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Fundamentals of Economics , Third Edition
William Boyes, Arizona State University
Michael Melvin, Arizona State University
Fundamental Question Reviews
Chapter 14: Money and Banking

  1. What is money?
    Money is anything that is generally acceptable to sellers in exchange for goods and services. Money serves as a medium of exchange, a unit of account, a store of value, and a standard of deferred payment.

  2. How is the U.S. money supply defined?
    There are three definitions of the U.S. money supply. The narrowest definition, the M1 money supply, consists of currency, travelers' checks, demand deposits, and other checkable deposits. M2 adds savings and small-denomination time deposits, and retail money market mutual fund balances. M3 equals M2 plus large time deposits, repurchase agreements, Eurodollar deposits, and institution—only money market mutual fund balances.

  3. How do countries pay for international transactions?
    Countries use the foreign exchange market to convert national currencies to pay for trade. They also use international reserve assets, like gold, or international reserve currencies, like the dollar.

  4. Why are banks considered intermediaries?
    Banks act as middlemen between savers and borrowers. They accept deposits from savers and use those deposits to make loans to borrowers.

  5. How does international banking differ from domestic banking?
    Domestic banking is heavily regulated, whereas international banking is not. Because they are not restricted by regulations, international banks can usually offer depositors and borrowers better terms than domestic banks.

  6. How do banks create money?
    Banks create money by making loans up to the amount of their excess reserves. The banking system can increase the money supply by the deposit expansion multiplier times the excess reserves in the system.




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