The Role and Nature of Money
Banking History in the U.S.
The Federal Reserve System
Banking Crises and Reforms
Banking Services and Credit
Financial Markets and Investment
100

What are the three main functions of money?


 Medium of exchange, unit of account, store of value.

100

What year was the First Bank of the United States created?

 1791

100

In what year was the Federal Reserve established?


 1913

100

What does FDIC stand for and what does it do?

 Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation; insures deposits up to $250,000.

100

What’s the difference between a debit card and a credit card?

Debit pulls directly from your account; credit lets you borrow money.

100

What are stocks?

 Shares of ownership in a corporation.

200

What is the difference between commodity and fiat money?


 Commodity money has intrinsic value; fiat money is backed by government trust.


200

 Why did the First Bank of the U.S. end?

 Its charter expired in 1811 and was not renewed.


200

 How many regional Federal Reserve Banks are there?

12

200

What caused the 2008 financial crisis?

 Risky home loans with balloon interest rates and mortgage defaults.

200

What’s one smart strategy for using credit cards?

 Only charge what you can pay off; pay weekly to avoid interest.

200

What is a bond?

 A loan to a corporation/government with a fixed interest return.

300

What are two examples of representative money?

 Paper money backed by gold or silver; gold/silver certificates.

300

 What was the Free Banking Era and when did it occur?

A period (1837–1863) without a federally chartered bank.

300

What does the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) do?

 Sets interest rates and controls the growth of the money supply.

300

What is foreclosure?

 When a bank takes possession of a property due to unpaid loans.

300

What is “liquidity” in financial terms?

 Ease of converting an asset into cash.


300

What is diversification and why is it important?


 Investing in a variety of assets to reduce risk.

400

Name four of the six factors that make currency effective.

 Uniformity, portability, acceptability, durability, divisibility, scarcity.

400

What issue arose during the Free Banking Era?

 State banks didn’t always have enough gold/silver to back currency, and fraud.

400

What’s the role of the Board of Governors in the Federal Reserve?

Oversees the system; members are appointed by the President.

400

What is the Federal Funds Rate?

 Interest rate banks charge each other to lend reserve balances.

400

 What’s a Certificate of Deposit (CD)?

 A timed deposit with interest, offered by banks/credit unions.

400

What’s the difference between capital gain and capital loss?


 Gain = sold for more than purchase; Loss = sold for less.

500

Why did early indigenous peoples in South America use cacao beans as money?

 They were a valuable, tradable commodity in their culture.

500

 How did Civil War reforms impact U.S. banking?

 Created federally chartered banks, standardized currency, and required reserves.

500

 How did the Fed respond to the Great Depression?

Initially fragmented; later reforms centralized its power in 1935.

500

 How did balloon interest rates contribute to the housing crash?

 Interest rates started low but increased drastically, leading to defaults.

500

What’s a credit score used for?

 To predict a person’s reliability in repaying debts

500

What is the difference between the capital and money markets?

 Capital = long-term funds; Money = short-term (under a year).