• Shuffle
    Toggle On
    Toggle Off
  • Alphabetize
    Toggle On
    Toggle Off
  • Front First
    Toggle On
    Toggle Off
  • Both Sides
    Toggle On
    Toggle Off
  • Read
    Toggle On
    Toggle Off
Reading...
Front

Card Range To Study

through

image

Play button

image

Play button

image

Progress

1/21

Click to flip

Use LEFT and RIGHT arrow keys to navigate between flashcards;

Use UP and DOWN arrow keys to flip the card;

H to show hint;

A reads text to speech;

21 Cards in this Set

  • Front
  • Back
M1
Currency + Checking Deposits
M2
M1 (Currency + Checking Deposits)+ Savings deposits, money market deposit accounts, overnight repurchase agreements, Eurodollars, noninstitutional money market mutual funds, and small time deposits.
M3
M2 (M1 (Currency + Checking Deposits)+ Savings deposits, money market deposit accounts, overnight repurchase agreements, Eurodollars, noninstitutional money market mutual funds, and small time deposits.)

+ Institutional money market mutual funds, large time deposits, and repurchase agreements and Eurodollars lasing more than 1 day.
MZM
M2 (M1 (Currency + Checking Deposits)+ Savings deposits, money market deposit accounts, overnight repurchase agreements, Eurodollars, noninstitutional money market mutual funds, and small time deposits.)

- Small denomination time deposits + noninstitutional money market mutual funds.

This is Zero Maturity Money
Divisia Money
Money concept that weights various types of financial assets according to their degree of "moneyness" and sums them up to try to determine how much money people will act like they have when it comes to spend.
Excess reserves
The amount arrived at when required reserves are subtracted from a bank's actual reserves.
Actual Reserves
The reserve amount computed by a bank by summing its holdings of vault cash with its holdings of reserve deposits at Federal Reserve banks over a 2-week reserve maintenance period
Required reserves
Financial institutions are required by law to maintain minimum reserves equal to a percentage of specified deposit liabilities. Reserve requirements vary with the deposit size of the institution and the type of deposit. They are held at Federal Reserve banks or as cash in financial institutions' vaults.
Fed funds rate
The rate at which banks and other depository institutions lend excess reserves or other immediately available cash deposits to each other overnight; the rate is determined by negotiation between the private borrowers and lenders of reserves.
Monetary theory
Theory that wehn the supply of money is greater than the amount of money people demand, people will spend faster and the level of economic activity in the economy (GDP) will rise. Conversely, if the money supply is low relative to the amount of money demanded, people will spend less in order to accumulate more money and the level of economic activity (GDP) will decline. These effects result from imbalances between the quantity of money supplied to the economy and quantity of money demanded.
Keynesian theory
Keynesian theory believes that the velocity is unstable and unpredictable, so it is hard to use monetary policy to control the economy directly. Monetary policy mainly affects the economy by changing interest rates, which in turn affects the willingness of both consumers and investors to buy goods.
Liquidity trap
In Keynesian theory, an occurance during major depressions when people already so so much money relative to their needs that any extra money is hoarded and will no longer drive down interest rates.
Humphrey-Hawkins Act
Passed in 1978, this legislation specifies the primary objectives of monetary policy - Full employment, stable prices, and moderate long-term interest rates. In addition, it requires that the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System submit a report on the economy and the conduct of monetary policy to Congress by February 20 and July 20 of each year.
Full Employment
Term implying that every person of working age who wishes to work can find employment
Frictional unemployment
Term indicating that a portion of those that are unemployed are in transition between jobs.
Structural unemployment
Term indicating that a portion of those that are unemployed are unemployed because there is a mismatch between their skill levels and available jobs or that there are jobs in one region of the country but few in another region
Natural rate of unemployment
Level of unemployment that policy makers are willing to tolerate - a sort of "full employment unemployment rate"
Price stability
The stability of the average price of all goods and services in the economy.
Inflation
The continuous rise in average price level.
Technical factors
Factors outside the control of the Federal Reserve (e.g. cash drains, float, and Treasury deposits) that affect the monetary base.
Velocity of money
Measures of the number of dollars of national income that are supported with each dollar of money in circulation. When velocity rises, more income can be generated with the same amount of money in circulation. The converse holds if velocity declines.