If nominal GDP is $600 billion and, on the average, each dollar is spent three times per year, then the amount of money demanded for transactions purposes will be: |
$200 billion |
It is costly to hold money because: |
in doing so, one sacrifices interest income. |
An increase in nominal GDP increases the demand for money because: |
more money is needed to finance a larger volume of transactions. |
The opportunity cost of holding money: |
varies directly with the interest rate. |
If the quantity of money demanded exceeds the quantity supplied: |
the interest rate will rise. |
Answer the question on the basis of the following information for a bond having no expiration date: bond price = $1,000; bond fixed annual interest payment = $100; bond annual interest rate = 10 percent. Refer to the given information. If the price of this bond falls by $200, the interest rate will: |
rise by 2.5 percentage points. (will be 12.5%) |
Answer the question on the basis of the following information for a bond having no expiration date: bond price = $1,000; bond fixed annual interest payment = $100; bond annual interest rate = 10 percent. Refer to the given information. If the price of this bond increases to $1,250, the interest rate will: |
fall to 8% |
Which of the following statements is correct? |
Interest rates and bond prices vary inversely. |
Which of the following is an asset on the consolidated balance sheet of the Federal Reserve Banks? |
Loans to commercial banks. (Other asset is securities) |
Reserves must be deposited in the Federal Reserve Banks by: |
all depository institutions, that is, all commercial banks and thrift institutions. |
The securities held as assets by the Federal Reserve Banks consist mainly of: |
Treasury bills, Treasury notes, and Treasury bonds. |
Federal Reserve Notes in circulation are: |
a liability as viewed by the Federal Reserve Banks. |
When a commercial bank borrows from a Federal Reserve Bank: |
the commercial bank’s lending ability is increased. |
The Federal Reserve Banks sell government securities to the public. As a result, the checkable deposits: |
and reserves of commercial banks both decrease. |
The Federal Reserve Banks buy government securities from commercial banks. As a result, the checkable deposits: |
of commercial banks are unchanged, but their reserves increase. |
The commercial banking system borrows from the Federal Reserve Banks. As a result, the checkable deposits |
of commercial banks are unchanged, but their reserves increase. |
In the United States, monetary policy is the responsibility of the: |
Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System. |
The four main tools of monetary policy are: |
the discount rate, the reserve ratio, interest on reserves, and open-market operations. |
Open-market operations refer to: |
the purchase or sale of government securities by the Fed. |
The purchase of government securities from the public by the Fed will cause: |
the money supply to increase. |
Suppose the Federal Reserve Banks sell $2 billion of government bonds to the public, which pays for them by drawing checks. As a result, commercial bank reserves will: |
decrease by $2 billion. |
The Federal Reserve System regulates the money supply primarily by: |
altering the reserves of commercial banks, largely through sales and purchases of government bonds. |
Which of the following is correct? When the Federal Reserve buys government securities from the public, the money supply: |
expands and commercial bank reserves increase. |
Open-market operations change: |
commercial bank reserves but not the size of the monetary multiplier. |
An increase in the legal reserve ratio: |
decreases the money supply by decreasing excess reserves and decreasing the monetary multiplier. |
Assume that the commercial banking system has checkable deposits of $10 billion and excess reserves of $1 billion at a time when the reserve requirement is 20 percent. If the reserve requirement is now raised to 30 percent, the banking system then has: |
neither an excess nor a deficiency of reserves. |
When the required reserve ratio is decreased, the excess reserves of member banks are: |
increased and the multiple by which the commercial banking system can lend is increased. |
A decrease in the reserve ratio increases the: |
amount of excess reserves in the banking system. |
Which of the monetary policy tools can alter both the level of excess reserves and the money multiplier? |
The reserve ratio. |
The interest rate at which the Federal Reserve Banks lend to commercial banks is called the: |
discount rate |
Which of the following tools of monetary policy is considered the most important on a day-to-day basis? |
Open-market operations. |
Which of the following tools of monetary policy is flexible and able to affect bank reserves quickly and by relatively specific amounts? |
Open-market operations. |
Which of the following tools of monetary policy has not been used since 1992? |
the reserve ratio |
Which of the following monetary policy tools was introduced in 2008? |
Interest on reserves held at the Fed. |
Interest paid on reserves held at the Fed: |
incentivizes financial institutions to hold more reserves and reduce risky lending. |
Beginning in 2008, the Fed was allowed to: |
pay interest on reserves deposited at Fed banks. |
Which of the following actions by the Fed most likely increase commercial bank lending? |
Reducing the interest paid on reserves held at the Fed. |
The interest rate that banks charge one another on overnight loans is called the: |
federal funds rate |
Which of the following statements is true? a)The Federal Reserve sets the federal funds rate. |
The Federal Reserve does not set the federal funds rate, but it influences it through the use of its open-market operations. |
A federal funds rate reduction that is caused by monetary policy will: |
decrease the prime interest rate. |
To reduce the federal funds rate, the Fed can: |
buy government bonds from the public. |
To increase the federal funds rate, the Fed can: |
sell government bonds to commercial banks. |
If the Fed wants to lower the federal funds rate, it should: |
buy government securities in the open market. |
Other things equal, which of the following would increase the federal funds rate? |
A decline in excess reserves in the banking system. |
The benchmark interest rate that banks use as a reference point for a variety of consumer and business loans is the: |
prime interest rate |
According to the Taylor rule: |
if inflation rises by 1 percentage point above its target, then the Fed should raise the real federal funds rate by one-half a percentage point. |
If the Fed were to set policy according to the Taylor rule, then if real GDP falls by 2 percent below potential GDP, the Fed should: |
reduce the real federal funds rate by 1 percentage point. |
Which of the following best describes the cause-effect chain of an expansionary monetary policy? |
An increase in the money supply will lower the interest rate, increase investment spending, and increase aggregate demand and GDP. |
If the Federal Reserve authorities were attempting to reduce demand-pull inflation, the proper policies would be to: |
sell government securities, raise reserve requirements, raise the discount rate, and increase the interest paid on reserves held at the Fed banks. |
A contraction of the money supply: |
increases the interest rate and decreases aggregate demand. |
Monetary policy is expected to have its greatest impact on: |
Ig (gross investment) |
Which of the following actions by the Fed would cause the money supply to increase? |
Purchases of government bonds from banks. |
Which of the following best describes the cause-effect chain of a restrictive monetary policy? |
A decrease in the money supply will raise the interest rate, decrease investment spending, and decrease aggregate demand and GDP. |
The purpose of an expansionary monetary policy is to shift the: |
aggregate demand curve rightward. |
All else equal, when the Federal Reserve Banks engage in a restrictive monetary policy, the prices of government bonds usually: |
fall |
All else equal, when the Federal Reserve Banks engage in an expansionary monetary policy, the interest rates received on government bonds usually: |
fall |
The price of government bonds and the interest rate received by a bond buyer are: |
inversely related |
A restrictive monetary policy is designed to shift the: |
aggregate demand curve leftward. |
As part of its zero interest rate policy (ZIRP), the Federal Reserve: |
used open-market operations to keep the federal funds rate between zero and 0.25 percent. |
Which of the following is a difference between "quantitative easing" and ordinary open-market operations? |
Open-market operations are done in order to lower interest rates; quantitative easing is merely intended to increase bank reserves. |
ch.16 econ
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