Unit: Monetary Policy

Size: px
Start display at page:

Download "Unit: Monetary Policy"

Transcription

1 Unit: Monetary Policy

2 2

3 3

4 Showing the Effects of Monetary Policy Graphically Three Related Graphs: Ø Money Market Ø Investment Demand Ø AD/AS

5 Interest Rate (i) S&D of Money S M S M1 Interest Rate (i) Investment Demand 10% 10% 5% 5% 2% D M 2% D I PL PL 1 PL e AD/AS Quantity M AS AD AD 1 Quantity of Investment The FED increases the money supply 2 stimulate the economy 1. Interest Rates Decreases 2. Investment Increases 3. AD, GDP and PL Increases Q e Q 1 GDP R

6 Interest Rate (i) S&D of Money S M1 S M Interest Rate (i) Investment Demand 10% 10% 5% 5% 2% D M 2% D I PL AD/AS Quantity M AS Quantity of Investment The FED decreases the money supply to slow down the economy PL e PL 1 AD AD 1 1. Interest Rtes increase 2. Investment decreases 3. AD, GDP and PL decrease Q 1 Q e GDP R

7 The role of the Fed is to take away the punch bowl just as the party gets going

8 The Government Stabilizing the Economy

9 The 3 tools of the FED

10 3 ways the FED can affect AD Discount Rate Lending Money to other Banks & credit unions Open Market Operations Buying and selling Bonds Reserve Requirement The FED can set the reserve requirements of banks. The FED is now chaired by Janet Yellen.

11 #1. The Discount Rate The Discount Rate is the interest rate that the FED charges commercial banks. Example: If Banks of America needs $10 million, they borrow it from the U.S. Treasury (which the FED controls) but they must pay it back with 3% interest. To increase the Money supply, the FED should DECREASE the Discount Rate (Easy Money Policy). To decrease the Money supply, the FED should INCREASE the Discount Rate (Tight Money Policy).

12 Federal Funds Rate Vs Discount Rate Federal Funds Rate Over the course of each day, as banks pay out and receive funds, they may end up with more (or fewer) funds than they need to meet their reserve requirement. Banks with excess funds lend them overnight to other banks that are short on funds. Discount Rate Banks may borrow funds directly from the discount window at their District Federal Reserve Bank to meet their reserve requirements The FED influences the Federal Funds Rate by setting a target rate and using open market operations.

13 Federal Funds Rate Target Federal Funds Rate Percent January February March April May June July August September October November December January February March April May June July August September October November December January February March April May June July August September October November December %

14 #2. Open Market Operations Open Market Operations is when the FED buys or sells government bonds (securities). To increase the Money supply, the FED should BUY government securities. To decrease the Money supply, the FED should SELL government securities. How are you going to remember? Buy-BIG- Buying bonds increases money supply Sell-SMALL- Selling bonds decreases money supply

15 Practice Don t forget the Monetary Multiplier!!!! 1. If the reserve requirement is.5 and the FED sells $10 million of bonds, what will happen to the money supply? 2. If the reserve requirement is.1 and the FED buys $10 million bonds, what will happen to the money supply? 3. If the FED decreases the reserve requirement from.50 to.20 what will happen to the money multiplier?

16 #3. The Reserve Requirement Fractional Reserve Banking - Only a small percent of your money is in the safe. The rest has been loaned out. Ø The Reserve Requirement is set by the FED Ø The reserve requirement is the percent of deposits that banks can NOT loan out FED Increase money supply A Banks keeps some in reserves and loans out the rest Those loans turn into deposits for other banks Other banks will take those deposits and loan out their excess reserves

17 The Money Multiplier Example: Assume the reserve ratio in the US is 10% You deposit $1000 in the bank The bank must hold $100 (required reserves) The bank lends $900 out to Bob (excess reserves) Bob deposits the $900 in his bank Bob s bank must hold $90. It loans out $810 to Jill Jill deposits $810 in her bank SO FAR, the initial deposit of $1000 caused the CREATION of another $1710 (Bob s $900 + Jill s $810) Money Multiplier = 1 Reserve Requirement (ratio) Example: If the reserve ratio is.20 and the money supply increases 2 Billion dollars. How much GDP increase by?

18 Using Reserve Requirement 1. If there is a recession, what should the FED do to the reserve requirement? (Explain the steps.) Decrease the Reserve Ratio 1. Banks hold less money and have more excess reserves 2. Banks create more money by loaning out excess 3. Money supply increases, interest rates fall, AD goes up 2. If there is inflation, what should the FED do to the reserve requirement? (Explain the steps.) Increase the Reserve Ratio 1. Banks hold more money and have less excess reserves 2. Banks create less money 3. Money supply decreases, interest rates up, AD down

19 Video: Bonds and Interest Rates

20 20

21 2009B Practice FRQ 21

22 2010 FRQ 2. A drop in credit card fees causes people to use credit cards more often for transactions and demand less money. (a) Using a correctly labeled graph of the money market, show how the nominal interest rate will be affected. (b) Given the interest rate change in part (a), what will happen to bond prices in the short run? (c) Given the interest rate change in part (a), what will happen to the price level in the short run? Explain. 22

