Deck 27: Saving, Investment and the Financial System

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Question
Long-term bonds usually pay a higher interest rate than do short-term bonds because long-term bonds are riskier.
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Question
The financial system consists of those institutions in the economy that help to match one person's saving with another person's investment.
Question
Capital investments can be financed through:

A) borrowing money from a bank
B) borrowing money from a friend or relative
C) sharing ownership and profits with someone who has sufficient money
D) all of the above
Question
Import receipts are not an addition to a country's GDP.
Question
The price of a share in the newspaper is the last price at which the share was traded.
Question
Shares enable firms to raise debt financing as the firm is in debt to its owners.
Question
Government policies are incapable of influencing interest rates and, therefore, cannot affect society's allocation of scarce resources.
Question
Financial markets are the institutions through which a person who wants to save can directly supply funds to a person who wants to borrow.
Question
The national income accounting identity S = I shows that saving and investment are equal for every individual household or firm.
Question
Dividends are the only way shareholders increase their wealth owning shares.
Question
An excess of tax revenue over government spending is called a budget deficit.
Question
A low P/E ratio indicates that the share price of a company is expensive compared to the company's expected earnings.
Question
The P/E ratio is the price of the share divided by the amount the corporation earned in the last financial year.
Question
Banks play two primary roles in the economy: they take in deposits from savers and lend these to borrowers, and they facilitate purchases of goods and services by allowing people to write cheques against their deposits.
Question
When the government borrows to finance its budget, private borrowers are still able to finance investment.
Question
When a country saves a small portion of its GDP:

A) less investment will take place
B) less resources will be available for investment in capital
C) more resources will be available for investment in capital
D) the country's productivity will fall
Question
The market for loanable funds can be modeled on a supply and demand schedule even though there are many exogenous circumstances that affect the price of funds.
Question
Investing in managed funds is an attempt to diversify risk across a range of investment options.
Question
The GDP of a closed economy is the sum of consumption, investment, government purchases and imports.
Question
When setting up a business, you might need to purchase a building, computer, filing cabinets and furniture. This type of purchase would be called ____ by an economist.

A) capital investment
B) business consumption expenditures
C) investment in human capital
D) none of the above
Question
A price-earnings ratio is:

A) the price of a firm's stock divided by the firm's dividend over the past year
B) the price of a firm's stock divided by the amount the firm earned per share over the past year
C) the earnings of a firm over the past year divided by the price of the stock at the end of the year
D) the price of a firm's stock divided by the earnings of the firm over the past year
Question
All else being equal, when people become less optimistic about a company's future, then:

A) the demand for the stock (and thus the price) rises
B) the demand for the stock (and thus the price) falls
C) the supply of the stock (and thus the price) rises
D) the supply of the stock (and thus the price) falls
Question
The type of bond that never matures is called:

A) the duration
B) the indefinite
C) the perpetuity
D) the term
Question
The financial system moves the economy's scarce resources from:

A) the government to citizens
B) higher-valued uses to lower-valued uses
C) savers to borrowers
D) borrowers to savers
Question
The yield curve is a graph of the interest rate on bonds of different terms, with the term shown on the horizontal axis and the interest shown on the vertical axis. Based on the discussion in chapter 10, what slope would you expect the yield curve to have?

A) No slope - flat
B) A negative slope - downward-sloping
C) A positive slope - upward-sloping
D) Negative at first, then positive
Question
The term of a bond is:

A) the interest rate of the bond
B) the credit risk rating of the bond
C) the principal amount of the bond
D) the length of time until the bond matures
Question
The demand for loanable funds shows the:

A) quantity of loanable funds demanded at each possible nominal interest rate
B) quantity of loanable funds demanded at each possible real interest rate
C) equilibrium quantity of money that will be borrowed at each possible real interest rate
D) equilibrium quantity of money that will be borrowed at each possible nominal interest rate
Question
Financial markets are:

A) the institutions in which a person who wants to save can directly supply funds to a person who wants to borrow
B) the financial institutions through which savers can indirectly provide funds to borrowers
C) the institutions that sell shares to the public and use the proceeds to buy various types of stocks and/or bonds
D) the same thing as banks
E) all of the above
Question
Private saving is:

A) the amount of income that businesses have left after paying for the factors of production
B) the amount of tax revenue that the government has left after paying for its spending
C) the amount of income that households have left after paying their taxes and paying for their consumption
D) always equal to investment
Question
Gina has the choice of two bonds, one that pays 5 per cent interest and one that pays 10 per cent interest. Which of the following is most likely?

