macro final (ch 14)
Suppose that the public holds 50% of the money supply in currency, that the reserve requirement is 20%, and that banks hold no excess reserves. If a customer deposits $6,000 in her checking account, required reserves will increase by:
$1,200
(Deposits: 100) If the minimum reserve ratio for ABC Bank is 10%, then the bank is required to maintain minimum reserves of:
$10 million.
money
the stock of assets that can be readily used to make transactions/ purchase goods and services (cash, checkable back deposits, travelers checks)
monetary base
the sum of currency in circulation and bank reserves
fed asstes
treasury bills (gov debt)
Fed's main policy tools
1. required reserve ratios 2. discount rate 3. open market operations
money multiplier
1/reserve ratio
If a bank has deposits of $10,000 and reserves of $5,000, and the reserve requirement is 20%, its excess reserves are $_____.
3,000
increase spread between discount and fed funds rate
cost of being short on reserves rises, decrease lending, money supply decreases
Which of the following is a component of both the monetary base and the money supply?
currency in circulation
Which combination of assets is considered to be money?
currency in circulation, checkable bank deposits, and traveler's checks
Which entity acts to protect depositors from a bank run by insuring all deposits up to $250,000?
FDIC
currency in circulation
actual cash held by the public
savings and loan
deposit-taking banks, usually specialized in issuing home loans.
If the reserve ratio is 8%, and the banking system does NOT want to hold excess reserves, how much more can be added to the money supply? Loans: 900,000 Deposits: 1,000,000 Reserves: 100,000
$250,000
The reserve requirement is 10%, and Olga withdraws $3,000 for travel money from her checking account. Assume that banks do not hold excess reserves and that the public holds only checkable bank deposits, that is, no currency. By how much will the money supply contract as a result of the withdrawal?
$27,000
The reserve requirement is 20%. Oleg receives $1,000 as a graduation present and deposits the money in his checking account. The bank does NOT want to hold excess reserves. How much of the $1,000 deposit can the bank lend out?
$800
The reserve requirement is 20%. Oleg receives $1,000 as a graduation present and deposits the money in his checking account. The bank does NOT want to hold excess reserves. What is the maximum possible expansion in the money supply as a result of this initial deposit?
4,000
Reserves are 20,000 and rr is 20% so loans are
80,000
M2
M1 plus near moneys
____ is the most liquid asset in the economy.
Money
The Federal Reserve's main assets are:
U.S. Treasury bills.
decrease spread between discount and fed funds rate
cost of being short on reserves falls, increase lending, money supply increases
excess reserves
a bank's reserves over and above its required reserves
commodity money
a good used as a medium of exchange that has intrinsic value in other uses
store of value
a means of holding purchasing power over time
unit of account
a measure used to set prices and make economic calculations
commodity-backed money
a medium of exchange that has no intrinsic value whose ultimate value is guaranteed by a promise that it can be converted into valuable goods
fiat money
a medium of exchange whose value derives entirely from its official status as a means of payment
bank run
a phenomenon in which many of a bank's depositors try to withdraw their funds due to fears of a bank failure
T account
a tool for analyzing a business's financial position by showing, in a single table, the business's assets (on the left) and liabilities (on the right)
commercial bank
accepts demand deposits and makes loans and provides other services for the public and covered by deposit insurance
federal funds market
allows banks that fall short of the reserve requirement to borrow funds from banks with excess reserves
discount window
an arrangement in which the Federal Reserve stands ready to lend money to banks in trouble
medium of exchange
an asset that individuals acquire for the purpose of trading goods and services
central bank
an institution designed to oversee the banking system and regulate the quantity of money in the economy
monetary aggregate
an overall measure of the money supply
checkable bank deposits
bank accounts that can be accessed by using checks, debit cards, and digital payments.
shadow banking
bank-like activities undertaken by nondepository financial firms such as investment banks and hedge funds, but without regulatory oversight and protection.