23 23

Unit 4: Money, Banking, and Monetary Policy

Unit 4: Money, Banking, and Monetary Policy Unit 4: Money, Banking, and Monetary Policy 1 Showing the Effects of Monetary Policy Graphically Three Related Graphs: Money Market Investment Demand AD/AS 2 Interest Rate (i) S&D of Money S M S M1 Interest

More information

Unit 4: Money and Monetary Policy

Unit 4: Money and Monetary Policy Unit 4: Money and Monetary Policy 1 Types of PERSONAL Investments Assets- Anything of monetary value owned by a person or business. 2 Bonds vs. Stocks Pretend you are going to start a lemonade stand. You

More information

Example: A = P(1 + rt) Principal (P) = $10,000 Rate (R) = 20% Time = 5 years Total = $20,000

Example: A = P(1 + rt) Principal (P) = $10,000 Rate (R) = 20% Time = 5 years Total = $20,000 The Money Market (Supply and Demand for Money) The Demand for Money The Demand for money shows an inverse relationship between nominal interest rates and the quantity of money demanded Ø What happens to

More information

UNIT 5 AS and AD and International Trade

UNIT 5 AS and AD and International Trade UNIT 5 AS and AD and International Trade 1 What is Macroeconomics? Macroeconomics is the study of the large economy as a whole. It is the study of the big picture. Instead of analyzing one consumer, we

More information

CH Lecture. McGraw-Hill/Irwin Colander, Economics 1-1

CH Lecture. McGraw-Hill/Irwin Colander, Economics 1-1 CH 30+31 Lecture McGraw-Hill/Irwin Colander, Economics 1-1 Money 2 The Definition and Functions of Money Money is anything that is generally accepted as payment for goods or services Money is a highly

More information

Monetary Policy Assignment #15

Monetary Policy Assignment #15 Monetary Policy Assignment #15 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=raeibejt5hy Monetary Policy & the FED- EconMovies #9: Despicable Me (5:00) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1dq7mmort9o&index=10&list=pl8dpuualjxtpnzwz5_o_5uirj8gqxnheo

More information

THE FEDERAL RESERVE. and the Banking System. Functions. The FED is the central banking system of the U.S.

THE FEDERAL RESERVE. and the Banking System. Functions. The FED is the central banking system of the U.S. UNit 4.3 THE FEDERAL RESERVE and the Banking System The FED is the central banking system of the U.S. * Established 1913 * Governing Body board of governors * Presidentially-appointed Chairman JANET YELLEN

More information

The Demand for Money p Explain the two reasons people demand to hold their wealth in the form on money.

The Demand for Money p Explain the two reasons people demand to hold their wealth in the form on money. Financial Sector Reading Guide Chapters 13, 14 and 15 Chapter 13: Money and Banking 1. Identify and describe the functions of money. 2. Define money supply and other financial assets. 3. Define and list

More information

How does the government stabilize the economy?

How does the government stabilize the economy? How does the government stabilize the economy? The government has two different tool boxes it can use: 1. Fiscal Policy- Actions by Congress and the president to adjust to the G in aggregate demand. 2.

More information

AP Macroeconomics. The Loanable Funds Market

AP Macroeconomics. The Loanable Funds Market AP Macroeconomics The Loanable Funds Market Loanable Funds Market The market where savers and borrowers exchange funds (Q LF ) at the r%. The D for LF, or borrowing comes from HH, firms, G and the foreign

More information

Term used to refer to the Federal Reserve System/Bank.

Term used to refer to the Federal Reserve System/Bank. Federal Reserve The Fed Term used to refer to the Federal Reserve System/Bank. They are the government s fiscal agent Hold and set reserve requirements Clear checks Supervise member banks Supply paper

More information

The Business Cycle. jobs and spending. How do we know if the economy is prosperous or in a depression?

The Business Cycle. jobs and spending. How do we know if the economy is prosperous or in a depression? The Business Cycle Consumers spend their money to buy products then production increases How do we know if the economy is prosperous or in a depression? Lots of jobs and money Spending slows and jobs begin

More information

Dr. Mary J. McGlasson Video #32 on Monetary Policy

Dr. Mary J. McGlasson Video #32 on Monetary Policy Monetary Policy Assignment #14 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1dq7mmort9o&index=10&list=pl8dpuualjxtpnzwz5_o_5uirj8gqxnheo Monetary Policy and the Federal Reserve: Crash Course Economics #10 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hdznoqp4smu&index=32&list=plf2a3693d8481f442

More information

AP Macroeconomics. Monetary Policy

AP Macroeconomics. Monetary Policy AP Macroeconomics Monetary Policy Monetary Policy Central bank (The Fed, Bank of Japan, ECB, Bank of England ) efforts to promote full employment, maintain price stability, and encourage long-run economic

More information

Macro Problem Set 3 Fall 2015

Macro Problem Set 3 Fall 2015 Macro Problem Set 3 Fall 2015 Directions: The True/False and Multiple Choice questions do not have to be turned in for credit. It would be foolish, however, not to spend a great deal of time working on

More information

The Song Remains the Same? Higher Rates Don t Typically Kill Bull Markets

The Song Remains the Same? Higher Rates Don t Typically Kill Bull Markets The Song Remains the Same? Higher Rates Don t Typically Kill Bull Markets July 28, 2015 by Liz Ann Sonders of Charles Schwab Key Points Slow tightening cycles tend to be rewarded by much better equity

More information

Monetary Policy CHAPTER 31. Will Rogers. There have been three great inventions since the beginning of time: fire, the wheel and central banking.