A) The 10 per cent bond has a shorter term than the 5 per cent bond
B) The 10 per cent bond is a government bond, and the 5 per cent bond is a junk bond
C) The 10 per cent bond is more risky than the 5 per cent bond
D) All of the above are equally likely
Question
IIn a closed economy, national saving:

A) is usually greater than investment
B) is usually less than investment because of the leakage of taxes
C) must equal investment
D) must equal government tax revenue
Question
A bond is:

A) a certificate of credit that specifies the credit of the holder of the bond
B) a capital investment
C) a certificate of indebtedness that specifies the obligations of the issuer to the holder of the bond
D) a factor of production
Question
Which of the following equations represents the GDP in an open economy?

A) Y = C + I + G
B) S = I - G
C) Y = C + I + G + NX
D) I = Y - C + G
Question
Financial intermediaries are:

A) the same as financial markets
B) financial institutions through which savers can indirectly provide funds to borrowers
C) the markets that facilitate stock and bond transactions
D) financial institutions through which savers can directly provide funds to borrowers
Question
A budget surplus is created when the government:

A) spends more than it receives in tax revenue
B) buys back more bonds than it issues
C) receives more tax revenue than it spends
D) raises interest rates
Question
Public saving is:

A) the amount of income that businesses have left after paying for the factors of production
B) the amount of tax revenue that the government has left after paying for its spending
C) the amount of income that households have left after paying their taxes and paying for their consumption
D) always equal to investment
Question
A dividend yield is:

A) the stock price as a percentage of the dividend
B) the inflation-adjusted dividend payment
C) the dividend as a percentage of the stock price
D) the real rate of interest on the stock
Question
The supply of loanable funds shows the:

A) quantity of loanable funds supplied at each possible nominal interest rate
B) equilibrium quantity of money that will be offered by savers at each possible nominal interest rate
C) equilibrium quantity of money that will be offered by savers at each possible real interest rate
D) quantity of loanable funds supplied at each possible real interest rate
Question
In a closed economy, national saving can be expressed by the equation S = (Y - T - C) + (T - G). What does (Y - T - C) represent?

A) Private saving
B) Government tax revenue
C) Public saving
D) Investment
Question
Australian government bonds are considered as being less risky and pay relatively low interest rates because:

A) they have a very high credit risk
B) they are considered to be a very safe credit risk
C) they are not backed by gold
D) they are considered part of a national debt that is extremely large
Question
Since all free markets, including financial markets, use the forces of supply and demand to determine prices, how do financial markets differ from other markets?
Question
A company is looking to see what rate of return it is receiving from a project when the project's initial investment is $14 million today and will receive $18.5 million in four years.

A) 7.22 per cent
B) 32.14 per cent
C) 19.8 per cent
D) 6.2 per cent
Question
If the real interest rate and the nominal interest rate was 3 per cent in 2005, then the inflation rate in 2005 would be:

A) 6 per cent
B) 3 per cent
C) 0 per cent
D) -3 per cent
Question
Sony is thinking about investing in a new project. Suppose that the project costs $10 million and will yield the company $20 million in 10 years. If the interest rate is 5 per cent, what is the present value of the yield in 10 years?

A) $9.5 million
B) $10.5 million
C) $12.3 million
D) $16.3 million
Question
Dean Martin's income was $1000 in 1950. If the annual interest rate was 5 per cent, then the present value of his 1950 income in the year 2000 would be:

A) $9524
B) $10 500
C) $70 400
D) $114 674
Question
What would happen to investment if the government were to increase the tax on interest income?

A) Investment spending would fall
B) Investment spending would rise
C) Investment would be unaffected
D) Investment could rise, fall or remain unchanged
Question
The demand for loanable funds is downward-sloping because:

A) as the interest rate falls, the demand for loanable funds increases
B) as the interest rate falls, the demand for loanable funds falls
C) as the interest rate rises, the quantity of loanable funds demanded rises
D) as the interest rate rises, the quantity of loanable funds demanded falls
Question
Using the national income accounting identity, derive the relationship between national saving and investment. Also decompose national saving into private saving and public saving.
Question
An investment tax credit:

A) reduces the supply of loanable funds
B) shifts the demand curve for loanable funds to the right
C) does not affect the interest rate
D) lowers the interest rate
Question
If a company's bond can be purchased today and expects to earn investors 5% p.a, paying $100 at the end of 25 years, what is today's price? What could occur, to the price of the bonds if the company's level of risk increases? Why?
Question
Using a graph representing the market for loanable funds, show and explain what happens to interest rates and investment if the investment tax credit is abolished.
Question
Which of the following statements is not correct about notional accounting identity?

