Economics of Money: Chapter 19
The quantity theory of money is a theory of how
Answer: C
Because the quantity theory of money tells us how much money is held for a given amount of aggregate income, it is also a theory of
Answer: B
The average number of times that a dollar is spent in buying the total amount of final goods and services produced during a given time period is known as
Answer: D
The velocity of money is
Answer: A
If the money supply is $500 and nominal income is $3,000, the velocity of money is
Answer: C
If the money supply is $600 and nominal income is $3,000, the velocity of money is
Answer: C
If the money supply is $500 and nominal income is $4,000, the velocity of money is
Answer: C
If the money supply is $600 and nominal income is $3,600, the velocity of money is
Answer: C
If nominal GDP is $10 trillion, and the money supply is $2 trillion, velocity is
Answer: B
If nominal GDP is $8 trillion, and the money supply is $2 trillion, velocity is
Answer: B
If nominal GDP is $10 trillion, and velocity is 10, the money supply is
Answer: A
If the money supply is $2 trillion and velocity is 5, then nominal GDP is
Answer: D
If the money supply is $20 trillion and velocity is 2, then nominal GDP is
Answer: D
Velocity is defined as
Answer: D
The velocity of money is defined as
Answer: B
The equation of exchange states that the quantity of money multiplied by the number of times this money is spent in a given year must equal
Answer: A
In the equation of exchange, the concept that provides the link between M and PY is called
Answer: A
The equation of exchange is
Answer: D
Irving Fisher took the view that the institutional features of the economy which affect velocity change ________ over time so that velocity will be fairly ________ in the short run.
Answer: C
In Irving Fisher's quantity theory of money, velocity was determined by
Answer: C
The classical economists' conclusion that nominal income is determined by movements in the money supply rested on their belief that ________ could be treated as ________ in the short run.
Answer: A
The view that velocity is constant in the short run transforms the equation of exchange into the quantity theory of money. According to the quantity theory of money, when the money supply doubles
Answer: D
Cutting the money supply by one-third is predicted by the quantity theory of money to cause
Answer: D
The classical economists believed that if the quantity of money doubled
Answer: C
The classical economists' contention that prices double when the money supply doubles is predicated on the belief that in the short run velocity is ________ and real GDP is ________.
Answer: A
For the classical economists, the quantity theory of money provided an explanation of movements in the price level. Changes in the price level result
Answer: A
If initially the money supply is $1 trillion, velocity is 5, the price level is 1, and real GDP is $5 trillion, an increase in the money supply to $2 trillion
Answer: C
If initially the money supply is $2 trillion, velocity is 5, the price level is 2, and real GDP is $5 trillion, a fall in the money supply to $1 trillion
Answer: C
According to the quantity theory of money demand
Answer: C
Fisher's quantity theory of money suggests that the demand for money is purely a function of ________, and ________ no effect on the demand for money.
Answer: A
________ quantity theory of money suggests that the demand for money is purely a function of income, and interest rates have no effect on the demand for money.
Answer: B
Irving Fisher's view that velocity is fairly constant in the short run transforms the equation of exchange into the
Answer: B
The quantity theory of inflation indicates that the inflation rate equals
Answer: A
The quantity theory of inflation indicates that if the aggregate output is growing at 3% per year and the growth rate of money is 5%, then inflation is
Answer: A
Empirical evidence shows that the quantity theory of money is a good theory of inflation
Answer: A
Methods of financing government spending are described by an expression called the government budget constraint, which states the following
Answer: A
Methods of financing government spending are described by an expression called the government budget constraint, which states the following
Answer: A
If the government finances its spending by issuing debt to the public, the monetary base will ________ and the money supply will ________.
Answer: D
If the government finances its spending by selling bonds to the central bank, the monetary base will ________ and the money supply will ________.
Answer: A
Financing government spending with taxes
Answer: D
Financing government spending by selling bonds to the public, which pays for the bonds with currency,
Answer: D
The financing of government spending by issuing debt
Answer: D
The finance of government spending through a Treasury sale of bonds which are then purchased by the Fed
Answer: A
This method of financing government spending is frequently called printing money because high-powered money (the monetary base) is created in the process.
Answer: B
Only when budget deficits are financed by money creation does the increased government spending lead to ________ in the ________.
