FInal exam Flashcards

1
Q

Money demand is affected by:
A. Output and the nominal interest rate
B. The nominal interest rate and inflation
C. The nominal interest rate, output and inflation
D. The nominal interest rate, output and money supply

A

Output and the nominal interest rate only

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2
Q

Which of the following factors drives asset bubble formation that affects asset prices over the financial cycle?
A. Expectations
B. Wealth effects
C. Credit constraints
D. Inflation

A

Expectations

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3
Q

What does CDS stand for?

A

Credit Default Swap

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4
Q

Which of the following are part of the shadow banking system?

A. Investment banks and retail banks
B. Universal banks and pension funds
C. Mutual funds and insurance companies
D. Monetary and fiscal authorities

A

Mutual funds and insurance companies

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5
Q

Central banks and banks both create money means that: Both banks and the central bank ___

A. Can print cash
B. Contribute to the money supply
C. Are government institutions
D. Set their own interest rate

A

Contribute to the money supply

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6
Q

Another word for Bank Capital is: A. Bank Reserves
B. Bank Debt
C. Bank Equity
D. Bank Investments

A

Bank Equity

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7
Q

If a central bank follows a Taylor rule it sets:
A. The interest rate as a function of expected inflation and output.
B. The money supply as a function of expected inflation and output
C. The interest rate as a function of expected inflation and money demand
D. The money supply as a function of expected inflation and money demand

A

The interest rate as a function of expected inflation and output

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8
Q

Reinhart and Rogoff define financial crises along three characteristics, which is not one of them?
A. Household recovery through repairing balance sheets
B. Deep and prolonged asset price collapses
C. Large and lasting adverse impacts on output and employment
D. Exploding government debt due to lower taxes and bank bailouts

A

Household recovery through repairing balance sheets

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9
Q

2.2. SOS! Exam 2024: Why did central bankers start using the interest rate rather than the money supply to target inflation from approximately the 1980s on? Use the quantity theory of money in your answer (max 50 words).

A

Because velocity was less stable after 1980s.

Under the quant. theory of money, to buy all the goods available in economy, there should be enough money and velocity (MV=PY)

The instability of velocity implied that changes in money supply would not directly cause changes in price level

  • M: money supply
  • V: velocity of circulation of money
  • P: Price level
  • Y: output
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10
Q

2.2.b. SOS Why is a financial crisis much worse for a central bank in the 3-equation model with a financial sector compared to the 3-equation model without a financial sector? Explain (max 100 words).

A

Because the financial sector amplifies shocks in the economy via the financial accelerator and asset bubbles.

When an Asset Bubble bursts the Fin. Accelerator amplifies and propagates the shock.

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11
Q

SOS: According to the 3-equation model, why was monetary policy ineffective in preventing the financial crisis? Use the concepts ‘financial cycle’ and ‘business cycle’ in your answer (max 50 words).

A

Banks play a key role in the financial cycle through their lending and borrowing behaviour.

The housing sector is following the business cycle (procyclical) and house purchase is often financed by borrowing from banks.

Peak of financial cycle often followed by
banking crisis.

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12
Q

3.a. Why might a balance sheet recession take longer to bounce back from than a normal recession? Explain (max 50 words).

A

A balance sheet recession is a recession that follows the break of large asset price bubbles.

It’s different from a normal recession because of the collapse in asset prices on the balance sheets of households and firms.

This brings in the financial accelerator.

-> households and firms deleverage -> reduce debt to repaid balance sheet -> increase in
savings -> decreased AD -> this slows down recovery

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13
Q

SOS: Imagine a city with restricted space for new housing. Are the following statements in questions (b) and (c) true, false or uncertain? Explain.

b. (1 point) A spike in demand for housing will see house prices rise in the short-run

c. (1 point) An extended period of high demand for housing will lead to a house price bubble.

A

b. (TRUE) Because the supply curve is inelastic since there is no space for more houses then the prices will continue to rise not only short term but also long term and they will not fall.

c. (False) Since there is no supply response, prices do not fall in the long-run. Hence prices persist to rise, without there being a bubble.

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14
Q

Name one advantage and one disadvantage of a target inflation rate of 4% as compared with one of 0% per annum and explain (max 50 words).

A

Advantages: Avoid the deflation trap, defense against nominal rigidities such as in wages. Disadvantages: Menu costs, shoe-leather costs, inefficient allocation of resources because price changes are harder to account for.

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15
Q

What does the no-bail-out clause of the ECB mean? Explain why this clause would make the SGP less necessary (max 50 words).

