Chapter 14

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Canada's national payments system currently clears and settles payments and transactions, at a volume that is currently ________ times our annual GDP.

A) 15 B) 10 C) 5 D) 2

Bank of Canada started operations in ________.

A) 1935

The Bank of Canada assumed the monopoly of issuing bank notes in ________.

A) 1945

Unemployment rates in Canada after the Great Depression rose close to ________.

A) 20 percent

From 1929 to 1933 the Canadian real GDP fell by almost ________.

A) 30 percent

Which of the following functions does the Bank of Canada perform?

A) Bank note issue

D Diff: 3 Type: MC Skill: Recall Objective: 14.6 Discuss the structure and independence of other major central banks around the world 9) The Eurosystem has a structure like that of the ________.

A) Bank of Canada B) Federal Reserve System C) Bank of England D) Swiss National Bank

The oldest central bank, having been founded in 1694, is the ________.

A) Bank of England B) Deutsche Bundesbank C) Bank of Japan D) Federal Reserve System

The overall responsibility for the operation of the bank of Canada is held by the ________.

A) Board of Directors

Which goal has been set jointly by the Bank and the Department of Finance?

A) Currency stability B) GDP growth C) Price stability D) Employment growth

According to the performance of the Canadian economy, and the evolution of economic theory, what is the most important goal of monetary policy?

A) Currency stability B) Price stability C) GDP growth D) Employment growth

Which of the following are entities of the Federal Reserve System?

A) Federal Reserve Banks B) The FDIC C) The Board of Advisors D) A and B only

Which of the following is not an entity of the Federal Reserve System?

A) Federal Reserve Banks B) The FDIC C) The Board of Governors D) The Board of Advisors

Which of the following are entities of the Federal Reserve System?

A) Federal Reserve Banks B) The FOMC C) The Board of Advisors D) A and B only

The European Central Bank is located in ________.

A) Frankfurt B) London C) Paris D) Rome

Which of the following is a responsibility of the Bank of Canada?

A) Funds management

The Maastricht Treaty which established the European Central Bank, defined price stability as an inflation rate equal to ________.

A) It did not specify exactly. B) 0 percent C) 1 percent D) 2 percent

The Bank of Canada quarterly Monetary Policy Report is published every ________, ________, ________ and ________.

A) January; April; July; October

The Bank of Canada's lender-of-last resort lending is coordinated with ________ and ________.

A) Office of the Superintendent of Financial Institutions Canada; Canada Deposit Insurance Corporation B) Office of the Superintendent of Financial Institutions Canada; the Department of Finance C) the Department of Finance; Canada Deposit Insurance Corporation D) Office of the Superintendent of Financial Institutions Canada; Canada Investment and Savings

Which of the following statements concerning an independent central bank are true?

A) Politicians may prefer an independent central bank, as it can be used as a "whipping boy" or "scapegoat" for poor economic performance. B) Politicians in a democratic society may be shortsighted because of their desire to win reelection; thus, the political process may generate a political business cycle, in which just before an election contractionary policies are pursued to raise unemployment and interest rates. C) Putting the Bank of Canada under control of the government may place too much pressure on the Bank of Canada to finance federal budget deficits, thereby imparting an inflationary bias to monetary policy. D) A and C only

Which of the following statements concerning an independent central bank are true?

A) Politicians may prefer an independent central bank, as it can be used as a "whipping boy" or "scapegoat" for poor economic performance. B) Politicians in a democratic society may be shortsighted because of their desire to win reelection; thus, the political process may generate a political business cycle, in which just before an election expansionary policies are pursued to lower unemployment and interest rates. C) Putting the Bank of Canada under control of the government may place too much pressure on the Bank to finance federal budget deficits, thereby imparting an inflationary bias to monetary policy. D) All of the above are true statements.

The oldest central bank, having been founded in 1656, is the ________.

A) Riksbank, the central bank of Sweden

All of the following have served as Bank of Canada governors except for ________.

A) Roy Romanow

Which of the following statements are true of the Bank of England?