Answer: B
If the deficit is financed by selling bonds to the ________, the money supply will ________, increasing aggregate demand, and leading to a rise in the price level.
Answer: C
If the deficit is financed by selling bonds to the ________, the money supply will ________, causing aggregate demand to ________.
Answer: C
The Keynesian theory of money demand emphasizes the importance of
Answer: C
Keynes hypothesized that the transactions component of money demand was primarily determined by the level of
Answer: C
Keynes argued that the transactions component of the demand for money was primarily determined by the level of people's ________, which he believed were proportional to ________.
Answer: A
Keynes hypothesized that the precautionary component of money demand was primarily determined by the level of
Answer: C
Keynes argued that the precautionary component of the demand for money was primarily determined by the level of people's ________, which he believed were proportional to ________.
Answer: C
The demand for money as a cushion against unexpected contingencies is called the
Answer: B
Keynes hypothesized that the speculative component of money demand was primarily determined by the level of
Answer: A
The speculative motive for holding money is closely tied to what function of money?
Answer: A
Of the three motives for holding money suggested by Keynes, which did he believe to be the most sensitive to interest rates?
Answer: C
Because Keynes assumed that the expected return on money was zero, he argued that people would
Answer: C
The Keynesian theory of money demand predicts that people will increase their money holdings if they believe that
Answer: D
If people expect nominal interest rates to be higher in the future, the expected return to bonds ________, and the demand for money ________.
Answer: C
If people expect nominal interest rates to be lower in the future, the expected return to bonds ________, and the demand for money ________.
Answer: B
Keynes argued that when interest rates were low relative to some normal value, people would expect bond prices to ________ so the quantity of money demanded would ________.
Answer: C
Keynes argued that when interest rates were high relative to some normal value, people would expect bond prices to ________, so the quantity of money demanded would ________.
Answer: B
According to Keynes's theory of liquidity preference, velocity increases when
Answer: D
Keynes's theory of the demand for money implies that velocity is
Answer: A
Because interest rates have substantial fluctuations, the ________ theory of the demand for money indicates that velocity has substantial fluctuations as well.
Answer: C
Keynes's liquidity preference theory indicates that the demand for money
Answer: C
Keynes's theory of the demand for money is consistent with
Answer: C
Keynes's theory of the demand for money is consistent with ________ movements in ________.
Answer: B
Keynes's model of the demand for money suggests that velocity is
Answer: B
Keynes's liquidity preference theory indicates that the demand for money is
Answer: C
Keynes's model of the demand for money suggests that velocity is ________ related to ________.
Answer: A
Keynes's liquidity preference theory indicates that the demand for money is ________ related to ________.
Answer: A
The Keynesian demand for real balances can be expressed as
Answer: D
Explain the Keynesian theory of money demand. What motives did Keynes think determined money demand? What are the two reasons why Keynes thought velocity could NOT be treated as a constant?
Answer: Keynes believed the demand for money depended on income and interest rates. Money was held to facilitate normal transactions and as a precaution for unexpected transactions. For both of these motives, money demand depended on income. People also held money as an asset, for speculative purposes. The speculative motive depends on income and interest rates. People hold more money for speculative purposes when they expect bond prices to fall, generating a negative return on bonds. Since money demand varies with interest rates, velocity changes when interest rates change. Also, since money demand depends upon expectations about future interest rates, unstable expectations can make money demand, and thus velocity, unstable.
The portfolio theories of money demand state that the demand for real money balances is ________ related to income and ________ related to the nominal interest rate.
Answer: A
The portfolio theories of money demand state that when income (and therefore, wealth) is higher, the demand for the money asset will ________ and the demand for real money balances will be ________.
Answer: A
As interest rates rise, the expected absolute return of money ________, money's expected return relative to bonds ________.
Answer: A
The theory of portfolio choice indicates that higher interest rates make money ________ desirable, and the demand for real money balances ________.
Answer: A
The theory of portfolio choice indicates that factors affecting the demand for money include
Answer: D
The theory of portfolio choice indicates that factors affecting the demand for money include
Answer: D
The evidence on the interest sensitivity of the demand for money suggests that the demand for money is ________ to interest rates, and there is ________ evidence that a liquidity trap exists.
Answer: B
In the liquidity trap a small change in interest rates produces ________ change in the quantity of money demanded.