Monetary Policy CHAPTER 31. Will Rogers. There have been three great inventions since the beginning of time: fire, the wheel and central banking. CHAPTER 31 Monetary Policy There have been three great inventions since the beginning of time: fire, the wheel and central banking. Will Rogers McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright 2010 by the McGraw-Hill Companies,

More information

If G increases from 100 to 200 (an increase of 100) then Y will increase by 200.

If G increases from 100 to 200 (an increase of 100) then Y will increase by 200. ECON 201: Principle of Macroeconomics Name: Fall 2004 Bellas Second Midterm You have two hours and thirty minutes to complete this exam. Answer all questions, explain your answers, label axes and curves

More information

Monetary Policy Tools?

Monetary Policy Tools? EQ: What is the Federal Reserve System? In the U.S., the Federal Reserve System was established in 1913 to discharge the function of a central bank and provide a strengthened framework of regulatory control

More information

Motives for holding money

Motives for holding money Money Financial asset that pays a relatively low return -- why do people hold it? Fractional reserve banking -- the money creation process. Banking panics and bank runs. Motives for holding money Medium

More information

All the graphs (and some other stuff) you need to know for Macro

All the graphs (and some other stuff) you need to know for Macro All the graphs (and some other stuff) you need to know for Macro IGNORE THE LAFFER CURVE! Correctly drawing and labeling graphs is critical in answering the free response questions (FRQs). For an interactive

More information

The Influence of Monetary and Fiscal Policy on Aggregate Demand

The Influence of Monetary and Fiscal Policy on Aggregate Demand Chapter 32 The Influence of Monetary and Fiscal Policy on Aggregate Demand Test B 1. Of the effects that help explain why the U.S. aggregate demand curve slopes downward the a. wealth effect is most important

More information

2. Why is it important for the Fed to know the size and the rate of growth of the money supply?

2. Why is it important for the Fed to know the size and the rate of growth of the money supply? KOFA HIGH SCHOOL SOCIAL SCIENCES DEPARTMENT AP ECONOMICS EXAM PREP WORKSHOP # 4 > MONEY, MONETARY POLICY, AND ECONOMIC STABILITY NAME : DATE : All About The Ms : 1. What are the three basic functions of

More information

Interest Rates and Monetary Policy

Interest Rates and Monetary Policy 14 Interest Rates and Monetary Policy 14-1 Chapter Objectives How the equilibrium interest rate is determined in the market for money. The goals and tools of monetary policy. The federal funds rate and

More information

The Federal Reserve and Open Market Operations PRINCIPLES OF ECONOMICS (ECON 210) BEN VAN KAMMEN, PHD

The Federal Reserve and Open Market Operations PRINCIPLES OF ECONOMICS (ECON 210) BEN VAN KAMMEN, PHD The Federal Reserve and Open Market Operations PRINCIPLES OF ECONOMICS (ECON 210) BEN VAN KAMMEN, PHD What is the Federal Reserve System? The Federal Reserve: Creates money (widely accepted means of payment:

More information

FINAL EXAM STUDY GUIDE

FINAL EXAM STUDY GUIDE AP MACROECONOMICS-2018 Name: FINAL EXAM STUDY GUIDE Instructions: DUE: Day of FINAL EXAM => Friday 12/21 st (1 st & 2 nd Periods) Thursday 12/20 th (4 th period) Section 1: PRODUCTION POSSIBLITIES FRONTIER

More information

Understanding the American Federal Reserve

Understanding the American Federal Reserve Understanding the American Federal Reserve The Federal Reserve headquarters is in Washington, DC. The basic structure of the Federal Reserve System includes: The Federal Reserve Board of Governors The

More information

1) List the 3 functions of money: 4) The Federal Reserve is the bank of the USA. It is considered from the Government and has 2 primary goals:

1) List the 3 functions of money: 4) The Federal Reserve is the bank of the USA. It is considered from the Government and has 2 primary goals: AP ECONOMICS---Ippolito 2017 Study Guide for Monetary Policy (unit #4) Name: Due Friday December 8 th Multiple Choice Test (25 questions, 100 pts) 1) List the 3 functions of money: 2) What is liquidity?

