Econ-Chapter 7 Flashcards

1
Q

equation of exchange

A

shows the relationship between prices and the money supply

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2
Q

the only way people will spend more on ALL goods is if

A

there is more dollars to spend

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3
Q

MV=PQ

A

the output in the economy is bought by the money supply, which is spent and re-spent at a rate of V, this is the interpretation of the equation of exchange

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4
Q

money supply turning over

A

that any dollars put in our pockets or in our bank account came from somewhere, and they will go to somewhere , and they will go from there.

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5
Q

velocity

A

the average number of times that $1 turns over

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6
Q

what does M, P, and Q mean

A

P- price of the output and Q- is the amount of the output produced by the economy , and M- is the money supply

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7
Q

simple quantity theory

A
  • developed by Irving Fisher and Ludwig von Mises
  • starts the equation of exchange and adds:
  • over a short time period, resources are limited, so output is limited
  • the speed at which money moves through the economy is limited
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8
Q

the simple quantity theory assumes that in the short run

A

output and velocity are constant

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9
Q

the result of the simple quantity theory is that the price level and the money supply are

A

proportionally related

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10
Q

Milton Friedman

A
  • founded the monetarist school of economics

- his book published in 1963- changed economics profession

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11
Q

Monetarism

A

begins with the equation of exchange, then softens the assumptions of the simple quantity theory

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12
Q

Friedman showed

A
  • that velocity is stable and predictable

- output is not fixed, but that the economy has potential that it tends to move toward.

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13
Q

equation of exchange

A

MV=PQ

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14
Q

Friedman illustrates his ideas in “the helicopter drop of dollars”

A

in the short run their will be an increase in prices and quantity, but in the long run with higher prices, the real wage, the real price of a steak dinner, and all other real prices are the same as before. in the long run, the helicopter drop only causes inflation

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15
Q

secured loans

A

loans that have a less risky asset backing as they are crucial to society. example: homes

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16
Q

the pizza place example

A

you own a pizza place and all the prices in the economy double evenly, this means that you should still produce the same amount of goods as before, because inflation does not change production decisions

17
Q

unanticipated inflation on a good you already possess a lot of

A

your wealth is higher

18
Q

unanticipated inflation

A

borrowers gain and loaners loose-in fact , everyone who has a contract to pau with inflated dollars gains, while those who receive the inflated dollars loose , also those who are saving dollars loose

19
Q

nominal interest rate

A

bank quote this which is the rate that is advertised which shows up on your finical statements

20
Q

real interest rate

A

banks formulate their nominal interests rate based on what they expect inflation to be, aiming for this

21
Q

Secured Loans

A

example : houses

these are loans that are backed by a real asset

22
Q

unsecured loans

A

example: credit cards
these have nothing really backing the loan which means they are higher because it costs the company much more to administer the credit card, whose payments vary and changers continue to pile up and be paid off

23
Q

As long as all prices rise or fall by the same amount and inflation is anticipated,..

A

inflation has no effect on the economy

24
Q

problems with uneven inflation

A
  • we don’t know the real worth of goods

- formation of bubbles in the economy

25
Q

Without prices to tell them the about scarcity and other’s preferences then

A

unemployment and less buisness will be done

26
Q

the idea that money creation fuels inflationary bubbles, which burst and cause unemployment was formulated by

A

the austrian economist Ludwig von Mises and Freidrich Von Hayek

27
Q

Austrian economists view the overall spontaneous order of the market based on-

A

tastes, knowledge, and scarcity, all connected by prices-as stable.

28
Q

Austrians say that the errors by central banks are the cause of

A

destabilization in the economy

29
Q

the state often spends more than it taxes, so it borrows from

A

private citizens, from companies, and from other governments by selling its bonds to them

30
Q

Monetizing the debt

A

when a centeral bank, such as the fed, attempts to assist the state in its borrowing by purchasing debt in return for dollars

31
Q

money creation causes inflation, which destabilizes the economy, but

A

inflation assists the state in financing its borrowing

32
Q

inflation

A

borrowers gain and lenders lose

33
Q

The inflationary tax

A

when the state creates inflation in order to reduce the value of its debt

34
Q

US Economy from 1800-1979

A
  • government issued greenbacks, would not exchange them for gold (the main issue of currency at the time)
  • then the greenbacks were used to exchange with gold
  • the fed was created
35
Q

Milton Friedman monetizing the debt

A
  • his predictions came true, inflation brought unemployment
  • inflation destabilized the economy
  • Paul Volcker tightened money supply, and caused a recession
  • this caused accounts to be worth half as much, and savers are lenders who then lose due to the inflationary tax