Institutions 2nd Edition
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SOLUTIONS
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MANUAL
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Michael Brandl
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Comprehensive Solutions Manual for Instructors
and Students
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© Michael Brandl. All rights reserved. Reproduction or distribution without permission is
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prohibited.
© Successhands
, Solutions Manual for Money, Banking, Financial Markets & Institutions
(2nd Edition)
Michael Brandl
ISBN: 9781337902724
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PART 1: MONEY AND ITS PRICES
1. Introduction
2. Money, Money Supply, and Interest
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3. Bonds and Loanable Funds
4. Interest Rates in More Detail
PART 2: MONEY AND THE OVERALL ECONOMY
5. Financial Markets through Time
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6. Aggregate Supply and Aggregate Demand
7. Banks and Money
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PART 3: CENTRAL BANKS
8. Central Banks
9. Monetary Policy Tools
10. The Money Supply Process
11. Monetary Policy Debates
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PART 4: THE BANKING SYSTEM
12. Bank Management
13. Bank Risk Management and Performance
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14. Banking Regulation
PART 5: FINANCIAL MARKETS
15. Money Markets
16. Bond Markets
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17. The Stock Market
18. The Mortgage Market
PART 6: GLOBAL FINANCIAL MARKETS
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19. Foreign Exchange Markets
20. Global Financial Architecture
PART 7: FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS
21. Thrifts and Finance Companies
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22. Insurance and Pensions
23. Mutual Funds
24. Investment Banks and Private Equity
© Successhands
, Solution Manual for
Money, Banking, Financial Markets & Institutions 2nd Edition for Brandl Michael
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Chapter 2-24
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CHAPTER 2: Money, Money Supply, and Interest
2-1 Section Review
1. What is the difference between money and currency? When are they the same? Why might they be
different?
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ANS: Money is anything generally accepted in exchange for goods & services. Currency is issued by a
bank or the government, but currency is not necessarily money. They are the same when they are
accepted in exchange for goods and services. Currencies can stop being money if people don’t accept
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them in exchange for goods and services. If a group of people stop using currency to get goods and
services but instead use bananas, then the bananas are the money.
2. How many prices must a barter economy have if the economy has four goods? What if it has 400
goods? Explain why having a money in the second case is beneficial.
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ANS: 4 goods = 6 prices; 400 goods = 79,800 prices. Money allows us to specialize and reduce our search
cost. Money allows us to reduce the number of stated prices we need.
3. You read a news story about a country that is suffering from rapid, ongoing increases in the cost of
living. Which characteristic of money is being directly negatively impacted in that economy?
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a. Unit of account
b. Medium of exchange
c. Store of value
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d. Double coincidence of wants
ANS: C
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2-2 Section Review
1. Bobby is confused. He states: “Since prisoners are not allowed to smoke in prisons any longer,
Radford’s examples of cigarettes in POW camps no longer applies.” How would you explain to Bobby
how Radford’s story demonstrates the concepts of the criteria of money, as well as the importance of
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changes in the money supply?
ANS: Any asset that is able to be standardized, divisible, durable and in demand could be currency, as
long as it is a medium of exchange, is a unit of account and has store of value. Cigarettes were money.
, 2. Proponents of the Gold Standard, or using gold as money, often argue that it will keep inflation under
control. How does the experience of Europe in the sixteenth century raise doubts about that claim?
ANS: If people start to hoard gold or silver, there may not be enough money, and an economy could
slide into recession. If gold or silver increases too rapidly the economy could suffer inflation.
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3. Ricardo and Friedman agree that if the money supply increases “too quickly” the following happens:
a. The rate of inflation decreases.
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b. The rate of real economic growth increases.
c. The rate of inflation increases.
d. The level of employment decreases.
ANS: C
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2-3 Section Review
1. A critic of money economics once stated, “if you cannot measure the money supply accurately, it is
not worth discussing at all.” How would you refute this statement?
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ANS: Due to changes in financial markets, financial innovation and changes in the way banks operate,
led to the decline in the usefulness of M2 as a monetary aggregate.
2. Economists are searching for a “good” measurement of the money supply. What constitutes a good
measurement of the money supply?
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ANS: To economists, a “good” measurement of the money supply is one that conforms to economic
theories regarding inflation and the economy. For example, if the money supply (according to a
particular measurement) increases faster than the growth rate of the economy, then economic theory
suggests that inflation should occur. On the other hand, if the money supply (according to a particular
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measurement) increases too slowly relative to the growth rate of the economy, then economic theory
suggests that this will result in a recession. When the measurement of the money supply coincides with
these economic predictions, then that particular measurement has the potential to be a “good”
measurement of the money supply. During certain periods of time, both M1 and M2 have been
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considered to be “good” measurements of the money supply. However, there have also been periods of
time where the changes in M1 or M2 did not coincide with economic theory.
3. Which of the following is the broadest or most inclusive measurement of the money supply?
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a. M1
b. M2
c. M3
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d. M0
ANS: B