More information

The Federal Reserve & Monetary Policy

The Federal Reserve & Monetary Policy The Federal Reserve & Monetary Policy Essential Standards SSEMA2B: Describe the organization of the Federal Reserve System (12 Districts, Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC), and Board of Governors. SSEMA2C:

More information

Macro Problem Set 3 Fall 2017

Macro Problem Set 3 Fall 2017 Macro Problem Set 3 Fall 2017 Directions: Choose the single best answer for each question. Answers should be turned in on the Scantron form at the beginning of class. True=A/False=B 15 points 1) Savings

More information

Aggregate Supply and Aggregate Demand

Aggregate Supply and Aggregate Demand Aggregate Supply and Aggregate Demand ECO 301: Money and Banking 1 1.1 Goals Goals Specific Goals Be able to explain GDP fluctuations when the price level is also flexible. Explain how real GDP and the

More information

Monetary Policy Tools 16.3

Monetary Policy Tools 16.3 Monetary Policy Tools 16.3 What is the process of money creation? What three tools does the Federal Reserve use to change the money supply? Why are some tools of monetary policy favored over others? Money

More information

UNITS 12-13: FIXING AN ECONOMY: FISCAL & MONETARY POLICY WORKSHEET USE THE LECTURE NOTES TO ANSWER THE FOLLOWING QUESTIONS (10 pts each)

UNITS 12-13: FIXING AN ECONOMY: FISCAL & MONETARY POLICY WORKSHEET USE THE LECTURE NOTES TO ANSWER THE FOLLOWING QUESTIONS (10 pts each) DUE DATE: NAME: UNITS 12-13: FIXING AN ECONOMY: FISCAL & MONETARY POLICY WORKSHEET USE THE LECTURE NOTES TO ANSWER THE FOLLOWING QUESTIONS (10 pts each) 1. John Keynes suggested that government should

More information

FINAL EXAM STUDY GUIDE

FINAL EXAM STUDY GUIDE AP MACROECONOMICS-2017 Name: FINAL EXAM STUDY GUIDE Instructions: DUE: Day of FINAL EXAM => Friday 12/22 nd (1 st & 2 nd Periods) Thursday 12/21 st (4 th period) Section 1: PRODUCTION POSSIBLITIES FRONTIER

More information

Unit 3: Aggregate Demand and Supply and Fiscal Policy

Unit 3: Aggregate Demand and Supply and Fiscal Policy Unit 3: Aggregate Demand and Supply and Fiscal Policy 1 Demand and Supply Review 1. Define Demand and the Law of Demand. 2. Identify the three concepts that explain why demand is downward sloping. 3. Identify

More information

16-3: Monetary Policy. Notes

16-3: Monetary Policy. Notes 16-3: Monetary Policy Notes I will gain an understanding of the three tools used by the Fed I will gain an understanding of when the Fed uses expansionary and contractionary monetary policy. Monetary Policy

More information

Chapter 14 Monetary Policy

Chapter 14 Monetary Policy Chapter Overview Chapter 14 Monetary Policy The objectives and the mechanics of monetary policy are covered in this chapter. It is organized around seven major topics: (1) interest rate determination;

More information

Free Response Answers

Free Response Answers Free Response Answers 1. (1998 #1) The increase in government spending leads to an outward shift in aggregate demand. Given that the economy is at full employment, the price level increases. The effect

More information

Fluctuations in the economy s output. 1. Three Components of Investment

Fluctuations in the economy s output. 1. Three Components of Investment ECON 3560/5040 INVESTMENT - Investment is the most volatile component of GDP Fluctuations in the economy s output - Why is investment negatively related to the interest rate? - What causes the investment

More information

Business Cycle Theory

Business Cycle Theory Business Cycle Theory Changes in Business Activity Economics, Unit: 06 Lesson: 01 Objectives 1.Describe phases of business cycle 2.Identify and explain the factors that cause business cycles 3.Analyze

More information

Worksheet 27.1: Monetary Policy Cause and Effect

Worksheet 27.1: Monetary Policy Cause and Effect Worksheet 27.1: Monetary Policy Cause and Effect 1. If the FED wants to increase the supply, determine the use of the three FED tools and explain how the supply increase would happen. Increase the supply

More information

Practice Test Macroeconomics Spring 2008 Chapter 16 The Monetary System

Practice Test Macroeconomics Spring 2008 Chapter 16 The Monetary System Practice Test Macroeconomics Spring 2008 Chapter 16 The Monetary System MULTIPLE CHOICE 1. Mia puts money into a piggy bank so she can spend it later. What function of money does this illustrate? a. store

More information

Fed Funds Rates Expected to Rise

Fed Funds Rates Expected to Rise Educational Series Fed Funds Rates Expected to Rise With the December 16th Federal Open Market Committee (the FOMC) meeting rapidly approaching I felt it important to revisit the discussion of what happens

More information

2. Suppose a family s annual disposable income is $8000 of which it saves $2000. (a) What is their APC?

2. Suppose a family s annual disposable income is $8000 of which it saves $2000. (a) What is their APC? REVIEW Chapters 10 and 13 Fiscal Policy 1. Complete the following table assuming that (a) MPS = 1/5, (b) there is no government and (c) all saving is personal saving. Level of output and income Consumption

More information

SV151, Principles of Economics K. Christ 6 9 February 2012

SV151, Principles of Economics K. Christ 6 9 February 2012 SV151, Principles of Economics K. Christ 6 9 February 2012 SV151, Principles of Economics K. Christ 9 February 2012 Key terms / chapter 21: Medium of exchange Unit of account Store of value Liquidity Commodity

More information

Unit 3: Aggregate Demand and Supply and Fiscal Policy

Unit 3: Aggregate Demand and Supply and Fiscal Policy Unit 3: Aggregate Demand and Supply and Fiscal Policy 1 Aggregate Demand 2 What is Aggregate Demand? Aggregate means added all together. When we use aggregates we combine all prices and all quantities.