A) S = (Y - T - C) - (T - G)
B) S = Y - C - G
C) S = I
D) Y = C + I + G
Question
A budget deficit:

A) raises the interest rate
B) lowers the interest rate
C) does not affect the interest rate
D) shifts the supply curve for loanable funds to the right
Question
Which of the following is not necessarily a motive for investment?

A) Desire to increase profits
B) Desire to improve market share in the long term
C) Desire to improve the status of the economy in the long term
D) Desire to satisfy consumer demand
Question
A company invested $50 million in building a factory 10 years ago when the annual interest rate was 2 per cent. What is the present value of the yield now?

A) $49 million
B) $51 million
C) $61 million
D) $70 million
Question
The supply of loanable funds is upward-sloping because:

A) as the interest rate falls, the supply of loanable funds increases
B) as the interest rate falls, the supply of loanable funds falls
C) as the interest rate rises, the quantity of loanable funds supplied falls
D) as the interest rate rises, the quantity of loanable funds supplied rises
Question
When James Tobin received a Nobel prize in economics, partly for demonstrating theoretically the rationale for diversifying a portfolio of assets, Charles Kindleberger, President of the American Economic Association, remarked that Tobin had received the prize for proving that 'it doesn't pay to put all your eggs in one basket'. Why might a saver decide to diversify his or her portfolio of assets?
Question
What would happen in the market for loanable funds if the government were to decrease the tax on interest income?

A) The demand for loanable funds would increase
B) The demand for loanable funds would decrease
C) The supply of loanable funds would decrease
D) The supply of loanable funds would increase
Question
If the nominal interest rate is 8 per cent and the rate of inflation is 3 per cent, then the real interest rate is:

A) 11 per cent
B) 3 per cent
C) 5 per cent
D) -5 per cent
Question
Playworld is thinking about investing in a new theme park. Suppose that the project costs $7 million and will yield the company $20 million in 10 years. If the interest rate is 5%, what is the present value of the yield in 10 years? What will be the future value of the $7 million investment? Should Playworld invest in the project?
Question
Discuss whether the Rudd stimulus package to shield the economy was successful.
Question
When the $700 billion bailout occurred in 2008 did this send a dangerous signal to the banks?
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Deck 27: Saving, Investment and the Financial System
1
Long-term bonds usually pay a higher interest rate than do short-term bonds because long-term bonds are riskier.
True
2
The financial system consists of those institutions in the economy that help to match one person's saving with another person's investment.
True
3
Capital investments can be financed through:

A) borrowing money from a bank
B) borrowing money from a friend or relative
C) sharing ownership and profits with someone who has sufficient money
D) all of the above
all of the above
4
Import receipts are not an addition to a country's GDP.
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k this deck
5
The price of a share in the newspaper is the last price at which the share was traded.
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6
Shares enable firms to raise debt financing as the firm is in debt to its owners.
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k this deck
7
Government policies are incapable of influencing interest rates and, therefore, cannot affect society's allocation of scarce resources.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 62 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
8
Financial markets are the institutions through which a person who wants to save can directly supply funds to a person who wants to borrow.
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9
The national income accounting identity S = I shows that saving and investment are equal for every individual household or firm.
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10
Dividends are the only way shareholders increase their wealth owning shares.
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11
An excess of tax revenue over government spending is called a budget deficit.
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12
A low P/E ratio indicates that the share price of a company is expensive compared to the company's expected earnings.
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13
The P/E ratio is the price of the share divided by the amount the corporation earned in the last financial year.
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k this deck
14
Banks play two primary roles in the economy: they take in deposits from savers and lend these to borrowers, and they facilitate purchases of goods and services by allowing people to write cheques against their deposits.
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15
When the government borrows to finance its budget, private borrowers are still able to finance investment.
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16
When a country saves a small portion of its GDP:

A) less investment will take place
B) less resources will be available for investment in capital
C) more resources will be available for investment in capital
D) the country's productivity will fall
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17
The market for loanable funds can be modeled on a supply and demand schedule even though there are many exogenous circumstances that affect the price of funds.
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k this deck
18
Investing in managed funds is an attempt to diversify risk across a range of investment options.
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k this deck
19
The GDP of a closed economy is the sum of consumption, investment, government purchases and imports.
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20
When setting up a business, you might need to purchase a building, computer, filing cabinets and furniture. This type of purchase would be called ____ by an economist.

