978-0134733821 Test Bank Chapter 5 Part 3

subject Type Homework Help
subject Pages 9
subject Words 2408
subject Authors Frederic S. Mishkin

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16) In the figure above, the decrease in the interest rate from i1 to i2 can be explained by
A) a decrease in money growth.
B) a decline in the expected price level.
C) an increase in income.
D) an increase in the expected price level.
17) In the figure above, the factor responsible for the decline in the interest rate is
A) a decline the price level.
B) a decline in income.
C) an increase in the money supply.
D) a decline in the expected inflation rate.
18) In the figure above, the decrease in the interest rate from i1 to i2 can be explained by
A) a decrease in money growth.
B) an increase in money growth.
C) a decline in the expected price level.
D) an increase in income.
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19) Using the liquidity preference framework, what will happen to interest rates if the Fed
increases the money supply?
20) Using the liquidity preference framework, show what happens to interest rates during a
business cycle recession.
1) Milton Friedman called the response of lower interest rates resulting from an increase in the
money supply the ________ effect.
A) liquidity
B) price level
C) expected-inflation
D) income
2) Of the four effects on interest rates from an increase in the money supply, the initial effect is,
generally, the
A) income effect.
B) liquidity effect.
C) price level effect.
D) expected inflation effect.
3) In the liquidity preference framework, a one-time increase in the money supply results in a
price level effect. The maximum impact of the price level effect on interest rates occurs
A) at the moment the price level hits its peak (stops rising) because both the price level and
expected inflation effects are at work.
B) immediately after the price level begins to rise, because both the price level and expected
inflation effects are at work.
C) at the moment the expected inflation rate hits its peak.
D) at the moment the inflation rate hits it peak.
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4) Of the four effects on interest rates from an increase in the money supply, the one that works
in the opposite direction of the other three is the
A) liquidity effect.
B) income effect.
C) price level effect.
D) expected inflation effect.
5) It is possible that when the money supply rises, interest rates may ________ if the ________
effect is more than offset by changes in income, the price level, and expected inflation.
A) fall; liquidity
B) fall; risk
C) rise; liquidity
D) rise; risk
6) When the growth rate of the money supply increases, interest rates end up being permanently
lower if
A) the liquidity effect is larger than the other effects.
B) there is fast adjustment of expected inflation.
C) there is slow adjustment of expected inflation.
D) the expected inflation effect is larger than the liquidity effect.
7) When the growth rate of the money supply is increased, interest rates will fall immediately if
the liquidity effect is ________ than the other money supply effects and there is ________
adjustment of expected inflation.
A) larger; fast
B) larger; slow
C) smaller; slow
D) smaller; fast
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8) If the Fed wants to permanently lower interest rates, then it should raise the rate of money
growth if
A) there is fast adjustment of expected inflation.
B) there is slow adjustment of expected inflation.
C) the liquidity effect is smaller than the expected inflation effect.
D) the liquidity effect is larger than the other effects.
9) If the liquidity effect is smaller than the other effects, and the adjustment to expected inflation
is slow, then the
A) interest rate will fall.
B) interest rate will rise.
C) interest rate will initially fall but eventually climb above the initial level in response to an
increase in money growth.
D) interest rate will initially rise but eventually fall below the initial level in response to an
increase in money growth.
10) If the liquidity effect is smaller than the other effects, and the adjustment to expected
inflation is immediate, then the
A) interest rate will fall.
B) interest rate will rise.
C) interest rate will fall immediately below the initial level when the money supply grows.
D) interest rate will rise immediately above the initial level when the money supply grows.
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11) In the figure above, illustrates the effect of an increased rate of money supply growth at time
period 0. From the figure, one can conclude that the
A) liquidity effect is smaller than the expected inflation effect and interest rates adjust quickly to
changes in expected inflation.
B) liquidity effect is larger than the expected inflation effect and interest rates adjust quickly to
changes in expected inflation.
C) liquidity effect is larger than the expected inflation effect and interest rates adjust slowly to
changes in expected inflation.
D) liquidity effect is smaller than the expected inflation effect and interest rates adjust slowly to
changes in expected inflation.
12) In the figure above, illustrates the effect of an increased rate of money supply growth at time
period 0. From the figure, one can conclude that the
A) Fisher effect is dominated by the liquidity effect and interest rates adjust slowly to changes in
expected inflation.
B) liquidity effect is dominated by the Fisher effect and interest rates adjust slowly to changes in
expected inflation.
C) liquidity effect is dominated by the Fisher effect and interest rates adjust quickly to changes in
expected inflation.
D) Fisher effect is smaller than the expected inflation effect and interest rates adjust quickly to
changes in expected inflation.
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Copyright © 2019 Pearson Education, Inc.
13) The figure above illustrates the effect of an increased rate of money supply growth at time
period T0. From the figure, one can conclude that the
A) liquidity effect is smaller than the expected inflation effect and interest rates adjust quickly to
changes in expected inflation.
B) liquidity effect is larger than the expected inflation effect and interest rates adjust quickly to
changes in expected inflation.
C) liquidity effect is larger than the expected inflation effect and interest rates adjust slowly to
changes in expected inflation.