More information

Multiple Choice Identify the letter of the choice that best completes the statement or answers the question.

Multiple Choice Identify the letter of the choice that best completes the statement or answers the question. Chapter 16 review Multiple Choice Identify the letter of the choice that best completes the statement or answers the question. 1. Why does the Federal Reserve alter monetary policy? a. to regulate the

More information

The Influence of Monetary and Fiscal Policy on Aggregate Demand. Lecture

The Influence of Monetary and Fiscal Policy on Aggregate Demand. Lecture The Influence of Monetary and Fiscal Policy on Aggregate Demand Lecture 10 28.4.2015 Previous Lecture Short Run Economic Fluctuations Short Run vs. Long Run The classical dichotomy and monetary neutrality

More information

Section 5 - The Financial Sector

Section 5 - The Financial Sector Section 5 - The Financial Sector Multiple Choice Identify the choice that best completes the statement or answers the question. 1. Which of the following assets is the MOST liquid? A. checkable bank deposits

More information

Reading Essentials and Study Guide

Reading Essentials and Study Guide Lesson 2 Monetary Policy ESSENTIAL QUESTION How does the government promote the economic goals of price stability, full employment, and economic growth? Reading HELPDESK Academic Vocabulary explicit openly

More information

Money Creation. The process by which banks create money is so simple that the mind is repelled. John Kenneth Galbraith My favorite economist

Money Creation. The process by which banks create money is so simple that the mind is repelled. John Kenneth Galbraith My favorite economist The Fractional Reserve System Money Creation 13 The process by which banks create money is so simple that the mind is repelled. John Kenneth Galbraith My favorite economist Monetary Multiplier Last Word

More information

The Federal Reserve System and Open Market Operations

The Federal Reserve System and Open Market Operations DYNAMIC POWERPOINT SLIDES BY SOLINA LINDAHL CHAPTER 32 The Federal Reserve System and Open Market Operations CHAPTER OUTLINE What Is the Federal Reserve System? The U.S. Money Supplies Fractional Reserve

More information

Cosumnes River College Principles of Macroeconomics Problem Set 7 Due May 1, 2017

Cosumnes River College Principles of Macroeconomics Problem Set 7 Due May 1, 2017 Spring 2017 Cosumnes River College Principles of Macroeconomics Problem Set 7 Due May 1, 2017 Name: Solutions Prof. Dowell Instructions: Write the answers clearly and concisely on these sheets in the spaces

More information

ECON Intermediate Macroeconomic Theory

ECON Intermediate Macroeconomic Theory ECON 322 - Intermediate Macroeconomic Theory Spring 2018 Mankiw, Macroeconomics, 8th ed., Chapter 4 Chapter 4: The Monetary System Key points: Define money What does a bank s balance sheet look like? Relationship

More information

Name Date Per. Part 1: Aggregate Demand

Name Date Per. Part 1: Aggregate Demand Name Date Per Part 1: Aggregate Demand 1. Aggregate means. When we use aggregates, we combine. Aggregate Demand is all the goods and services ( ) that buyers are willing and able to purchase at different

More information

Fall 2013 Unit 3 - MACROECONOMIC POLICY

Fall 2013 Unit 3 - MACROECONOMIC POLICY Chapters 10 and 13 - Fiscal Policy Fall 2013 Unit 3 - MACROECONOMIC POLICY Reading Assignments: o Chapter 10: ALL o Chapter 13: ALL o PLUS Review Ch. 18 pp. 374-378 "Taxation and Aggregate Supply" Study

More information

Econ 202 Homework 5 Monetary Policy - 25 Points

Econ 202 Homework 5 Monetary Policy - 25 Points 1. Money serves all following economic functions EXCEPT: a. a source of economic wealth. b. a method of exchange. c. a standard of value. d. a store of value. 2. The term liquidity refers to a. the ability

More information

Chapter 16: The Federal Reserve and Monetary Policy

Chapter 16: The Federal Reserve and Monetary Policy SCHS SOCIAL STUDIES What you need to know UNIT 6 1. Describe the structure of today s Federal Reserve System 2. Describe how the Federal Reserve serves the federal government 3. Understand why some monetary

More information

The Aggregate Demand/Aggregate Supply Model

The Aggregate Demand/Aggregate Supply Model CHAPTER 27 The Aggregate Demand/Aggregate Supply Model The Theory of Economics... is a method rather than a doctrine, an apparatus of the mind, a technique of thinking which helps its possessor to draw

More information

LECTURE 20 LAST TIME Aggregate Demand & Aggregate Supply together again for the first time. Aww. NEWS. TODAY. Aggregate Demand & Supply in a Crisis