A) capital investment
B) business consumption expenditures
C) investment in human capital
D) none of the above
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k this deck
21
A price-earnings ratio is:

A) the price of a firm's stock divided by the firm's dividend over the past year
B) the price of a firm's stock divided by the amount the firm earned per share over the past year
C) the earnings of a firm over the past year divided by the price of the stock at the end of the year
D) the price of a firm's stock divided by the earnings of the firm over the past year
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22
All else being equal, when people become less optimistic about a company's future, then:

A) the demand for the stock (and thus the price) rises
B) the demand for the stock (and thus the price) falls
C) the supply of the stock (and thus the price) rises
D) the supply of the stock (and thus the price) falls
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k this deck
23
The type of bond that never matures is called:

A) the duration
B) the indefinite
C) the perpetuity
D) the term
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k this deck
24
The financial system moves the economy's scarce resources from:

A) the government to citizens
B) higher-valued uses to lower-valued uses
C) savers to borrowers
D) borrowers to savers
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25
The yield curve is a graph of the interest rate on bonds of different terms, with the term shown on the horizontal axis and the interest shown on the vertical axis. Based on the discussion in chapter 10, what slope would you expect the yield curve to have?

A) No slope - flat
B) A negative slope - downward-sloping
C) A positive slope - upward-sloping
D) Negative at first, then positive
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26
The term of a bond is:

A) the interest rate of the bond
B) the credit risk rating of the bond
C) the principal amount of the bond
D) the length of time until the bond matures
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27
The demand for loanable funds shows the:

A) quantity of loanable funds demanded at each possible nominal interest rate
B) quantity of loanable funds demanded at each possible real interest rate
C) equilibrium quantity of money that will be borrowed at each possible real interest rate
D) equilibrium quantity of money that will be borrowed at each possible nominal interest rate
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k this deck
28
Financial markets are:

A) the institutions in which a person who wants to save can directly supply funds to a person who wants to borrow
B) the financial institutions through which savers can indirectly provide funds to borrowers
C) the institutions that sell shares to the public and use the proceeds to buy various types of stocks and/or bonds
D) the same thing as banks
E) all of the above
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k this deck
29
Private saving is:

A) the amount of income that businesses have left after paying for the factors of production
B) the amount of tax revenue that the government has left after paying for its spending
C) the amount of income that households have left after paying their taxes and paying for their consumption
D) always equal to investment
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30
Gina has the choice of two bonds, one that pays 5 per cent interest and one that pays 10 per cent interest. Which of the following is most likely?

A) The 10 per cent bond has a shorter term than the 5 per cent bond
B) The 10 per cent bond is a government bond, and the 5 per cent bond is a junk bond
C) The 10 per cent bond is more risky than the 5 per cent bond
D) All of the above are equally likely
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k this deck
31
IIn a closed economy, national saving:

A) is usually greater than investment
B) is usually less than investment because of the leakage of taxes
C) must equal investment
D) must equal government tax revenue
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k this deck
32
A bond is:

A) a certificate of credit that specifies the credit of the holder of the bond
B) a capital investment
C) a certificate of indebtedness that specifies the obligations of the issuer to the holder of the bond
D) a factor of production
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33
Which of the following equations represents the GDP in an open economy?

A) Y = C + I + G
B) S = I - G
C) Y = C + I + G + NX
D) I = Y - C + G
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34
Financial intermediaries are:

A) the same as financial markets
B) financial institutions through which savers can indirectly provide funds to borrowers
C) the markets that facilitate stock and bond transactions
D) financial institutions through which savers can directly provide funds to borrowers
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35
A budget surplus is created when the government:

A) spends more than it receives in tax revenue
B) buys back more bonds than it issues
C) receives more tax revenue than it spends
D) raises interest rates
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36
Public saving is:

A) the amount of income that businesses have left after paying for the factors of production
B) the amount of tax revenue that the government has left after paying for its spending
C) the amount of income that households have left after paying their taxes and paying for their consumption
D) always equal to investment
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37
A dividend yield is:

A) the stock price as a percentage of the dividend
B) the inflation-adjusted dividend payment
C) the dividend as a percentage of the stock price
D) the real rate of interest on the stock
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38
The supply of loanable funds shows the:

A) quantity of loanable funds supplied at each possible nominal interest rate
B) equilibrium quantity of money that will be offered by savers at each possible nominal interest rate
C) equilibrium quantity of money that will be offered by savers at each possible real interest rate
D) quantity of loanable funds supplied at each possible real interest rate
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39
In a closed economy, national saving can be expressed by the equation S = (Y - T - C) + (T - G). What does (Y - T - C) represent?

