Principles of Economics (12th Edition)
Principles of Economics (12th Edition)
12th Edition
ISBN: 9780134078779
Author: Karl E. Case, Ray C. Fair, Sharon E. Oster
Publisher: PEARSON
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Chapter 25, Problem 2.2P
To determine

The change in the money supply of an economy with the increase in the reserve ratio.

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During the financial crisis, banks excess reserves [beyond what is required by regulatory reserve requirements] exploded.  If the Federal Reserve Bank of New York purchased $1 billion in U.S. Treasury Bills in this environment and the reserve requirement is 20%, then the change in the total money supply will be approximately: Group of answer choices an increase of a bit more than $1 billion. a decrease of a bit more than $1 billion. an increase of a bit less than $5 billion. a decrease of a bit less than $5 billion
Suppose again that checkable deposits started off at $400,000 in First Main Street Bank, the required reserve ratio is 15%, and no excess reserves and no cash leakage exist. You know from the previous step that, due to the sale of securities by the Fed, the money supply in the economy contracted from $400,000 to $392,000. But the contraction of the money supply does not stop with First Main Street Bank. It moves to other banks. The loan repayment that Charles made to First Main Street Bank was written on a check Second Republic Bank issued. Then, when the check cleared, the reserves of Second Republic Bank declined, and Second Republic Bank found itself reserve deficient as well. It applied loan repayments to its reserve deficiency position. The effect continued with other banks and so on. The initial removal of funds in the amount of $8,000 will cause the money supply to contract by $______. Therefore, the money supply is $______. (Hint: round the results of your calculations to the…
If the Fed wishes to increase the money supply, it can:   Question 11 options:   buy bonds from a bank, giving the bank cash in return, which it can then lend out.   sell a bond to bank, and take the money it receives in exchange out of circulation in the economy.   buy a bond from a bank, requiring the bank to hold the money it receives as excess reserves.   sell a bond to a bank, and take the money it receives and lend it out to someone else.
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