LECTURE 20 LAST TIME Aggregate Demand & Aggregate Supply together again for the first time. Aww. NEWS. TODAY. Aggregate Demand & Supply in a Crisis Aggregate Demand & Supply in a Crisis LECTURE 20 LT TIME Aggregate Demand & Aggregate Supply together again for the first time. Aww. NEWS. TODAY. Aggregate Supply & Aggregate Demand Effects. Fiscal Policy;

More information

Unemployment that occurs at the natural rate of output is called:

Unemployment that occurs at the natural rate of output is called: ECON 1A Macroeconomics Lecture Notes: Chapter 11 - Aggregate Supply Aggregate Supply in the Short Run AS - relationship between the economy s price level and Assuming: Technology is fixed. Labor & AS:

More information

Economics 102 Homework #7 Due: December 7 th at the beginning of class

Economics 102 Homework #7 Due: December 7 th at the beginning of class Economics 102 Homework #7 Due: December 7 th at the beginning of class Complete all of the problems. Please do not write your answers on this sheet. Show all of your work. 1. The economy starts in long

More information

EXAM PREP WORKSHOP # 5 > COMBINED MONETARY AND FISCAL POLICY

EXAM PREP WORKSHOP # 5 > COMBINED MONETARY AND FISCAL POLICY LIGHTHOUSE CPA SOCIAL SCIENCES DEPARTMENT AP ECONOMICS EXAM PREP WORKSHOP # 5 > COMBINED MONETARY AND FISCAL POLICY NAME : DATE : Review Of Tools Of Monetary And Fiscal Policy : 1. Both monetary and fiscal

More information

Unit 3 - MACROECONOMIC POLICY

Unit 3 - MACROECONOMIC POLICY Unit 3 - MACROECONOMIC POLICY Chapters 10 and 13 - Fiscal Policy Reading Assignments: o ALL of chapter 10 o ALL of chapter 13 o PLUS pp. 367-368 "Taxation and Aggregate Supply" Study Guide o Chapter 10:

More information

The Monetary System P R I N C I P L E S O F. N. Gregory Mankiw. What Money Is and Why It s Important

The Monetary System P R I N C I P L E S O F. N. Gregory Mankiw. What Money Is and Why It s Important C H A P T E R 29 The Monetary System P R I N C I P L E S O F Economics N. Gregory Mankiw What Money Is and Why It s Important Without money, trade would require barter, the exchange of one good or service

More information

QUANTITATIVE EASING: WHAT MIGHT MILTON FRIEDMAN HAVE SAID?

QUANTITATIVE EASING: WHAT MIGHT MILTON FRIEDMAN HAVE SAID? QUANTITATIVE EASING: WHAT MIGHT MILTON FRIEDMAN HAVE SAID? COMMENTS TO THE ECONOMIC CLUB OF SHEBOYGAN APRIL 20, 2016 Paul L. Kasriel econtrarian@gmail.com Econtrarian, LLC 920-818-0236 The Econtrarian

More information

I. A. B. C. D. E. F I. A. B. C. I. A B. C.

I. A. B. C. D. E. F I. A. B. C. I. A B. C. AP EXAM FRQS I. Assume that the United States economy is in long-run equilibrium with an expected inflation rate of 6 percent and an unemployment rate of 5 percent. The nominal interest rate is 8 percent.

More information

Chapter 11 The Determination of Aggregate Output, the Price Level, and the Interest Rate

Chapter 11 The Determination of Aggregate Output, the Price Level, and the Interest Rate Principles of Macroeconomics Twelfth Edition Chapter 11 The Determination of Aggregate Output, the Price Level, and the Interest Rate Copyright 2017 Pearson Education, Inc. 11-1 Copyright 11-2 Chapter

More information

I. The Money Market. A. Money Demand (M d ) Handout 9

I. The Money Market. A. Money Demand (M d ) Handout 9 University of California-Davis Economics 1B-Intro to Macro Handout 9 TA: Jason Lee Email: jawlee@ucdavis.edu In the last chapter we developed the aggregate demand/aggregate supply model and used it to

More information

UNIVERSITY OF MIAMI Principles of Macroeconomics (ECO 212) Answer Key to the Third Sample Midterm Professor Adrian Peralta-Alva

UNIVERSITY OF MIAMI Principles of Macroeconomics (ECO 212) Answer Key to the Third Sample Midterm Professor Adrian Peralta-Alva UNIVERSITY OF MIAMI Principles of Macroeconomics (ECO 212) Answer Key to the Third Sample Midterm Professor Adrian Peralta-Alva Section I. Multiple-choice questions (80 points total). Clearly mark what

More information

For instance, some societies used cows as money 1 cow = 2 goats 1 cow = 5 blankets 1 cow = 3 chairs 1 cow = 50 loafs of bread

For instance, some societies used cows as money 1 cow = 2 goats 1 cow = 5 blankets 1 cow = 3 chairs 1 cow = 50 loafs of bread Money History of Money Barter economy: Goods were exchanged directly for other goods, so there was no money in the economy. It was very difficult to have a lot of exchange going on because of the requirement

