货币金融学答案.doc
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1、【精品文档】如有侵权,请联系网站删除,仅供学习与交流货币金融学答案.精品文档.55 Chapter 1 Why Study Money, Banking, and Financial Markets? 2. The data in Figures 1, 2, 3, and 4 suggest that real output, the inflation rate, and interest rates would all fail.4. You might be more likely to buy a house or a car because the cost of financing
2、 them would fall, or you might be less likely to save because you earn less on your savings.6. No. It is true that people who borrow to purchase a house or a car are worse off because it costs them more to finance their purchase; however, savers benefit because they can earn higher interest rates on
3、 their savings.7. The basic activity of banks is to accept deposits and make loans. 8. They channel funds from people who do not have a productive use for them to people who do, thereby resulting in higher economic efficiency.9. The interest rate on three-month Treasury bills fluctuates more than th
4、e other interest rates and is lower on average. The interest rate on Baa corporate bonds is higher on average than the other interest rates.10. The lower price for a firms shares means that it can raise a smaller amount of funds, so investment in facilities and equipment will fall. 11. Higher stock
5、prices means that consumers wealth is higher, and they will be more likely to increase their spending.12. It makes foreign goods more expensive, so British consumers will buy fewer foreign goods and more domestic goods. 13. It makes British goods more expensive relative to American goods. Thus Ameri
6、can businesses will find it easier to sell their goods in the United States and abroad, and the demand for their products will rise.14. In the mid- to late 1970s and in the late 1980s and early 1990s, the value of the dollar was low, making travel abroad relatively more expensive; thus it was a good
7、 time to vacation in the United States and see the Grand Canyon. With the rise in the dollars value in the early 1980s, travel abroad became relatively cheaper, making it a good time to visit the Tower of London. 15. When the dollar increases in value, foreign goods become less expensive relative to
8、 American goods; thus you are more likely to buy French-made jeans than American-made jeans. The resulting drop in demand for American-made jeans because of the strong dollar hurts American jeans manufacturers. On the other hand, the American company that imports jeans into the United States now fin
9、ds that the demand for its product has risen, so it is better off when the dollar is strong. 56 Chapter 2 An Overview of the Financial System 1. The share of Microsoft stock is an asset for its owner, because it entitles the owner to a share of the earnings and assets of Microsoft. The share is a li
10、ability for Microsoft, because it is a claim on its earnings and assets by the owner of the share.2. Yes, I should take out the loan, because I will be better off as a result of doing so. My interest payment will be $4,500 (90% of $5,000), but as a result, I will earn an additional $10,000, so I wil
11、l be ahead of the game by $5,500. Since Larrys loan-sharking business can make some people better off, as in this example, loan sharking may have social benefits. (One argument against legalizing loan sharking, however, is that it is frequently a violent activity.) 3. Yes, because the absence of fin
12、ancial markets means that funds cannot be channeled to people who have the most productive use for them. Entrepreneurs then cannot acquire funds to set up businesses that would help the economy grow rapidly.4. The principal debt instruments used were foreign bonds which were sold in Britain and deno
13、minated in pounds. The British gained because they were able to earn higher interest rates as a result of lending to Americans, while the Americans gained because they now had access to capital to start up profitable businesses such as railroads. 5. This statement is false. Prices in secondary marke
14、ts determine the prices that firms issuing securities receive in primary markets. In addition, secondary markets make securities more liquid and thus easier to sell in the primary markets. Therefore, secondary markets are, if anything, more important than primary markets.6. You would rather hold bon
15、ds, because bondholders are paid off before equity holders, who are the residual claimants. 7. Because you know your family member better than a stranger, you know more about the borrowers honesty, propensity for risk taking, and other traits. There is less asymmetric information than with a strange
16、r and less likelihood of an adverse selection problem, with the result that you are more likely to lend to the family member.9. Loan sharks can threaten their borrowers with bodily harm if borrowers take actions that might jeopardize their paying off the loan. Hence borrowers from a loan shark are l
17、ess likely to increase moral hazard. 10. They might not work hard enough while you are not looking or may steal or commit fraud.11. Yes, because even if you know that a borrower is taking actions that might jeopardize paying off the loan, you must still stop the borrower from doing so. Because that
18、may be costly, you may not spend the time and effort to reduce moral hazard, and so the problem of moral hazard still exists. 57 12. True. If there are no information or transactions costs, people could make loans to each other at no cost and would thus have no need for financial intermediaries.13.
19、Because the costs of making the loan to your neighbor are high (legal fees, fees for a credit check, and so on), you will probably not be able earn 5% on the loan after your expenses even though it has a 10% interest rate. You are better off depositing your savings with a financial intermediary and
20、earning 5% interest. In addition, you are likely to bear less risk by depositing your savings at the bank rather than lending them to your neighbor. 14. A ranking from most liquid to least liquid is (a), (b), (c), and (d). The ranking is similar for the most safe to the least safe.15. Increased disc
21、ussion of foreign financial markets in the U.S. press and the growth in markets for international financial instruments such as Eurodollars and Eurobonds. 58 Chapter 3 What Is Money? 1. (b) 2. Because the orchard owner likes only bananas but the banana grower doesnt like apples, the banana grower wi
22、ll not want apples in exchange for his bananas, and they will not trade. Similarly, the chocolatier will not be willing to trade with the banana grower because she does not like bananas. The orchard owner will not trade with the chocolatier because he doesnt like chocolate. Hence, in a barter econom
23、y, trade among these three people may well not take place, because in no case is there a double coincidence of wants. However, if money is introduced into the economy, the orchard owner can sell his apples to the chocolatier and then use the money to buy bananas from the banana grower. Similarly, th
24、e banana grower can use the money she receives from the orchard owner to buy chocolate from the chocolatier, and the chocolatier can use the money to buy apples from the orchard owner. The result is that the need for a double coincidence of wants is eliminated, and everyone is better off because all
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