Chapter 14 Flashcards
What is intertemporal substitution?
The allocation of consumption, work, and leisure across time to maximize well-being.
What are irreversible investments?
Have high value only under specific conditions—they cannot be easily moved, adjusted, or reversed if conditions change.
Negative shocks increase uncertainty, and the more uncertain the world appears, the harder it is for investors to..
know where to invest
While investors wait before deciding what to invest in, resources remain idle, contributing to..
further economic slowdown
What are labor adjustment costs?
The costs of shifting workers from declining sectors of the economy to the growing sectors.
Where can the costs of shifting worker be seen?
- job search activity
2. migration
What is time bunching?
The tendency for economic activities to be coordinated at common points in time.
The clustering of economic activity in time makes buying and selling..
more efficient.
What is collateral?
A valuable asset that is pledged to a lender to secure a loan. If the borrower defaults, ownership of the collateral transfers to the lender.
What is a collateral shock?
A reduction in the value of collateral. Collateral shocks make borrowing and lending more difficult.
During booms, asset values increase and banks approve more..
loans
When are banks reluctant to lend?
during recessions
When asset prices fall, there is a lot of..
collateral damage