More information

Aggregate Demand and Aggregate Supply

Aggregate Demand and Aggregate Supply Aggregate Demand and Aggregate Supply Aggregate Demand and Aggregate Supply The Learning Objectives in this presentation are covered in Chapter 20: Aggregate Demand and Aggregate Supply LEARNING OBJECTIVES

More information

The Hottest M&A Market Ever:

The Hottest M&A Market Ever: The Hottest M&A Market Ever: What You Should Do About It Keynote at the World Angel Investment Summit September 27, 2018 Toronto, Canada Basil Peters Early Exits 10 Years On Ten years ago when I wrote

More information

5. What is the Savings-Investment Spending Identity? Savings = Investment Spending for the economy as a whole

5. What is the Savings-Investment Spending Identity? Savings = Investment Spending for the economy as a whole Unit 4 Test Review KEY Savings, Investment and the Financial System 1. What is a financial intermediary? Explain how each of the following fulfills that role: Financial Intermediary: Transforms funds into

More information

After studying this chapter you will be able to

After studying this chapter you will be able to 30 Monetary Policy After studying this chapter you will be able to! Describe Canada s monetary policy objective and the framework for setting and achieving it! Explain how the Bank of Canada makes its

More information

Principles of Money, Banking, and Financial Markets, 12e (Ritter / Silber / Udell) Chapter 2 The Role of Money in the Macroeconomy

Principles of Money, Banking, and Financial Markets, 12e (Ritter / Silber / Udell) Chapter 2 The Role of Money in the Macroeconomy Principles of Money, Banking, and Financial Markets, 12e (Ritter / Silber / Udell) Chapter 2 The Role of Money in the Macroeconomy 2.1 Introducing Money 1) The most prominent role for money is to serve

More information

17.1 How Banks Work 17.2 Monetary Policy in the Short Run 17.3 Monetary Policy in the Long Run

17.1 How Banks Work 17.2 Monetary Policy in the Short Run 17.3 Monetary Policy in the Long Run CHAPTER 17 Money Creation, the Federal Reserve System, and Monetary Policy 17.1 How Banks Work 17.2 Monetary Policy in the Short Run 17.3 Monetary Policy in the Long Run 1 CONTEMPORARY ECONOMICS: LESSON

More information

Economics Chapters Duke Unit III Measuring Economic Performance

Economics Chapters Duke Unit III Measuring Economic Performance Economics Chapters 12-16 Duke Unit III Measuring Economic Performance Chapter 12 Section 1 (Pgs. 301-308) Gross Domestic Product (GDP)- 1. What is the difference between final goods and services as opposed

More information

Elements of Macroeconomics: Homework #6. Due 11/27or 11/28 in assigned Section

Elements of Macroeconomics: Homework #6. Due 11/27or 11/28 in assigned Section Elements of Macroeconomics: Homework #6 Due 11/27or 11/28 in assigned Section Name: Section: Section I Based on the information given below, answer the following questions Brazil s real GDP = 6 trillion

More information

2017 Commercial Lending SWOT Analysis for Community-Based Financial Institutions

2017 Commercial Lending SWOT Analysis for Community-Based Financial Institutions FINANCIAL PERFORMANCE 2017 Commercial Lending SWOT Analysis for Community-Based Financial Institutions By Patrick True, ProfitStars Lending Solutions sales@profitstars.com 877.827.7101 SWOT Analysis (noun)

More information

Module 31. Monetary Policy and the Interest Rate. What you will learn in this Module:

Module 31. Monetary Policy and the Interest Rate. What you will learn in this Module: Module 31 Monetary Policy and the Interest Rate What you will learn in this Module: How the Federal Reserve implements monetary policy, moving the interest to affect aggregate output Why monetary policy

More information

ECON Intermediate Macroeconomic Theory

ECON Intermediate Macroeconomic Theory ECON 3510 - Intermediate Macroeconomic Theory Fall 2015 Mankiw, Macroeconomics, 8th ed., Chapter 12 Chapter 12: Aggregate Demand 2: Applying the IS-LM Model Key points: Policy in the IS LM model: Monetary

More information

Intermediary Balance Sheets Tobias Adrian and Nina Boyarchenko, NY Fed Discussant: Annette Vissing-Jorgensen, UC Berkeley

Intermediary Balance Sheets Tobias Adrian and Nina Boyarchenko, NY Fed Discussant: Annette Vissing-Jorgensen, UC Berkeley Intermediary Balance Sheets Tobias Adrian and Nina Boyarchenko, NY Fed Discussant: Annette Vissing-Jorgensen, UC Berkeley Objective: Construct a general equilibrium model with two types of intermediaries:

More information

Definitions and Basic Concepts

Definitions and Basic Concepts Definitions and Basic Concepts 1. Compare and contrast the federal funds rate with the discount rate. How does the discount rate influence the effective federal funds rate? Federal funds rate: the interest

More information

The Influence of Monetary and Fiscal Policy on Aggregate Demand

The Influence of Monetary and Fiscal Policy on Aggregate Demand The Influence of Monetary and Fiscal Policy on Aggregate Demand Chapter 34 Copyright 2001 by Harcourt, Inc. All rights reserved. Requests for permission to make copies of any part of the work should be

