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Summary
LO 2.1
Several developments led to the 2007–2008 fi nancial crisis. A
rapid decline in housing prices led to increased unemployment, fi rst
in housing-related activities and then more broadly. As a result, many
homeowners were forced to default on their home mortgage loans.
The fi nancial crisis was made worse because the downturn occurred
at a time when individuals, fi nancial institutions, and businesses were
heavily in debt.
LO 2.2
Money is transferred from savers to businesses in three ways.
Direct transfers occur when savers purchase a business fi rm’s securities
from the business fi rm that issued the securities. Indirect transfers can
involve an investment banking fi rm that uses money from savers to
purchase a business fi rm’s securities and then distribute the securities
to savers. Indirect transfers also may be carried out through a fi nan-
cial intermediary. For example, a fi nancial institution may issue its
own securities to obtain money from savers, and then use the money
to purchase a business fi rm’s securities.
LO 2.3
The major components of the monetary system include a
central bank (the Fed) and a banking system. The Fed defi nes and
regulates the money supply, as well as facilitates the transferring of
money through check processing and clearing. An effi
cient banking
system, creates money, transfers money, provides fi nancial interme-
diation, and processes/clears checks.
LO 2.4
Money is anything generally accepted as a means of pay-
ment for goods, services, and debts. The functions of money include
serving as a medium of exchange, a store of value, and a standard
of value.
LO 2.5
Physical money (coin and currency) in the United States
developed from full backing in gold or silver to token coins or fi at
money. Coins were initially full-bodied money because they con-
tained the same value in metal as their face value. Today, we have
token coins because there face values are higher than the value of
their metal content. Paper money was originally representative
full-bodied money because the money was backed by an amount of
precious metal equal in value to the face amount of the currency.
Today, paper money is not backed by precious metals and is referred
to as fi at money because currency is declared legal tender for pur-
poses of making payments and discharging debts.
LO 2.6
The major types of money market securities are Treasury bills
(short-term debt obligation issued by the government), commercial
paper (short-term unsecured promissory note issued by high-quality
corporations), negotiable certifi cate of deposit (short-term debt
instrument issued by depository institutions), banker’s acceptance
(promise of future payment issued by a fi rm and guaranteed by a
commercial bank), repurchase agreement (short-term debt security
where the seller agrees to repurchase the security at a specifi ed price
and date), and federal funds (short-term loans typically for one day to
one week made between depository institutions.
LO 2.7
The M1 money supply consists of currency, traveler’s checks,
demand deposits, and other checkable deposits at depository institu-
tions. The M2 money supply defi nition consists of M1 plus highly
liquid fi nancial assets, including savings accounts, small time depos-
its, and retail money market mutual funds.
LO 2.8
The output of goods and services in the economy is known
as the gross domestic product (GDP). The money supply times the
velocity of money equals GDP. A net increase in the changes in
the money supply and the velocity of money will lead to a higher GDP.
Economists also express GDP as being equal to real output times
the price level. Thus, a larger GDP due to an increase in the money
supply with no change in the velocity of money also means that a
net increase in changes in real output and price level must occur.
Monetarists contend that there is a direct link between the money
supply and gross domestic product (GDP) via the velocity of money.
Keynesians believe the link is less direct because changes in money
supply fi rst aff ect interest rates, which, in turn, infl uence GDP through
changes in consumption and investment. Evidence does not indicate
that one group is right and the other is wrong.
LO 2.9
The international monetary system was historically tied to the
gold standard. In 1944, the exchange rates between the currencies of
most industrialized countries were fi xed relative to the U.S. dollar or
gold. By early 1973, major currencies were allowed to fl oat against
each other, resulting in a fl exible, or fl oating, exchange rate system.
Another major international monetary system development occurred
when an initial 11 European Union countries agreed to give up their
individual currencies for a unifi ed currency called the euro, begin-
ning January 1, 1999, with monetary policy being administered by
the European Central Bank.
Occasionally the savings of some individuals are directed to
other individuals who want to purchase homes using mortgage loans.
Individual, institutional, and business savings also may be directed
to help government entities to fi nance defi cits causes by tax revenues
being exceeded by expenditures.
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