and net exports that, if they change, shift the aggregate demand curve

Determinants of aggregate supply

Factors such as input prices, productivity, and the legal institutional environment that, if they change, shift the aggregate supply curve.

interest

the payment made for the use of money (of borrowed funds)


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