Test 3 ch 10 (money and banking) Flashcards

1
Q

Barter

A

The direct exchange of goods and services; requires a double coincidence of wants (I have to want what you are trading and vice versa)

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2
Q

Money

A

An asset that is generally accepted as a means of payment for goods and services.

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3
Q

Commodity money

A

It is an item that serves a useful purpose other than acting as a medium of exchange. (ex. salt, gold, and other precious metals that have been used in the past.

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4
Q

Fiat money

A

Is paper currency and coin that has been designated by government as legal tender (it must be accepted as payment for debts) - no real value.

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5
Q

The functions of money

A

1) Medium of exchange
2) Unit of account (standard of value)
3) Store of value (store of wealth)

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6
Q

Liquidity

A

This refers to the ease with which the asset may be converted into a medium of exchange without loss of value.

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7
Q

M1 measures of the money supply

A

M1, includes liquid assets, such as cash and checking account deposits, that are directly and immediately spendable.
M1= currency held by the public + demand and other checkable deposits + traveler’s checks

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8
Q

M2measures fo the money supply

A

M2 is a broader measure of the money supply which includes both liquid (dependable) assets that are contained in the M1 plus less liquid assets or near-monies. money market deposit accounts are included in saving deposits.
M2= M1 + saving deposits + small denomination time deposits + retail money funds.

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9
Q

Fractional reserve banking

A

in fractional reserve banking systems banks (depository institutions) are required to hold only a small fraction of their total deposits on reserve. legally can be in the form of cash in vaults or as deposits at a federal reserve bank.

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10
Q

Required reserve ratio (r)

A

The fraction of deposits that must be held as reserves. typically r is around 10%.

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11
Q

Actual or total bank reserves (R)

A

consists of cash in the bank’s vault and deposits at the federal reserve bank.

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12
Q

Excess reserves (ER)

A

Reserves held beyond the minimum required are called excess reserves. (profit-maximizing banks may have an incentive to keep excess reserves close to zero because banks may earn more by putting funds into other interest-bearing assets such as loans and securities).

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13
Q

Simple deposit multiplier

A

The maximum amount of new deposit dollars that can be created through lending can be estimated using the simple deposit multiplier. (Simple deposit multiplier = 1/r). [to find the maximum amount of total deposits that can be supported by $__ = simple deposit multiplier x $__]

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14
Q

Maximum deposit creation calculations

A

[to find the maximum amount of total deposits that can be supported by $__ = simple deposit multiplier x $__]

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15
Q

Maximum potential change in the money supply calculations

A

The potential/additional deposit creation (maximum increase in the money supply) = change in excess reserve times the simple deposit multiplier = chg ER x (1/r)

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16
Q

Medium of exchange

A

Is something that is generally accepted in trade for goods and services and settlement of debts.
(Money as a medium of exchange is better than barter because barter requires a double coincidence of wants and leads to inefficiency).

17
Q

Unit of account (standard of value)

A

Money acts as a common denominator for comparing the relative values of goods and services.
(money serves this function and increases efficiency because using money values to make decisions, communicate, and keep records reduces transaction costs). ex. “how many loaves of bread is a blanket worth?”

18
Q

Store of value (store of wealth)

A

Money serves as a store of value because it stores purchasing power over time and can be used for future purchases. (people don’t always want to spend all of their income as soon as it is received).

19
Q

Required reserves (RR)

A

is the fraction of deposits that must be held as reserves.

20
Q

Money multiplier process

A

As the banks retain only a small fraction of these reserves, the rest (excess reserves) may be loaned out. In the money multiplier process money created by one bank is deposited into another bank, allowing loans to be created.