Answer: D
In a liquidity trap, monetary policy has ________ effect on aggregate spending because a change in the money supply has ________ effect on interest rates.
Answer: A
In the liquidity trap, monetary policy
Answer: C
In the liquidity trap, the money demand curve
Answer: A
Evidence suggests that a liquidity trap is possible when
Answer: C
The reason that economists are so interested in the stability of velocity is because if the demand for money is not stable, then steady growth of the money supply
Answer: C
Describe what the liquidity trap is. Explain how it can be problematic for monetary policymakers.
Answer: The liquidity trap describes the situation in which the demand for money is insensitive to changes in interest rates (i.e., the money demand curve is infinitely elastic). In this case, monetary policy has no direct affect on aggregate spending because a change in the money supply will not affect interest rates.
The absence of money illusion means that
Answer: D
If there are economies of scale in the transactions demand for money, as income increases, money demand
Answer: B
Comparing Tobin's model of the speculative demand for money with Keynesian speculative demand
Answer: C
In the Baumol-Tobin model, given that total costs for an individual equals + , where T0 = monthly income, b = brokerage costs, and C = amount raised from each bond transaction, derive the so-called square root rule.
Answer: An individual will minimize their costs. Thus, the optimal level of C is found as follows:
COSTS = +
= + = 0
=
Since money demand is the average desired holdings of cash balances, C/2:
Md = =
The last expression is the square root rule.
The Baumol-Tobin analysis suggests that
Answer: B
The Baumol-Tobin analysis suggests that an increase in the brokerage fee for buying and selling bonds will cause the demand for money to ________ and the demand for bonds to ________.
Answer: B
The Baumol-Tobin analysis suggests that a decrease in the brokerage fee for buying and selling bonds will cause the demand for money to ________ and the demand for bonds to ________.
Answer: D
In the Baumol-Tobin analysis of transactions demand for money, either an increase in ________ or a decrease in ________ increases money demand.
Answer: A
In the Baumol-Tobin analysis of the demand for money, either an increase in ________ or an increase in ________ increases money demand.
Answer: D
In the Baumol-Tobin analysis of transactions demand, scale economies imply that an increase in real income increases the quantity of money demanded ________, while an increase in the price level increases the quantity of money demanded ________.
Answer: C
Tobin's model of the speculative demand for money improves on Keynes's analysis by showing that
Answer: C
Tobin's model of the speculative demand for money shows that people hold money as a store of wealth as a way of
Answer: A
Tobin's model of the speculative demand for money shows that people hold money as a ________ as a way of reducing ________.
Answer: D
Tobin's model of the speculative demand for money shows that people can reduce their ________ by ________ their asset holdings.
Answer: D
Because Treasury bills pay a higher return than money and have no risk
Answer: C
The speculative demand for money may not exist because
Answer: B
What factors determine the demand for money in the Baumol-Tobin analysis of transactions demand for money? How does a change in each factor affect the quantity of money demanded?
Answer: The factors are real income, the price level, interest rates, and the brokerage cost of shifting between money and bonds. Increases in real income increase money demand less than proportionately, since the model predicts scale economies in transactions demand. Increases in prices increase money demand proportionately, since the demand is for real balances. The quantity of money demanded varies inversely with interest rates, since interest is the opportunity cost of holding money. The brokerage fee is the cost of converting other assets (bonds) into money. An increase in this cost increases money demand.
In one of the earliest studies on the link between interest rates and money demand using United States data, James Tobin concluded that the demand for money is
Answer: A
Starting in 1974, the conventional M1 money demand function began to
Answer: B
Starting in 1974, the conventional M1 money demand function began to severely ________ the demand for money. Stephen Goldfeld labeled this phenomenon "the case of the missing ________."
Answer: D
Conventional money demand functions tended to ________ money demand in the middle and late 1970s, and ________ velocity beginning in 1982.
Answer: A
Researchers at the Federal Reserve found that M2 money demand functions performed ________ in the 1980s, with M2 velocity moving ________ with the opportunity cost of holding M2.
Answer: D
In the early 1990s, M2 growth underwent a dramatic ________, which some researchers believe ________ be explained by traditional money demand functions.
Answer: C
In the late 1990s, M2 velocity ________, suggesting a ________ normal relationship between M2 and macroeconomic variables.
Answer: B