A bank run can break a bank because:
banks cannot quickly convert illiquid loans into liquid assets without facing a large financial loss.
Lucia withdraws $6,000 from her checking account to pay tuition this semester. Assume that the reserve requirement is 20% and that banks do not hold excess reserves. Immediately after the withdrawal, reserves _____, and checkable deposits _____.
decrease by $6,000; decrease by $6,000
increase reserve requirement
decrease the money supply
The reserve requirement is 10%, and Olga withdraws $3,000 for travel money from her checking account. Assume that banks do not hold excess reserves and that the public holds only checkable bank deposits, i.e., no currency. As a result of the withdrawal, required reserves _____ by _____.
decrease; $300
If the Fed conducts an open-market sale, bank reserves _____, and the money supply is likely to _____.
decrease; decrease
features to protect against bank runs
deposit insurance, capital requirements, reserve requirements, and a discount window
Which of the following is NOT designed to help prevent bank runs? deposit insurance reserve requirements the federal funds rate capital requirements
federal funds rate
Paper money in the United States, which has no intrinsic value but can be converted into a valuable good on demand and is used as a medium of exchange, is an example of:
fiat money.
near moneys
financial assets that can't be directly used as a medium of exchange but can be readily converted into cash or checkable bank deposits
The reserve ratio is the:
fraction of deposits that banks hold in their vaults plus their deposits at the Federal Reserve.
Suppose that the required reserve ratio is 25%, and a customer deposits $300 in her checkable deposit. The money supply will _____ if the banking system does NOT hold any excess reserves.
increase by an additional $900
decrease reserve requirement
increase the money supply
Suppose that the Federal Reserve buys $100 million of U.S. Treasury bills. The money supply:
increases by more than $100 million.
The use of counterfeit money leads to:
lost revenue to pay for operations of the economy's government.
If the Federal Reserve wants to increase the money supply, it could:
lower the reserve requirement.
What are money's three functions?
medium of exchange, unit of account, store of value
fed liabilities
monetary base (currency in circulation and reserves)
When a bank deposit is withdrawn and held as currency, bank reserves decrease, and the:
monetary base does not change.
One function of the Fed is to use _____ policy, which involves changes in _____ to affect aggregate spending, to lessen the impact of economic fluctuations on the economy.
monetary; the money supply
Which of the following is a tool of monetary policy used by the Federal Reserve? I. tax rates II. government purchases of goods and services
neither I nor II
discount rate compared to fed funds rate
normally discount rate set above fed funds rate to discourage banks from turning to the fed when they're short on reserves
discount rate
rate the Federal Reserve charges for loans to commercial banks
equation for checkable bank deposits
reserves divided by reserve ratio
Money is anything that:
serves as a medium of exchange for goods and services.
When we keep part of our wealth in a savings account, money plays the role of a(n):
store of value.
bank reserves
the currency banks hold in their vaults plus their deposits at the Federal Reserve
reserve ratio
the fraction of deposits that banks hold as reserves
federal funds rate
the interest rate at which banks make overnight loans to one another
When the Federal Reserve decreases banks' reserves through open-market operations:
the monetary base decreases, loans decrease, and the money supply decreases.
Suppose that there are no excess reserves in the banking system and that demand deposits are $200,000. If the monetary authorities lower the required reserve ratio from 10% to 5%:
the money-creating potential of the banking system will rise.
open market operations
the purchase and sale of U.S. government bonds by the Fed
money supply
the total value of financial assets in the economy that are considered money (currency plus deposits)
Suppose you find a $50 bill that you put in a coat pocket last winter. If you deposit it in your checking account:
there is no change in M1 or M2.
Banks don't lend out all funds that are deposited because:
they have to satisfy any depositor who wants to withdraw funds.
investment bank
trades in financial assets and is not covered by deposit insurance because doesn't accept deposits
When a person makes price comparisons among goods and services, money is being used mainly as a(n):
unit of account.