Exam 11: The Monetary System
Exam 1: Ten Principles of Economics347 Questions
Exam 2: Thinking Like an Economist528 Questions
Exam 3: Interdependence and the Gains From Trade413 Questions
Exam 4: The Market Forces of Supply and Demand568 Questions
Exam 5: Measuring a Nations Income428 Questions
Exam 6: Measuring the Cost of Living420 Questions
Exam 7: Production and Growth417 Questions
Exam 8: Saving, Investment, and the Financial System473 Questions
Exam 9: The Basic Tools of Finance419 Questions
Exam 10: Unemployment562 Questions
Exam 11: The Monetary System421 Questions
Exam 12: Money Growth and Inflation384 Questions
Exam 13: Open-Economy Macroeconomic Models447 Questions
Exam 14: A Macroeconomic Theory of the Open Economy375 Questions
Exam 15: Aggregate Demand and Aggregate Supply466 Questions
Exam 16: The Influence of Monetary and Fiscal Policy on Aggregate Demand416 Questions
Exam 17: The Short-Run Trade-Off Between Inflation and Unemployment367 Questions
Exam 18: Six Debates Over Macroeconomic Policy235 Questions
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Money allows people to specialize in what they do best, thereby raising everyone's standard of living.
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Which of the following can the Fed do to change the money supply?
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You pay for cheese and bread from the deli with currency. Which function of money does this best illustrate?
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If the Federal Open Market Committee decides to increase the money supply, then the Federal Reserve
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Imagine an economy in which: (1) pieces of paper called yollars are the only thing that buyers give to sellers when they buy goods and services, so it would be common to use, say, 50 yollars to buy a pair of shoes; (2) prices are posted in terms of yardsticks, so you might walk into a grocery store and see that, today, an apple is worth 2 yardsticks; and (3) yardsticks disintegrate overnight, so no yardstick has any value for more than 24 hours. In this economy,
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A problem that the Fed faces when it attempts to control the money supply is that
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Suppose banks desire to hold no excess reserves and that the Fed has set a reserve requirement of 10 percent. If you deposit $9,000 into First Jayhawk Bank,
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Which of the following lists is included in what economists call "money"?
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In the 19th century, when crop failures often led to bank runs, banks would make relatively fewer loans and hold relatively more excess reserves. By itself, these actions by the banks should have
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Table 11-6.
-Refer to Table 11-6. If the Bank of Springfield has lent out all the money it can given its level of deposits, then what is the reserve requirement?

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In a fractional-reserve banking system with no excess reserves and no currency holdings, if the central bank buys $100 million worth of bonds,
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Assume that when $100 of new reserves enter the banking system, the money supply ultimately increases by $800. Assume also that no banks hold excess reserves and that the entire money supply consists of bank deposits. If, at a point in time, reserves for all banks amount to $750, then at that same point in time, loans for all banks amount to $6,000.
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