Question 1. When you have $1,000 in a savings account at a bank:
A) the bank holds a financial asset of $1,000 and you hold a financial liability of $1,000.
B) the bank holds a financial liability of $1,000 and you hold a financial asset of $1,000.
C) both you and the bank now have a financial asset of $1,000.
D) both you and the bank now have a financial liability of $1,000.
Question 2. When you withdraw $1,000 from your bank account:
A) the bank's financial assets fall by $1,000 and your financial liabilities rise by $1,000.
B) the bank's financial liabilities fall by $1,000 and your financial assets rise by $1,000.
C) both your and the bank's financial assets rise by $1,000.
D) the bank's financial liabilities and assets fall by $1,000, and you have exchanged one financial asset for another.
Question 3. The short-term interest rate is determined in the:
A) loanable funds market.
B) stock market.
C) exchange rate market.
D) money market.
Question 4. The Federal Reserve Bank is the U.S. central bank:
A) whose liabilities serve as cash in the United States.
B) whose assets serve as cash in the United States.
C) who holds, in reserve, all financial assets of banks.
D) who holds, in reserve, all financial liabilities of banks.
Question 5. The chief difference between the M1 and M2 measures of the money supply is:
A) the supply of M1 exceeds the supply of M2.
B) M2 excludes traveler's checks.
C) M1 is a broader, more comprehensive measure.
D) M2 includes assets with a lower liquidity than those in M1.
Question 6. Banks hold people's cash for free, and sometimes even pay for the privilege of holding it, because:
A) they are nice.
B) deposits allow banks to make profitable loans.
C) the Federal Reserve requires that they do so.
D) the cash can be deposited at the Federal Reserve Bank to earn interest.
Question 7. Early medieval bankers were similar to modern bankers in that:
A) they lend a portion of the deposits.
B) they could not create money.
C) deposits were backed by gold.
D) they were not subject to any regulation.
Question 8. The actual reserve ratio:
A) usually is less than the required reserve ratio.
B) usually is equal to the required reserve ratio.
C) usually is greater than the required reserve ratio.
D) can be greater than or less than the required reserves ratio to deposits depending on the currency to deposit ratio.
Question 9. A reserve ratio of 0.10 means that a bank can lend an amount equal to:
A) 10 percent of its deposit liabilities.
B) 10 percent of its excess reserves.
C) 90 percent of its deposit liabilities.
D) 90 percent of its excess reserves.
Question 10. As the reserve ratio goes up, the simple money multiplier goes:
A) up, and more money will be created.
B) down, and less money will be created.
C) up, and less money will be created.
D) down, and more money will be created.
Question 11. The key to understanding the money creation process is the fact that:
A) whenever banks create financial assets for themselves, they create financial liabilities for individuals, and those financial liabilities are considered money.
B) whenever banks create financial liabilities for themselves, they create financial assets for individuals, and those financial assets are considered money.
C) banks are able to print dollar bills and add these to circulation whenever they extend loans.
D) since the money supply excludes cash but includes checking account deposits, money is created whenever individuals deposit cash into a checking account.
Question 12. A month ago, you bought a one-year bond with a value of $100 that pays a fixed interest rate of 5 percent per year. The interest rate of the economy was also 5 percent. Today you read in the newspaper that the interest rate in the economy increased to 6 percent. You are holding a bond that is:
A) highly desirable to other investors.
B) less desirable to other investors.
C) not desirable at all.
D) desirable to you.
Question 13. In the AS/AD model, an expansionary monetary policy has the greatest effect on the price level when it:
A) increases both nominal and real income.
B) increases real income but not nominal income.
C) increases nominal income but not real income.
D) doesn't increase real or nominal income.
Question 14. In the AS/AD model, a contractionary monetary policy:
A) reduces investment but increases aggregate demand.
B) reduces both investment and aggregate demand.
C) increases both investment and aggregate demand.
D) increases investment but reduces aggregate demand.
Question 15. The effect of an expansionary monetary policy results in a shift of the aggregate demand to the right. The effect of the monetary policy on the aggregate demand is:
A) direct from the money supply to the aggregate demand.
B) indirect through the short-term and long-term interest rates.
C) direct from the money supply to the aggregate supply.
D) indirect through the government expenditures.
Question 16. The explicit functions given to the Fed by the Congress include all of the following except:
A) regulating financial institutions.
B) serving as a lender of last resort to financial institutions.
C) providing banking services to the U.S. government.
D) holding the nominal interest rate no more than 2 percent above the real interest rate.
Question 17. The monetary base includes:
A) currency and coin in circulation plus checkable deposits.
B) currency and coin in circulation only.
C) vault cash plus checkable deposits.
D) currency and cash plus commercial bank deposits at the Fed.
Question 18. Suppose the reserve requirement is 20% and there are no cash holdings or excess reserves. A $1 billion purchase of government securities by the Fed will:
A) increase the potential amount of checkable deposits in the banking system by $5 billion.
B) increase the potential amount of checkable deposits in the banking system by $1 billion.
C) reduce the potential amount of checkable deposits in the banking system by $1 billion.
D) reduce the potential amount of checkable deposits in the banking system by $5 billion.
Question 19. When the Fed reduces the discount rate, this sends a signal to banks that the Fed wants:
A) to reduce the reserve requirement.
B) the money supply to contract.
C) the Federal funds rate to increase.
D) the money supply to expand
Question 20. If the Fed funds rate is below the Fed's target range the Fed should:
A) follow expansionary policy.
B) follow contractionary policy.
C) print money.
D) do nothing.