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1. The financial system coordinates investment and saving, which are important determinants of long-run real GDP.
2. When economists refer to investment, they mean the purchasing of stocks and bonds and other types of saving.
3. Banks and mutual funds are examples of financial markets.
4. When a firm wants to borrow directly from the public to finance the purchase of new equipment, it does so by selling
shares of stock.
5. Most entrepreneurs finance their purchases of real capital using their past saving.
6. Other things the same, the higher the rate of saving and investment in a country, the higher will be the standard of
living in the future.
7. Lenders sell bonds and borrowers buy them.
8. Lenders buy bonds and borrowers sell them.
9. When a firm wants to borrow directly from the public to finance the purchase of new equipment, it does so by selling
bonds.
10. Other things the same, corporate bonds generally feature higher interest rates than U.S. government bonds.
11. The sale of either stocks or bonds to raise money is known as equity finance.
12. When a corporation experiences financial problems, bondholders are paid before stockholders.
13. Corporations receive no proceeds from the resale of their stock.
14. Generally, if people begin to expect a company to have higher future profits, the price of the company’s stock will
begin to decrease.
15. If a share of stock in Skylight Chili sells for $75, the retained earnings per share are $5, and the dividend per share is
$2, then the price-earnings ratio is 15.
16. If people become less optimistic about the future earnings of Hyde Park Jazz Studio, then the price of the company’s
stock will fall.
17. Mutual funds are a type of financial intermediary.
18. Index funds are usually outperformed by mutual funds that are actively managed by professional money managers.
19. All financial intermediaries are financial institutions, but not all financial institutions are financial intermediaries.
20. Because of differences in tax treatment, municipal bonds pay a higher interest rate than do corporate bonds.
21. If the tax rate fell, holding municipal bonds would be less desirable so the interest rates on them would fall.
22. If a share of stock in Dell sells for $70, the retained earnings per share are $5, and the dividend per share is $2, then
the price-earnings ratio is 10.
23. In a closed economy, if taxes fall and consumption rises, then private saving must fall.
24. Anything other than a change in the interest rate that decreases national saving shifts the supply of loanable funds to
the left.
25. Skeptics of government policy to reduce taxes on saving argue that it would primarily benefit the rich.
26. Credit risk refers to the probability that the issuer of a bond will fail to pay some or all of the interest or principal.
27. Owners of bonds that were issued by the federal government are not required to pay federal income tax on the interest
income.
28. Financial crises seldom involve economic downturns.
29. To state that national saving is equal to investment, for a closed economy, is to state an accounting identity.
30. By definition, government purchases and taxes are zero for a closed economy.
31. National saving is equal to Y – T – C.
32. Public saving is T – G, while private saving is Y – T – C.
33. Public saving is equal to national saving minus private saving.
34. To state that public saving is equal to investment, for a closed economy, is to state an accounting identity.
35. In a closed economy, investment must be equal to private saving.
36. If, for an imaginary closed economy, investment amounts to $10,000 and the government is running a $2,500 deficit,
then private saving must amount to $12,500.
37. If, for an imaginary closed economy, investment amounts to $12,000 and the government is running a $2,000 deficit,
then private saving must amount to $10,000.
38. Suppose a small closed economy has GDP of $5 billion, consumption of $3 billion, and government expenditures of
$1 billion. Then investment and national saving are both $1 billion.
39. Joan uses some of her income to buy mutual fund shares. A macroeconomist refers to Joan’s purchase as investment.
40. Alberta buys a paint sprayer and a lift for her car customizing shop. A macroeconomist would refer to these purchases
as investment.
41. In a closed economy, each unit of output is either consumed by households or invested.
42. The conventions of national income accounting imply that saving and investment are equal for the economy as a
whole and for individual households and firms.
43. The demand for loanable funds comes from saving and the supply of loanable funds comes from investment.
44. A decrease in taxes on interest income would increase the interest rate.
45. If Congress instituted an investment tax credit, the demand for loanable funds would shift rightward.
46. When the government budget deficit rises, national saving is reduced, interest rates rise, and investment falls.
47. The term crowding out refers to decreases in the interest rate caused by government budget surpluses.
48. When the U.S. government is in debt during a given year, it follows that its budget is in deficit for that year.
49. The ratio of government debt to GDP was higher during the Reagan presidency than at any previous time in U.S.
history.
50. An increase in the demand for loanable funds increases the equilibrium interest rate and increases the equilibrium
level of saving.
51. An increase in the demand for loanable funds increases the equilibrium interest rate and decreases the equilibrium
level of saving.
52. The term loanable funds refers to all income that is not used for consumption.
53. The term loanable funds refers to all income that is not used for consumption or government expenditures.
54. We interpret the term loanable funds to mean the flow of resources available to fund private investment.
55. An increase in the budget deficit shifts the demand for loanable funds to the right.
56. A government may use deficit financing to smooth tax rates over time.
57. On a graph that depicts the market for loanable funds, the nominal interest rate is measured along the vertical axis.
58. When an economy’s government goes from running a budget deficit to running a budget surplus, the economy’s long-
run growth prospects are improved.
59. Managed mutual funds perform better on average than index funds because stock prices are usually a good predictor
of a company’s true value.
60. Index funds are financial intermediaries, but municipal bonds are not.
61. The majority of economists believe that policies that reduce the saving rate will reduce long-run living standards.
62. Financial markets are important for bringing equilibrium to the loanable funds market, but do not affect the efficient
allocation of scarce resources in the long-run.
63. Taking out a mortgage to buy a condo, buying a mutual fund, and building a new factory are all examples of
investment.