A) The Bank of England was established in 1919. B) The governor and four deputy governors comprise the monetary policy making body. C) Until 1997, the decision to raise or lower interest rates resided not with the Bank of England but with the chancellor of the Exchequer. D) B and C only.

Which of the following are entities of the Eurosystem?

A) The European Central Bank B) National finance ministries in each country C) The Governing Council of the European Central Bank D) A and C only

Which of the following are entities of the Eurosystem?

A) The European Central Bank B) The central banks of the European Union countries that have adopted the euro C) The central banks of the euro area countries and of the European Union countries that have not yet adopted the euro D) A and B only

The case for Bank of Canada independence includes the idea that ________.

A) a politically insulated Bank of Canada would be more concerned with long-run objectives and thus be a defender of a sound dollar and a stable price level B) a Bank of Canada under the control of the government might make the so-called political business cycle more pronounced C) the principal-agent problem is perhaps worse for the Bank than for politicians since the former does not answer to the voters on election day D) A and B only.

Increased operational independence by the Bank of Canada has also raised the standards for ________.

A) accountability B) secrecy C) misconduct D) confusion

Supporters of the current system of Bank of Canada independence believe that a less autonomous Bank would ________.

A) adopt a short-run bias toward policymaking B) pursue overly expansionary monetary policies C) be more likely to create a political business cycle D) do each of the above

The strongest argument for an independent Bank of Canada rests on the view that subjecting the Bank to more political pressures would impart ________.

A) an inflationary bias to monetary policy B) a deflationary bias to monetary policy C) a disinflationary bias to monetary policy D) a countercyclical bias to monetary policy

Countries with the most independent central banks have low inflation ________.

A) but have higher unemployment than countries with less independent central banks B) but have higher output fluctuations than countries with less independent central banks C) and have lower rates of unemployment than countries with less independent central banks D) but have no higher unemployment or output fluctuations than countries with less independent central banks

The Executive Board of the European Central Bank ________.

A) consists of the European Central Bank's president, vice president, and four other members B) is responsible for the business of the European Central Bank C) is responsible for the implementation of monetary policy in accordance with the guidelines set by the Governing Council D) All of the above.

Because of its unique power to ________ base money, the Bank of Canada can ease the liquidity problems of ________.

A) create; financial institutions B) create; provincial governments C) save; financial institutions D) save; provincial governments

As the federal government's fiscal agent the Bank of Canada provides ________ management services for the federal government.

A) debt

The benefit of the Ban k of Canada's role as the lender-of-last-resort include ________.

A) easing liquidity problems of any financial institution B) deterring bank runs and panics D) A and B only

The Bank of Canada's goal of low inflation is closely tied to ________.

A) economic growth B) price volatility C) low interest rates D) growth in the money supply

The political business cycle refers to the phenomenon that just before elections, politicians enact ________ policies. After the elections, the bad effects of these policies (for example, ________ ) have to be counteracted with ________ policies.

A) expansionary; higher unemployment; contractionary B) expansionary; a higher inflation rate; contractionary C) contractionary; higher unemployment; expansionary D) contractionary; a higher inflation rate; expansionary

The responsibility of monetary policy in Canada was given by the 1967 Bank of Canada Act to the ________.

A) government B) Bank of Canada C) provincial governments D) parliament

Advocates of Bank of Canada independence fear that subjecting the Bank to direct government control would ________.

A) impart an anti-inflationary bias to monetary policy B) force monetary authorities to sacrifice the long-run objective of price stability C) make the so-called political business cycle even more pronounced D) B and C only.

Politicians in a democratic society may be shortsighted because of their desire to win reelection; thus, the political process can ________.

A) impart an inflationary bias to monetary policy B) impart a deflationary bias to monetary policy C) generate a political business cycle, in which just before an election expansionary policies are pursued to lower unemployment and interest rates D) cause A and C only

Under the current "joint responsibility system," ________.

A) in the event of a serious policy conflict the minister of finance can issue a directive that the Bank of Canada must follow B) the government accepts full responsibility for monetary policy C) the Bank of Canada does not have considerable autonomy in the conduct of day-to-day monetary policy D) A and B only.

