Macroeconomics Chapter 8 – Flashcards

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Financial system
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The group of institutions in the economy that help to match one person's saving with another person's investment
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The financial system moves the economy's scarce resources from savers (________) to borrowers (_______).
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The financial system moves the economy's scarce resources from savers (households and governments) to borrowers (firms).
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Financial markets
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- Financial institutions through which savers can directly provide funds to borrowers - Directly bring savers and borrowers together - Bonds and stocks
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Bond
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A certificate of indebtedness that specifies the obligations of the borrow to the holder of the bond
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Who issues bonds?
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Firms and governments
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Date of maturity
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Identifies the time at which the loan will be repaid, as specified by the bond agreement
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Principal
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Promise of interest and eventual repayment of the amount burrowed
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Perpetuity
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A bond that never matures
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________-term bonds are riskier than ________-term bonds.
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Long-term bonds are riskier than short-term bonds.
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Credit risk
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The probability that the borrower will fail to pay some of the interest or principal.
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What affects credit risk?
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- Level of debt carried by issuer of bond - Recent changes in amount of debt carried - Stability of owner's revenues
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Default
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Failure to pay; borrowers can default on their loans by declaring bankruptcy.
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Describe the interest rates of junk bonds in comparison to more secure bonds.
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Junk bonds pay considerably higher interest rates than the bonds issued by more secure corporations and by governments.
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Stock
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A claim to partial ownership in a firm
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How does a buyer of a stock earn return?
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- Dividend: a share of profits earned by partial owners - Capital gain: selling a stock for more than it was purchased for
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Why is the return on stocks typically greater than the return on bonds?
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- Stocks are usually riskier than bonds because of the risk of capital loss - In the case of bankruptcy, stock holders are the last ones that are compensated
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Equity finance
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The sale of stock to raise money
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Stock index
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An average of a group of stock prices
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What do stock prices reflect?
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Expected profitability
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Is the purchase of a stock or bond considered an investment?
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No
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Financial intermediaries
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- Financial institutions through which savers can indirectly provide funds to borrowers - Indirectly bring together savers and borrowers - Banks and mutual funds
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Banks
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Provide loans to borrowers and accept deposits from savers
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In what way do banks facilitate purchases of goods and services?
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They allow people to write cheques against their deposits
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Mutual fund
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An institution that sells shares to the public and uses the proceeds to buy a portfolio of stocks and bonds
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Advantages of a mutual fund
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1. Allow people with small amounts of money to diversify with little risk because they only have a small stake in each company. 2. Actively managed mutual funds give ordinary people access to the skills of professional money managers, usually for a fee.
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Index funds
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Mutual funds that buy all the stocks in a given stock index and perform somewhat better on average than mutual funds that take advantage of active management
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National income accounting identity
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Y = C + I + G - Y = GDP in a closed economy - C = consumption - I = investment - G = government purchases
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National saving
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The total income in the economy that remains after paying for consumption and government purchases. In a closed economy, saving equals investment.
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S = ? = ?
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S = Sp + Sg = I
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Private saving
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The income that households have left after paying for taxes and consumption
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Sp = ?
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Sp = Y - T - C
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Sg = ?
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Sg = T - G
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Public saving
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The tax revenue that the government has left after paying for its spending
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Budget surplus
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An excess of tax revenue over government spending (T>G)
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Budget deficit
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A shortfall of tax revenue from government spending (G>T)
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Government debt
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The sum of all past budget deficits and surpluses
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Debt is a ______ variable, while deficit is a ______ variable.
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Debt is a stock variable, while deficit is a flow variable.
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Market for loanable funds
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The market in which those who want to save supply funds and those who want to borrow to invest demand funds
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Loanable funds
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All income that people have chosen to save and lend out, rather than use for their own consumption
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Assumptions of the market for loanable funds model
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• All borrowing is done by firms who want to invest (purchase new capital equipment) • All saving is done by households and governments whose income is greater than their current spending on goods and services • Treat public (government) borrowing as negative saving
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What is the source of the supply of loanable funds?
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Saving by households and governments
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In what direction is the slope of the supply curve in the market for loanable funds and why?
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The slope of the supply curve is positive because higher interest rates increase the return of lending by households
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How can the supply of loanable funds be increased?
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Anything that causes the households/government to save more at any interest rate increases the supply of loanable funds.
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How do changes in taxes affect the supply curve?
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Changes in "T" do not shift supply curve since T is added to S(g) and subtracted from S(p), and national saving is S(g) + S(p)
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What is the source of the demand for loanable funds?
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Investment by firms
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In what direction is the slope of the demand curve in the market for loanable funds and why?
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The slope of the demand curve is negative because higher interest rates increase the cost of borrowing
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How can the demand of loanable funds be increased?
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Anything that causes a firm to want to purchase more capital at any interest rate will cause the demand to increase
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The _________ approaches the equilibrium level at which the supply and demand for loanable funds exactly balance.
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The interest rate approaches the equilibrium level at which the supply and demand for loanable funds exactly balance.
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The supply and demand for loanable funds depend on the ________ interest rate rather than the _______ interest rate.
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The supply and demand for loanable funds depend on the real interest rate rather than the nominal interest rate.
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Nominal interest rate
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The monetary return to saving and cost of borrowing
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Real interest rate
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The nominal interest rate corrected for inflation
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The relation between consumption tax and saving
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Under a consumption tax, income that is saved is not taxed, encouraging greater saving.
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Do tax changes affect the quantity of loanable funds supplied or demanded?
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A tax change alters the incentive for households to save at any given interest rate, therefore it would affect the quantity of loanable funds supplied at each interest rate.
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What would result if a reform of the tax laws encouraged greater saving?
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If a reform of the tax laws encouraged greater saving, the result would be lower interest rates and greater investment.
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Investment tax credit
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Gives a tax advantage to any firm building a new factory or buying a new piece of equipment
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What would result if a reform of the tax laws encouraged greater investment?
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If a reform of the tax laws encouraged greater investment, the result would be higher interest rates and greater saving.
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A change in the government budget balance represents a change in _______ saving and, thereby, in the _______ of loanable funds.
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A change in the government budget balance represents a change in public saving and, thereby, in the supply of loanable funds.
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When the government runs a budget deficit, public saving is _______, and national saving is _______.
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When the government runs a budget deficit, public saving is negative, and national saving is reduced.
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When the government reduces national saving by running a budget deficit, the interest rate _______, and investment by firms _______. A government budget deficit _______ the _______ of loanable funds.
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When the government reduces national saving by running a budget deficit, the interest rate rises, and investment by firms falls. A government budget deficit reduces the supply of loanable funds.
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A budget surplus ________ the supply of loanable funds, ________ the interest rate, and ________ investment by firms. ________ investment means ________ capital accumulation and more rapid economic ________.
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A budget surplus increases the supply of loanable funds, reduces the interest rate, and stimulates investment by firms. Higher investment means great capital accumulation and more rapid economic growth.
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What decisions does the government face when a virtuous cycle is reached?
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- Cut taxes - Increase spending on social programs - Pay off past debt
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Government net debt
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The difference between the value of government financial liabilities and financial assets • Declining net debt indicates that the economy is living within its means • Economic slowdowns cause the government net debt to rise
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