A

The no-bail out clause means that the ECB can’t bail out governments of member states.

If credible, a no-bail-out clause would mean higher government deficits would be penalized by capital markets demanding a higher risk premium.

This makes limiting the deficit through the SGP less necessary.

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16
Q

What is SPG?

A

Stability and Growth Pact
The Stability and Growth Pact (SGP) is a set of fiscal rules designed to prevent countries in the EU from spending beyond their means

17
Q
  1. The Phillips Curve shows the relationship between
    A. The interest rate and output
    B. Inflation and the interest rate
    C. Inflation and output
    D. Output and investment
A

Inflation and output

18
Q

The MR curve represents the behavior of
A. The tax authority
B. The central bank
C. Investors
D. Households

A

The central bank

19
Q

An example of a supply shock to the Netherlands is:
A. The antitrust authority breaks up Shell to boost competition
B. Apple introduces its new iPhone model
C. The new government coalition abolishes the dividend tax
D. Brexit boosts foreign direct investment by Goldman Sachs in the Netherlands

A

The antitrust authority breaks up Shell to boost competition

20
Q

In the three-equation model there is NO equation for:
A. The goods market
B. The stock market
C. Monetary policy
D. Inflation

A

The stock market

21
Q

The reaction of an economy to a demand or supply shock is FASTEST with
A. Rational expectations for a demand shock, adaptive expectations for a supply shock
B. Rational expectations for a supply shock, adaptive expectations for a demand shock
C. Rational expectations for both types of shock
D. Adaptive expectations for both types of shock

A

Rational expectations for both types of shock

22
Q

In the trade-off that the central bank faces, the binding constraint to achieve its goals is given by
A. The PC curve
B. The IS curve
C. The MR curve
D. The PS curve

A

The PC curve

23
Q

The Rational Expectations Hypothesis implies that
A. Forecasts are always correct
B. The economy is always in equilibrium
C. Expectations are model-consistent
D. The central bank responds to temporary demand shocks

A

Expectations are model-consistent

24
Q

Inflation bias can occur in the three-equation model
A. Both with adaptive and with rational expectations
B. Only with adaptive expectations
C. Only with rational expectations
D. Neither with adaptive nor with rational expectations

A

Both with adaptive and with rational expectations

25
Q

When is the multiplier from government spending the HIGHEST?
A. When financed with a deficit in the three-equation model
B. When financed with taxation in the three-equation model
C. Under the assumptions of Ricardian Equivalence
D. When the interest rate is not at the zero lower bound

A

When financed with a deficit in the three-equation model

26
Q

Why was the use of the Reinhart and Rogoff (2010) paper as a defense of austerity by European governments heavily criticized in retrospect (according to the Carlin&Soskice textbook)?

A. Spreadsheet mistakes understated the effect of government debt on economic growth
B. Low spending by European governments slowed down Eurozone growth
C. It was proven that causality ran from low growth to high debt, not the other way around
D. The relationship between the north and south of Europe was not taken into account

A

Low spending by European governments slowed down Eurozone growth

A is incorrect because R&R overstate the effect of debt on growth, not understate it
C is incorrect because the causal relationship was not proven one way or another
D is incorrect because it is not relevant to how R&R was used

27
Q

Money demand is affected by:
A. Output and the nominal interest rate
B. The nominal interest rate and inflation
C. The nominal interest rate, output and inflation
D. The nominal interest rate, output and money supply

A

Output and the nominal interest rate

28
Q

Which of the following are part of the shadow banking system?
A. Investment banks and retail banks
B. Universal banks and pension funds
C. Mutual funds and insurance companies
D. Monetary and fiscal authoritie

A

Mutual funds and insurance companies

29
Q

If a central bank follows a Taylor rule it sets:
A. The interest rate as a function of expected inflation and output
B. The money supply as a function of expected inflation and output
C. The interest rate as a function of expected inflation and money demand
D. The money supply as a function of expected inflation and money demand

A

The interest rate as a function of expected inflation and output

30
Q

Business cycle vs FInancial cycle?

A

BC = fluctuations in GDP
FC = fluctuations in financial vars

31
Q

According to David-Jan Jansen (Guest lecture) what effect did the invention of the contraceprive pill have on the interest rates?

A

Long-term interest rates have declined a lot since 1960.

This is mainly due to demography. Due to birth control, fewer people were given birth to. Hence, this leads to excess savings and a fall in the interest rate.

Low interest rates might give rise to house bubbleswich would increase financial instability and sovereign debt should increase to avoid this.