The Bank of Canada enjoys ________.

A) instrument independence B) political dependence C) goal independence D) A and C only.

The Bank of Canada enjoys ________.

A) instrument independence B) political independence C) goal independence D) A and B only.

Economist Stanley Fisher defined two types of independence of central banks: ________ and ________ independence.

A) instrument; goal B) policy; goal C) instrument; political D) parliamentary; decision

The theory of bureaucratic behavior suggests that a consumer's behaviour is motivated by the ________.

A) maximization of personal welfare B) maximization social welfare C) minimization of government intervention D) minimization political pressure

Putting the Bank of Canada under control of the government ________.

A) may place too much pressure on the Bank of Canada to finance federal budget deficits B) impart an inflationary bias to monetary policy C) generate a political business cycle, in which just before an election contractionary policies are pursued to raise unemployment and interest rates D) may cause A and B only

Base money is also know as ________.

A) monetary base

Changes in the ________ lead to ________ changes in the money supply.

A) monetary base; multiple B) monetary base; equal C) inflation rate; multiple D) inflation rate; equal

The Great Depression contributed to significant changes in Canadian ________.

A) monetary policy

The purchase and sale of government securities by the Bank of Canada is known as ________.

A) open market buyback operations B) repurchase agreements C) interbank borrowing D) monetary base transactions

The systematic and permanent differences in macroeconomic outcomes that differ by political party are known as ________ business cycles.

A) partisan B) electoral C) real D) nominal

The ability of a central bank to set monetary policy goals is ________.

A) political independence B) goal independence C) policy independence D) instrument independence

The ability of a central bank to set monetary policy instruments is ________.

A) political independence B) goal independence C) policy independence D) instrument independence

The case for Bank of Canada independence does not include the idea that ________.

A) political pressure would impart an inflationary bias to monetary policy B) a politically insulated Bank would be more concerned with long-run objectives and thus be a defender of a sound dollar and a stable price level C) a Bank of Canada under the control of the government might make the so-called political business cycle more pronounced D) the principal-agent problem is perhaps worse for the Bank of Canada than for politicians since the former does not answer to the voters on election day

The board of governors members of the federal reserve system in the U.S. are appointed by the ________ and confirmed by the ________.

A) president; senate B) president; house of representatives C) senate; president D) house of representatives; president

The Bank of Canada ultimate objective is ________.

A) price stability B) to keep interest rates low C) economic growth D) low unemployment

According to the authors of your textbook, the Federal Reserve is ________.

A) remarkably free of the political pressures that influence other government agencies B) more responsive to the political pressures that influence other government agencies C) constrained in its policy making by the congressional threat to reduce Fed independence D) A and C only.

According to the author of your textbook, the Federal Reserve is ________.

A) remarkably free of the political pressures that influence other government agencies B) more responsive to the political pressures that influence other government agencies C) probably somewhat constrained in its policy making by the congressional threat to reduce Fed independence D) A and C only.

The Bank of Canada serves as a lender of last ________ when a deposit-taking financial institution faces a ________ crisis.

A) resort; liquidity

In its role as provider of central banking services, the Bank of Canada ________.

A) serves as a lender of last resort if a deposit-taking institution faces a liquidity crisis C) is responsible for the government's operating accounts and for managing the government's foreign exchange reserves D) A and C only.

The Board of Directors appoints the governor of the Bank of Canada for a renewable term of ________ years.

A) seven

In its responsibility for the government's operating accounts, the Bank of Canada ________.

A) shifts balances between accounts at the Bank of Canada and the banks B) shifts balances between chartered banks C) sells Canada Savings Bonds on behalf of the federal government D) manages foreign exchange transactions

Critics of Bank of Canada independence argue ________.

A) that it is undemocratic to have monetary policy controlled by an elite group responsible to no one B) that an independent Bank of Canada conducts monetary policy with a consistent inflationary bias C) that the Bank of Canada, since it does not face a binding budget constraint, spends too much of its earnings D) A and B only.

Treasury bills are a responsibility of ________.

