Chapter 5: Environmental Influences Flashcards
Central banks may be involved with: (7)
- monetary, interest rate and inflation policy
- banking regulation
- Implementation of government borrowing
- Performance and integrity of financial markets
- Intervention in currency markets
- Printing and minting of notes and coins
- Taxation
Main investor classes (4)
- Households
- Financial intermediaries
- Businesses
- Foreign investors
Advantages offered by financial intermediaries (4)
- Pooling of investors’ resources enabling lending of large amounts
- Diversification
- Expertise
- Lower costs
Role of investment banks: (4)
- advise on the price to be charged
- handle the marketing of the issue
- verify the quality of the information supplied
- innovate security design and packaging
List the main forms of government policy (5)
- monetary policy
- fiscal policy
- national debt management policy
- exchange rate policy
- prices and incomes policy
Interest rates affect: (4)
- personal sector expenditure
- business sector investment and economic growth prospects
- corporate profitability
- the balance of payments
The ways in which companies avoid tax (3)
- financing subsidiaries in high-tax countries mainly with debt to reduce profits
- reducing profits in high-tax areas through excessively high transfer pricing for intra-group transactions
- transferring profits through the use of hybrid instruments that arbitrage between tax regimes.
Describe the main forms of government policy: (5)
- Monetary policy - the control of some measure of money supply and/or the level and structure interest rates.
- Fiscal policy - decisions on the level and structure of taxation and government spending and hence, by implication, the public sector borrowing requirement.
- National debt management policy - the manipulation of the outstanding stock of government debt instruments held by the domestic private sector.
- Exchange rate policy - directed towards achieving some target for the exchange rate, perhaps with the objective of influencing the country’s international trading and investment patterns.
- Prices and incomes policy - aimed at influencing the rates of wage and price inflation.
The success of a government’s economic policy can best be assessed in terms of the major economic objectives: (4)
- unemployment
- inflation
- balance of payments
- economic growth
Monetary policy
the control of some measure of the money supply and/or the level and structure of interest rates.
Fiscal policy
decisions on the level and structure of taxation and government expenditure and hence, by implication, the public sector borrowing requirement.
National debt management policy
the manipulation of the outstanding stock of government debt instruments held by the domestic private sector, in order to influence the level and structure of interest rates or the availability of liquid reserve assets to the banking sector.
Exchange rate policy
directed towards achieving some target for the exchange rate of the domestic currency in terms of foreign currencies, perhaps with the objective of influencing the country’s international trading and investment patterns.
Non-market (direct) controls used by the Central Bank: (3)
- setting minimum liquid reserve ratios
- setting interest rate ceilings for bank deposits
- issuing directives regarding the types of lending to be undertaken
What is Quantitative Easing (QE): (2)
- Quantitative Easing (QE) is a monetary policy used by some central banks to increase the supply of money.
- It usually involves both a direct increase in the money supply (i.e. electronically ‘printing’ money) and a knock-on effect from the fractional reserve system, increasing money supply further.