ch 14
the required reserves of a bank equal its ______the required reserve ratio
deposits multiplied by
Banks can make additional loans when required reserves are
less than total reserves
the quantity theory of money seeks to explain the connection between money and
prices
which of the following is not one of the ways that the German government ended the hyperinflation of the 1920s
raising the required reserve ratio to reduce bank loans
During the German hyperinflation of the 1920s, the large increases in the money supply were generated by the German government
selling large quantities of government bonds to the central bank, the Reichsbank
the German Hyperinflation of the early 1920s was caused by
the German government raising funds for expenditures by selling bonds to the central bank
the velocity of money is defined as
the average number of times each dollar is used to purchase goods and services.
hyperinflation can be caused by
the government selling bonds to the central bank
the quantity theory of money implies that the price level will be stable (no inflation or deflation) when the growth rate of the money supply equals
the growth rate of real GPD
According to the quantity theory of money, inflation is caused by
the money supply growing faster than real GDP
the quantity theory of money assumes that
the velocity of money is constant
If banks receive a greater amount of reserves and do not hold all of these reserves as excess reserves, the money supply expands.
true
If the rate of growth in real GDP exceeds the rate of growth in the money supply, the quantity theory of money predicts a price deflation.
true
In the US, businesses are not required to accept cash as payment for goods or services
true
Money will fail to serve as a medium of exchange if it ceases to be a store of value.
true
Most US currency held outside the US banking system is held by foreigners
true
a cash withdrawal reduces deposits, reserves, and excess reserves in the banking system
true
an open market purchase of treasury securities by the federal reserve causes the reserves of banks to rise
true
hyperinflation occurs because governments want to spend more than they raise in taxes, and they pay for the extra purchases by printing money or selling large quantities of government bonds to the central bank
true
in 2008, Zimbabwe ran out of locally produced Coca Cola and local coke bottlers were not able to import the concentrated syrup needed to make coke from the United States because they could not obtain US dollars. A small amount of coke was imported from South Africa, but a single bottle sold for around 15 billion Zimbabwean dollars. Zimbabwe was experiencing rapid increases in the price level, which is known as hyperinflation.
true
in an economy with money, as opposed to barter, people are more likely to specialize in the production of goods and services
true
the Fed can change the money supply more quickly by using open market operations as compared to discount policy
true
the Fed was founded in 1913 to serve as lender of last resort to bankers during bank runs and panics
true
the quantity equation becomes the basis for a theory when we assume that velocity of money is constant
true
Bank reserves include A) deposits at the Fed and short-term treasury securities. B) vault cash and short-term Treasury securities. C) vault cash and deposits at the Fed. D) deposits at other banks and deposits at the Fed.
C) vault cash and deposits with the federal reserve
the quantity equation states that
M x V = P x Y
Hyperinflation is caused by
a high rate of growth in the money supply
A series of bank runs in a country should have no effect on M1 as money simply moves from checking deposits to currency.
false
Economies cannot function without money.
false
If gold is used as money in an economy, the money supply is easy to control.
false
a persons wealth is the same as his income
false
an economy without money would have no exchanges of goods and services
false
banks hold 100% of their checking deposits as vault cash to ensure that bank runs do not occur
false
if bankers become more uncertain regarding future deposits and withdrawals and choose to hold more excess reserves against deposits, the money multiplier will increase
false
if the fed wishes to decrease the supply of money and credit, it may sell government securities, raise the discount rate, or lower required reserve ratios
false
innovations, including new products and services, in financial markets and institutions have made the job of defining the money supply easier
false
the Fed has complete control over the money supply
false
the amount of national income in an economy equals the money supply in an economy
false
the money of supply is easier to control with commodity money than it is with fiat money
false
the real world money multiplier is greater than the simple money multiplier
false
your checking account balance is included in your banks assets
false
Liquidity increases as we move from the M1 to the M2 definition of the money supply.
falsefalse
billion Zimbabwean dollars. Zimbabwe was experiencing rapid increases in the price level, which is
hyperinflation
in 1980, one Zimbabwean dollar was worth 1.47 US dollars. By the end of 2008, the exchange rate was one to 2 billion Zimbabwean dollars. When an economy experiences rapid increases in the price level such as what occurred in Zimbabwe, the economy is said to experience
hyperinflation
There is a strong link between changes in the money supply and inflation
in the long run, but not in the short run
according to the quantity theory of money, deflation will occur if the
money supply grows at a slower rate than real GDP
the quantity equation states that the
money supply times the velocity of money equals the price level times real output.