A) Private saving
B) Government tax revenue
C) Public saving
D) Investment
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k this deck
40
Australian government bonds are considered as being less risky and pay relatively low interest rates because:

A) they have a very high credit risk
B) they are considered to be a very safe credit risk
C) they are not backed by gold
D) they are considered part of a national debt that is extremely large
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
41
Since all free markets, including financial markets, use the forces of supply and demand to determine prices, how do financial markets differ from other markets?
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42
A company is looking to see what rate of return it is receiving from a project when the project's initial investment is $14 million today and will receive $18.5 million in four years.

A) 7.22 per cent
B) 32.14 per cent
C) 19.8 per cent
D) 6.2 per cent
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k this deck
43
If the real interest rate and the nominal interest rate was 3 per cent in 2005, then the inflation rate in 2005 would be:

A) 6 per cent
B) 3 per cent
C) 0 per cent
D) -3 per cent
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44
Sony is thinking about investing in a new project. Suppose that the project costs $10 million and will yield the company $20 million in 10 years. If the interest rate is 5 per cent, what is the present value of the yield in 10 years?

A) $9.5 million
B) $10.5 million
C) $12.3 million
D) $16.3 million
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45
Dean Martin's income was $1000 in 1950. If the annual interest rate was 5 per cent, then the present value of his 1950 income in the year 2000 would be:

A) $9524
B) $10 500
C) $70 400
D) $114 674
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k this deck
46
What would happen to investment if the government were to increase the tax on interest income?

A) Investment spending would fall
B) Investment spending would rise
C) Investment would be unaffected
D) Investment could rise, fall or remain unchanged
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47
The demand for loanable funds is downward-sloping because:

A) as the interest rate falls, the demand for loanable funds increases
B) as the interest rate falls, the demand for loanable funds falls
C) as the interest rate rises, the quantity of loanable funds demanded rises
D) as the interest rate rises, the quantity of loanable funds demanded falls
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48
Using the national income accounting identity, derive the relationship between national saving and investment. Also decompose national saving into private saving and public saving.
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49
An investment tax credit:

A) reduces the supply of loanable funds
B) shifts the demand curve for loanable funds to the right
C) does not affect the interest rate
D) lowers the interest rate
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50
If a company's bond can be purchased today and expects to earn investors 5% p.a, paying $100 at the end of 25 years, what is today's price? What could occur, to the price of the bonds if the company's level of risk increases? Why?
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51
Using a graph representing the market for loanable funds, show and explain what happens to interest rates and investment if the investment tax credit is abolished.
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52
Which of the following statements is not correct about notional accounting identity?

A) S = (Y - T - C) - (T - G)
B) S = Y - C - G
C) S = I
D) Y = C + I + G
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53
A budget deficit:

A) raises the interest rate
B) lowers the interest rate
C) does not affect the interest rate
D) shifts the supply curve for loanable funds to the right
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54
Which of the following is not necessarily a motive for investment?

A) Desire to increase profits
B) Desire to improve market share in the long term
C) Desire to improve the status of the economy in the long term
D) Desire to satisfy consumer demand
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55
A company invested $50 million in building a factory 10 years ago when the annual interest rate was 2 per cent. What is the present value of the yield now?

A) $49 million
B) $51 million
C) $61 million
D) $70 million
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k this deck
56
The supply of loanable funds is upward-sloping because:

A) as the interest rate falls, the supply of loanable funds increases
B) as the interest rate falls, the supply of loanable funds falls
C) as the interest rate rises, the quantity of loanable funds supplied falls
D) as the interest rate rises, the quantity of loanable funds supplied rises
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57
When James Tobin received a Nobel prize in economics, partly for demonstrating theoretically the rationale for diversifying a portfolio of assets, Charles Kindleberger, President of the American Economic Association, remarked that Tobin had received the prize for proving that 'it doesn't pay to put all your eggs in one basket'. Why might a saver decide to diversify his or her portfolio of assets?
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58
What would happen in the market for loanable funds if the government were to decrease the tax on interest income?

A) The demand for loanable funds would increase
B) The demand for loanable funds would decrease
C) The supply of loanable funds would decrease
D) The supply of loanable funds would increase
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59
If the nominal interest rate is 8 per cent and the rate of inflation is 3 per cent, then the real interest rate is:

A) 11 per cent
B) 3 per cent
C) 5 per cent
D) -5 per cent
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60
Playworld is thinking about investing in a new theme park. Suppose that the project costs $7 million and will yield the company $20 million in 10 years. If the interest rate is 5%, what is the present value of the yield in 10 years? What will be the future value of the $7 million investment? Should Playworld invest in the project?
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61
Discuss whether the Rudd stimulus package to shield the economy was successful.
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62
When the $700 billion bailout occurred in 2008 did this send a dangerous signal to the banks?
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