A) the Bank of Canada

Under the current "joint responsibility system," ________.

A) the Bank of Canada and the minister of finance consult regularly B) in the event of a serious policy conflict the minister of finance can issue a directive that the Bank of Canada must follow C) the Bank of Canada has full responsibility for monetary policy D) A and B only.

Under the current "joint responsibility system," ________.

A) the Bank of Canada does not have considerable autonomy in the conduct of day-to-day monetary policy B) in the event of a serious policy conflict the minister of finance can issue a directive that the Bank of Canada must follow C) the government has no responsibility for the policy being followed by the Bank of Canada D) the Bank of Canada has full responsibility for monetary policy

Regarding central bank independence, ________.

A) the Fed is more independent than the European Central Bank B) the European Central Bank is more independent than the Fed C) the trend in industrialized nations has been to reduce central bank independence D) the Bank of England has the longest tradition of independence of any central bank in the world

B Diff: 2 Type: MC Skill: Recall Objective: 14.6 Discuss the structure and independence of other major central banks around the world 14) Of the major central banks of the world, the most independent is ________.

A) the Federal Reserve System B) the European Central Bank C) the Bank of Canada D) the Bank of England

Instrument independence is ________.

A) the ability of the central bank to set monetary policy goals B) the ability of the government to set monetary policy goals C) the ability of the government to set monetary policy instruments D) the ability of the central bank to set monetary policy instruments

Goal independence is ________.

A) the ability of the central bank to set monetary policy goals B) the ability of the government to set monetary policy goals C) the ability of the prime minister to set monetary policy instruments D) the ability of the government to set monetary policy instruments

Goal independence is the ability of ________ to set monetary policy ________.

A) the central bank; goals B) Congress; goals C) Congress; instruments D) the central bank; instruments

Instrument independence is the ability of ________ to set monetary policy ________.

A) the central bank; goals B) Parliament; goals C) Parliament; instruments D) the central bank; instruments

Critics of the current system of Bank of Canada independence contend that ________.

A) the current system is undemocratic B) voters have too much say about monetary policy C) the governor has too much control over monetary policy on a day-today basis D) B and C only.

Foreign exchange reserves are held by ________.

A) the federal government

Recent research has found that countries with the most independent central banks have experienced ________.

A) the lowest average rates of inflation B) rates of inflation no different from countries with less independent central banks C) the highest average rates of inflation D) high inflation from financing deficits

Recent research indicates that inflation performance (low inflation) has been found to be best in countries with ________.

A) the most independent central banks B) political control of monetary policy C) money financing of budget deficits D) a policy of always keeping interest rates low

Recent research indicates that inflation performance (low inflation) has been found to be best in countries with ________.

A) the most independent central banks B) the least independent central banks C) political control of monetary policy D) a policy of always keeping interest rates low

The theory of bureaucratic behaviour suggests that the objective of a bureaucracy is to maximize ________.

A) the public's welfare B) profits C) its own welfare D) conflict with the executive and legislative branches of government

The theory of bureaucratic behaviour suggests that the Bank of Canada will fight ________.

A) to preserve the public's welfare B) to maximize profits C) minimize its own welfare D) to preserve autonomy

In its role as provider of paper money, the Bank of Canada ________.

A) works closely with private sector partnerships and note-issuing authorities in other countries in order to improve cost-effectiveness, increase the durability of Canadian bank notes, and reduce counterfeiting B) tries to preserve the integrity and safety of Canadian currency in the most economical and efficient manner possible D) A and B only.

Which of the following are entities of the Bank of Canada?

B) The Board of Directors

Which of the following are entities of the Bank of Canada?

B) The Governing Council

The Great Depression ________.

B) contributed to significant changes in government policy

In its role as provider of central banking services, the Bank of Canada holds deposit accounts of the ________.

B) directly clearing members of the Canadian Payments Association C) international organizations, such as the International Monetary Fund D) B and C only.

In its role as the federal government's fiscal agent, the Bank of Canada provides debt management services for the federal government such as ________.

B) managing new debt offerings by the federal government C) servicing the federal government's outstanding debt D) B and C only.