D) liquidity effect is smaller than the expected inflation effect and interest rates adjust slowly to
changes in expected inflation.
14) The figure above illustrates the effect of an increased rate of money supply growth at time
period T0. From the figure, one can conclude that the
A) Fisher effect is dominated by the liquidity effect and interest rates adjust slowly to changes in
expected inflation.
B) liquidity effect is dominated by the Fisher effect and interest rates adjust slowly to changes in
expected inflation.
C) liquidity effect is dominated by the Fisher effect and interest rates adjust quickly to changes in
expected inflation.
D) Fisher effect is smaller than the expected inflation effect and interest rates adjust quickly to
changes in expected inflation.
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15) The figure above illustrates the effect of an increased rate of money supply growth at time
period T0. From the figure, one can conclude that the
A) liquidity effect is smaller than the expected inflation effect and interest rates adjust quickly to
changes in expected inflation.
B) liquidity effect is larger than the expected inflation effect and interest rates adjust quickly to
changes in expected inflation.
C) liquidity effect is larger than the expected inflation effect and interest rates adjust slowly to
changes in expected inflation.
D) liquidity effect is smaller than the expected inflation effect and interest rates adjust slowly to
changes in expected inflation.
16) The figure above illustrates the effect of an increased rate of money supply growth at time
period T0. From the figure, one can conclude that the
A) Fisher effect is dominated by the liquidity effect and interest rates adjust slowly to changes in
expected inflation.
B) liquidity effect is dominated by the Fisher effect and interest rates adjust slowly to changes in
expected inflation.
C) liquidity effect is dominated by the Fisher effect and interest rates adjust quickly to changes in
expected inflation.
D) Fisher effect is smaller than the expected inflation effect and interest rates adjust quickly to
changes in expected inflation.
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17) Interest rates increased continuously during the 1970s. The most likely explanation is
A) banking failures that reduced the money supply.
B) a rise in the level of income.
C) the repeated bouts of recession and expansion.
D) increasing expected rates of inflation.
1) The riskiness of an asset is measured by
A) the magnitude of its return.
B) the absolute value of any change in the asset's price.
C) the standard deviation of its return.
D) risk is impossible to measure.
2) Holding many risky assets and thus reducing the overall risk an investor faces is called
A) diversification.
B) foolishness.
C) risk acceptance.
D) capitalization.
3) The ________ the returns on two securities move together, the ________ benefit there is from
diversification.
A) less; more
B) less; less
C) more; more
D) more; greater
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4) A higher ________ means that an asset's return is more sensitive to changes in the value of the
market portfolio.
A) alpha
B) beta
C) CAPM
D) APT
5) The riskiness of an asset that is unique to the particular asset is
A) systematic risk.
B) portfolio risk.
C) investment risk.
D) nonsystematic risk.
6) The risk of a well-diversified portfolio depends only on the ________ risk of the assets in the
portfolio.
A) systematic
B) nonsystematic
C) portfolio
D) investment
7) Both the CAPM and APT suggest that an asset should be priced so that it has a higher
expected return
A) when it has a greater systematic risk.
B) when it has a greater risk in isolation.
C) when it has a lower systematic risk.
D) when it has a lower systematic risk and a lower risk in isolation.
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8) In contrast to the CAPM, the APT assumes that there can be several sources of ________ that
cannot be eliminated through diversification.
A) nonsystematic risk
B) systematic risk
C) credit risk
D) arbitrary risk
9) Risk averse investors always prefer to have higher ________ and lower ________ of the
return.
A) expected return; standard deviation
B) standard deviation; expected return
C) prices; standard deviation
D) standard deviation; prices
1) When stock prices become more volatile, the ________ curve for gold shifts right and gold
prices ________, everything else held constant.
A) demand; increase
B) demand; decrease
C) supply; increase
D) supply; decrease
2) A return to the gold standard, that is, using gold for money will ________ the ________ for
gold, ________ its price, everything else held constant.
A) increase; demand; increasing
B) decrease; demand; decreasing
C) increase; supply; increasing
D) decrease; supply; increasing
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3) When gold prices become more volatile, the ________ curve for gold shifts to the ________;
________ the price of gold.
A) supply; right; increasing
B) supply; left; increasing
C) demand; right; decreasing
D) demand; left; decreasing
4) Discovery of new gold in Alaska will ________ the ________ of gold, ________ its price,
everything else held constant.
A) increase; demand; increasing
B) decrease; demand; decreasing
C) decrease; supply; increasing
D) increase; supply; decreasing
5) An increase in the expected inflation rate will ________ the ________ for gold, ________ its
price, everything else held constant.
A) increase; demand; increasing
B) decrease; demand; decreasing
C) increase; supply; increasing
D) decrease; supply; increasing
6) The price of gold should be ________ to the expected inflation rate.
A) positively related
B) negatively related
C) inversely related
D) unrelated
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Copyright © 2019 Pearson Education, Inc.
5.9 Web Appendix 3: Loanable Funds Framework
1) In the loanable funds framework, the ________ curve of bonds is equivalent to the ________
curve of loanable funds.
A) demand; demand
B) demand; supply
C) supply; supply
D) supply; equilibrium
2) In the loanable funds framework, the ________ is measured on the vertical axis.
A) price of bonds
B) interest rate
C) quantity of bonds
D) quantity of loanable funds
3) In the loanable funds framework, the demand curve of loanable funds is
A) downward-sloping.
B) upward-sloping.
C) mound-shaped.
D) u-shaped.

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