4.1: Financial Assets
4.2 Real /Nominal Interest Rates
4.3 A
4.3 B
4.4 Banking & Expand money
4.5 Money Market
4.6 Monetary Policy
4.7 Loanable Funds Market
100

giving up the change to earn money through interest (by holding cash)

What is opportunity cost (of holding cash)

100

Nominal - Inflation

What is the Fisher equation (real interest rate)
100

aggregate that includes  total amount of currency in circulation or on reserve by commercial banks

What is the monetary base


100

The United States' Central bank

What is the Federal Reserve

100

Reserves, Excess Reserves, and Loans are on this side of the bank balance sheet

What are assets to banks (on a bank balance sheet)

100

the Y axis in the money market

What is the nominal interest rate

100
The type of monetary policy that isuesd to correct a recessionary gap

What is expansionary monetary policy? 

100

a hypothetical market for the money that is able to be borrowed including the market for bonds, stocks, and personal loans

What is the Loanable Funds Market


200

The measure of how fast an asset can be turned into cash

What is liquidity?

200

They type of loan banks make to ensure they maintain the same real rate of return

a Flexible interest loan

200

aggregate that includes demand deposits, currency in circulation, and savings accounts

What is M1

200

Minimum amount of cash that a bank MUST hold

what are reserve requirements /what is the required reserve rate

200

Demand Deposits are on this side of the bank balance sheet

What are liabilities (on a bank balance sheet)

200

the aggregate the money market refers to

What is M1

200
The type of monetary policy used to correct an expansionary gap

What is contractionary monetary policy?

200

additional education, skills, certifications, knowledge, health etc that makes you a better person (and more importantly better part of the labor force)

What is Human Capital

300

Examples include crypto, real-estate, gold/silver. and art

What are examples of least liquid assets

300

The expected real inflation rate when banks charge 5% interest on all loans and the expected inflation rate is 2%?

What is 3%?

300

Aggregate that includes money in circulation, demand deposits, savings accounts, small denomination time deposits and retail money market funds

What is M2

300

buying or selling government debt (though bonds)

what are open market operations

300

Demand Deposits / Reserves =

What is the reserve requirement (rate)

300

Include changes in the aggregate price level, changes in GDP, changes in technology, and changes in the ability and costs of using money substitutes (like credit cards)

What is/are (changes that result in) a shift in the demand for money

300

The two reasons it takes a while for the economy to respond to monetary policy changes

What are recognition lag an impact lag?

300

When the government is running a deficit and drives up interest rates.  This leads to reduced investment spending.

What is Crowding Out?

400

The entity who sees a car loan as an asset

Who is the bank/lender


400

The actual rate of return when the bond with a 6% interest rate is met with 5% actual inflation rate.

What is 1% (rate of return)

400

If you move $500 from your checking account to purchase a CD, _______ is unchanged while _______ decreases.

(What is/are) M2 and M1 respectively 

400

the interest rate banks pay the Federal Reserve when a bank needs liquid now so they can get a short term loan of cash on this discounted rate

what is the discount rate/window

400

This function describes the way banks create money from a single deposit

What is the money multiplier

400

An increase in credit card fees can cause MD to increase resulting in this effect.

What is the nominal interest rate rising
400

The expansionary monetary policy in a limited reserve framework as a result of less money required to be in reserves.

What is the impact of a reduction in reserve rate?

400
The leftward shift of the demand curve when people have less money and are not as inclined to take on big purchases
What is the impact of a recession (on the Loanable funds market)?
500

The relationship between interest rates and bond values

What is an inverse relationship

500

The new nominal interest rate when Vern has a fixed interest CD with a nominal interest rate of 7% with no expected inflation.  If inflation is now expected to be 3%

What is 7%

500

= $210 billion

What is the monetary Base

500

(this isn't on the test but these 500 questions are usually easy for you so I had to throw this on here sorry)

The Chair of the Federal Reserve

Who is Jerome Powell

500

1/rr

What is the money multiplier formula

500

How will a change in the Demand for money due to a decrease in GDP affect the AD curve?

(this does not answer in a question--there's no better way to format this one)

Demand will decrease, causing NIR to decrease.  NIR decreasing boosts interest based spending which increases the Consumption portion of the AD curve which shifts AD to the right (increase)

500

The Expansionary monetary policy that occurs in an ample reserves system.

What is a decrease in administered interest rates/ policy rate?

500

The rightward shift of the supply curve when there is more money entering the market to work with 

What is the effect of positive inflow (net capital inflow on the loanable funds market)?