More information

Economic Fundamentals

Economic Fundamentals CHAPTER 5 Economic Fundamentals INTRODUCTION Economics, put simply, is the study of shortages supply vs. demand. As the demand for a product or service rises, the price of those goods or services will

More information

Objectives for Chapter 24: Monetarism (Continued) Chapter 24: The Basic Theory of Monetarism (Continued) (latest revision October 2004)

Objectives for Chapter 24: Monetarism (Continued) Chapter 24: The Basic Theory of Monetarism (Continued) (latest revision October 2004) 1 Objectives for Chapter 24: Monetarism (Continued) At the end of Chapter 24, you will be able to answer the following: 1. What is the short-run? 2. Use the theory of job searching in a period of unanticipated

More information

The Federal Reserve System and Open Market Operations

The Federal Reserve System and Open Market Operations Chapter 15 MODERN PRINCIPLES OF ECONOMICS Third Edition The Federal Reserve System and Open Market Operations Outline What Is the Federal Reserve System? The U.S. Money Supplies Fractional Reserve Banking,

More information

COURSE MACROECONOMICS EXAM #2 (Two Hours) NOVEMBER 7, 2017

COURSE MACROECONOMICS EXAM #2 (Two Hours) NOVEMBER 7, 2017 COURSE 180.101 MACROECONOMICS EXAM #2 (Two Hours) NOVEMBER 7, 2017 NAME TA* *Two points if you write down the name of your TA Section I (20 points) (2 pts each) 1. Name both the outgoing Chair and the

More information

Lecture 13: The Great Depression

Lecture 13: The Great Depression Lecture 13: The Great Depression November 1, 2016 Prof. Wyatt Brooks Finishing the Equity Premium Equity Premium: How much higher is the average return on stocks than on safe assets (US Treasury bonds)

More information

Consumer Price Index

Consumer Price Index The Return of Inflation? Yet another Fed meeting has now come and gone without a rate hike. As much as market participants continue to obsess over when the Fed will normalize interest rates, the Fed Funds

More information

Securing Your Lifetime Income Stream

Securing Your Lifetime Income Stream Securing Your Lifetime Income Stream Bob Carlson AAII-DC Editor, Retirement Watch October 2012 800-552-1152 The Big Challenges The Fed s Zero Interest Rate Policy Both inflation & deflation are possible

More information

EQ: What happens to equilibrium price and quantity when there is a change in supply or demand?

EQ: What happens to equilibrium price and quantity when there is a change in supply or demand? EQ: What happens to equilibrium price and quantity when there is a change in supply or demand? The main thing that affects Supply is production costs. Costs of factors of production affect supply: Employee

More information

The Influence of Monetary and Fiscal Policy on Aggregate Demand

The Influence of Monetary and Fiscal Policy on Aggregate Demand The Influence of Monetary and Fiscal Policy on Aggregate Demand Chapter 20 Copyright 2001 by Harcourt, Inc. All rights reserved. Requests for permission to make copies of any part of the work should be

More information

Monetary Policy and Economic Outcomes *

Monetary Policy and Economic Outcomes * OpenStax-CNX module: m48773 1 Monetary Policy and Economic Outcomes * OpenStax This work is produced by OpenStax-CNX and licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution License 4.0 By the end of this section,

More information

How has money changed over the centuries? What are the functions of money? Where does our money come from?

How has money changed over the centuries? What are the functions of money? Where does our money come from? How has money changed over the centuries? What are the functions of money? Where does our money come from? Section Preview In this section, you will learn that money functions as a medium of exchange,

More information

THE FEDERAL RESERVE AND MONETARY POLICY Macroeconomics in Context (Goodwin, et al.)

THE FEDERAL RESERVE AND MONETARY POLICY Macroeconomics in Context (Goodwin, et al.) Chapter 12 THE FEDERAL RESERVE AND MONETARY POLICY Macroeconomics in Context (Goodwin, et al.) Chapter Overview In this chapter, you will be introduced to a standard treatment of central banking and monetary

More information

Economics Chapter 13: FISCAL AND MONETARY POLICY

Economics Chapter 13: FISCAL AND MONETARY POLICY Economics Chapter 13: FISCAL AND MONETARY POLICY SECTION 1 Fiscal Policy Two Types of Fiscal Policy Fiscal policy deals with the government makes in spending or taxation to achieve particular economic.

More information

Money, Banking and the Federal Reserve

Money, Banking and the Federal Reserve Money, Banking and the Federal Reserve What Is Money? Money is any asset that can easily be used to purchase goods and services. Fiat money : Money, such as paper currency, that is authorized by a central

More information

Questions and Answers. Intermediate Macroeconomics. Second Year

Questions and Answers. Intermediate Macroeconomics. Second Year Questions and Answers Intermediate Macroeconomics Second Year Chapter2 Q1: MCQ 1) If the quantity of money increases, the A) price level rises and the AD curve does not shift. B) AD curve shifts leftward

More information