The Great Depression contributed to significant changes in Canadian ________.

B) monetary policy

The main motivation for the formation of the Bank of Canada in 1934 was ________.

B) the need for Canada to reflect its growing political independence from Britain

The Bank of Canada has regional offices in the following cities, except ________.

C) Edmonton

The Bank of Canada has regional offices in which of the following cities?

C) Montreal

Which of the following functions are not performed by the Bank of Canada in its role as the federal government's fiscal agent?

C) Setting interest rates payable on time deposits

Which of the following functions are not performed by the Bank of Canada?

C) Setting interest rates payable on time deposits

Which of the following is an element of the Bank of Canada?

D) B (Board of Directors) and C (Governing Council) only

Explain two concepts of central bank independence. Is the Bank of Canada politically independent? Why do economists think central bank independence is important?

Instrument independence is the ability of the central bank to set its instruments, and goal independence is the ability of a central bank to set its goals. The Bank of Canada enjoys instrument independence but not goal independence because of the "joint responsibility system." Independence is important because there is some evidence that independent central banks pursue lower rates of inflation without harming overall economic performance.

What contributed to the move towards accountability and transparency of the Bank of Canada?

The Bank's move towards accountability and transparency was motivated by a number of recent trends in society and the economy. These have included economic comprehension about interest rates, developments about targets and inflation, and greater openness in the government.

What are the main functions of the Bank of Canada? Describe them briefly.

The main functions of the Bank of Canada are: a. Bank note issue: Since 1967 the Bank of Canada with the revision of the Bank Act was provided with unlimited powers to issue legal tender. The Bank also tries to preserve the integrity and safety of Canadian currency. b. Government debt and asset management services: The Bank of Canada in its role as the government's fiscal agent provides debt-management services for the federal government such as advising on borrowings, managing new debt offerings and servicing outstanding debt. c. Central banking services: The bank of Canada serves as the lender of last resort for the deposit-taking financial institutions. It also plays a central role in Canada's national payments system. Finally the Bank acts as the holder of deposit accounts for the government. d. Monetary policy: The Bank of Canada employs tools such as open market operations to conduct monetary policy. The Bank's ultimate objective is to keep inflation low so that steady economic growth is achieved.

Describe the structure of the Bank of Canada.

The overall responsibility for the operation of the Bank of Canada rests with the Board of Directors which consists of fifteen members. The governor, the senior deputy governor, the deputy minister of finance and twelve outside directors. The board appoints the governor and the senior deputy governor with the governments approval for a term of seven years. The outside directors are appointed by the minister of finance for a three-year term and they are required to come from all regions of Canada and a variety of occupations with the exception of banking.

What is the theory of bureaucratic behavior and how can it be used to explain the behavior of the Bank of Canada?

The theory of bureaucratic behavior concludes that the main objective of any bureaucracy is to maximize its own welfare, which is related to power and prestige. This can explain why the Bank of Canada has defended its autonomy, and will avoid conflict with powerful groups that might threaten to curtail its power and reduce its autonomy.

Explain the joint responsibility system.

Under the joint responsibility system, the governor of the Bank of Canada and the minister of finance, acting on behalf of the government, consult regularly and, in the event of a serious disagreement over the conduct of monetary policy, the government has the right to override the Bank's decisions. In particular, the minister of finance can issue a directive to the Bank indicating the specific policy changes that the Bank must follow. The directive, however, must be published indicating not only the new policy that the Bank is supposed to undertake but also the period during which it is to apply.

How do political cycles influence aggregate economic activity?

We distinguish between two types of political cycles: a. electoral business cycles: politicians maximize their popularity or their probability of re-election by following pre-election expansionary fiscal policies in order to please the voters. These give rise to persistent cyclical patterns of key policy and target variable across electoral terms, regardless of the political orientation of the incumbent government. b. partisan business cycles: systematic and permanent differences in macroeconomic outcomes that differ by political party. In this case politicians are ideological; they represent the interests of different pressure groups and, when in office, follow policies which are favorable to their supporting groups.


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