MODULE 22
Physical Asset
A claim on a tangible object that gives the owner the right to dispose of the object as he or she wishes
Bank Deposit
A claim on the bank, which is obliged to give you your cash if and when you demand it
Mutual Fund
A financial intermediary that creates a stock portfolio by buying and holding shares in a company and then selling shares of the stock portfolio to individual investors
Bank
A financial intermediary that provides liquid financial assets in the form of deposits to lenders and uses their funds to finance borrowers' investment spending on illiquid assets
Diversified Portfolio
A group of stocks in which risks are unrelated to, or offset, one another
Wealth
A household's value of its accumulated savings
Loan
A lending agreement between an individual lender and an individual borrower
Financial Asset
A paper claim that entitles the buyer to future income from the seller
Stock
A share in the ownership of a company
Bond Rating Agencies
Bond purchasers can acquire free information free of charge on the quality of the bond issuer such, such as the bond issuers credit history, from bond rating agencies rather than having to incur the expense of investigating it themselves.
Mortgage-Backed Securities
Created by pooling thousands of individual home mortgage loans and selling shares to investors
Outflows
Domestic savings that finance investment spending in another country
What relationship would you expect to find between the level of development of a country's financial system and its level of economic development? Explain in terms of the country's levels of savings and investment spending.
Economic development and growth are the result of among other factors, investment spending on physical capital. Since investment spending is equal to savings, the greater the amount saved, the higher investment spending will be, and so the higher growth and economic development will be. So the existence of institutions that facilitate savings will help a country with financial system that provides low transaction costs, opportunities for diversification of risk, and high liquidity to its savers will experience faster growth and economic development than a country that doesn't.
Inflow
Foreign savings that finance investment spending in the country
Budget Deficit
Government spending exceeds tax revenue; a negative budget surplus
Budget Surplus
If government collects more tax revenue than it spends
Three important problems facing borrowers and lenders
transaction costs, financial risk, desire for liquidity
Illiquid
An asset is illiquid if it cannot be quickly converted into cash without much loss of value
Liquid
An asset is liquid if it can be quickly converted into cash without much loss of value.
Diversification
An individual can engage in diversification by investing in several different assets with unrelated risks.
Financial Indeterminancy
An institution that transforms funds gathered from many individuals into financial assets
Loan-Backed Securities
Assets created by pooling individual loans and selling shares in that pool (a process called securitization)
The Most Important Types of Financial Indeterminancy
Mutual Funds, Pension Funds, Life Insurance Companies, and Banks
Pension Funds
Nonprofit institutions that collect the savings of their members and invest those funds in a wide variety of assets, providing their members with income when the retire.
Human Capital
One of the two instrumental sources of economic growth; increases in the skills and knowledge of the workforce. Largely provided from the government through public education.
Physical Capital
One of the two sources of instrumental economic growth; increases in capital - goods used to make other goods. Is mainly created through private investment spending.
Bond
Promise to pay a fix sum of interest each year and to repay the principal -- the value stated on the face of the bond -- to the owner of the bond. A financial asset from the owner's point of view and a liability from its issuers point of view.
Liability
Requirement to money in the future
Savings-Investment Spending Identity
Savings are investment spending are always equal for the economy as a whole
Life Insurance Companies
Sells policies that guarantee a payment to a policyholder's beneficiaries when the policyholder die
Four Kinds of Financial Assets
Stocks, bonds, loans, and bank deposits
Budget Balence
The difference between tax revenue and government spending; refers to both a budget surplus and a budget deficit
Transaction Costs
The expenses of actually putting together and executing a deal
List and describe the four most important types of financial intermediaries
The four most important type of financial intermediaries are mutual funds, pension funds, life insurance companies, and banks. Mutual funds are a financial intermediary that creates a stock portfolio by buying and holding shares in a company and then selling shares of the stock portfolio to individual investors. Mutual funds are a way for individuals who don't have a large amount of money to invest to solve the problem of achieving diversification without higher transaction costs. A pension fund is a nonprofit institution that invests the savings of members and provides them with income when they retire. A life insurance company sells policies that guarantee payment to a policyholder's beneficiaries when the policyholder dies, enabling policyholders to cushion their beneficiaries from financial hardships from their death. A bank provides liquid assets in the form of bank deposits to lenders and uses those funds to finance borrowers investment spending on liquid assets.
National Cost
The interest that must eventually be paid to the foreigner
Capital Inflow
The net effect of international inflows and outflows of funds on the total savings available for investment spending in any given country. Is equal to the total inflow of foreign funds minus the total outflow of domestic funds to other countries.
Interest Rate
The price, calculated as a percentage of the amount borrowed, charged by lenders to borrowers for the use of their savings for one year.
Default
The risk that the bond issuer might fail to make payments as specified by the bond contract
Identify and describe the three tasks of a well-functioning financial system
The three tasks of a financial system are to reduce transaction costs, financial risk, and provide liquidity. A well functioning financial system facilitates investment spending by allowing companies to borrow large sums of money without incurring large transaction costs. A well functioning financial system helps people reduce their exposure to risk, so that they are more willing to engage in investment spending in the face of uncertainty in the economy. A well functioning financial system allows the fast, low cost conversion of assets into cash.
Decreasing which of the following is a task of the financial system? i. transaction costs ii. risks iii. liquidity
Transaction costs and risks
Financial Risk
Uncertainty about future outcomes the involve financials losses and gains
Depositers
When you put your money in a bank, you are essentially becoming a lender by lending the bank your money
A financial intermediary that provides liquid financial assets in the form of deposits to lenders and uses their funds to finance borrowers' investment spending on illiquid assets is called... a.) mutual fund b.) bank c.) corporation d.) pension fund e.) life insurance company
b.) bank
A nonprofit institution collects the savings of its members and invests those funds in a wide variety of assets in order to provide its members with income after retirement. This describes a a.) mutual fund b.) bank c.)savings and loan d.) pension fund e.) life insurance company
d.) pension fund
National Savings
equal to the sum of private savings and the budget balance; the total amount of savings generated within the economy
Which of the following is not a type of financial asset? a.) bonds b.) stocks c.) bank deposits d.) loans e.) houses
houses