Term
|
Definition
Trickle down via tax cuts
Free markets (rational/efficient)
Small govt
**Firms and actors behave rationally** |
|
|
Term
Significance of berlin wall falling |
|
Definition
Showing capitalism winning the economic war |
|
|
Term
Recent rends in job growth vs workforce growth
|
|
Definition
Jobs are not created fast enough for the rate at which jobs are growing on the supply side |
|
|
Term
Formula for supply of labor |
|
Definition
Supply side = labor growth + worker productivity |
|
|
Term
Unemployment rates
Jan '00
Aug '09 |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
From Jan 2000 to Aug 2010, what was the change in the dow |
|
Definition
11,522 to 10,213 (decreased) |
|
|
Term
How has median house hold income chaged from 2000-2008 |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
How long did it take housing prices to double during the housing bubble |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
Historically, what is the avg return on housing |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
Why, with decreasing median income did consumption increase? |
|
Definition
People at this time were borrowing against there homes |
|
|
Term
Who was most likely to walk away from their mortgage during the crisis |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
If you take the real GDP growth from 2000-2010 and subtract the growth in finance, what is the growth left? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
How has the govt budget changed from 2000-2010 |
|
Definition
From a 236 bill surplus to a 1.3 TRILLION deficit |
|
|
Term
During the last decade, what was one of the main reasons we dropped from a surplus to a deficit? |
|
Definition
Iraq and Afghanistan wars were paid by outside money which lead to tax cuts which has led to recession. |
|
|
Term
What were the 5 highest countries returns in stock and bonds over the last decade? |
|
Definition
Ukraine 893%
Peru 839%
Russia 685%
China 560%
Brazil 303%
India 275% |
|
|
Term
How does an increase in price reduce AD |
|
Definition
Yd = C+I+G+NX
-As P increases, M (supply of real money) Decreases
-Real rate must increases so that the opportunity cost of holding less real money increases and causes public to be more willing to hold less real-monetary assets and more non-monetary assets.
-As real real increases, firms as less willing to invest in ppe and consumers have more of an incentive to save instead of spend, so I and C both drop
-As real rate increases, demand for home currency increases, which causes the home currency or fx rate to appreciate. This raises the cost of exports, and lowers the cost of imports so NX decreases
***So : C, I and NX all decrease. and so does AD*** |
|
|
Term
When are the following markets in equilibrium?
Asset markets
Nonmoney Asset Market
Goods Market
When all three of these are in equilibrium what state is the economy in? |
|
Definition
-Asset Markets : Quantity of real money balances = available supply
-Nonmoney asset market : households and businesses are satisfied with their holdings of non money assets
-Goods Market : Savings = Investment
-General Equilibrium |
|
|
Term
How does an increase in nominal money supply affect the AD curve and why |
|
Definition
Shifts the AD curve to the right because real money balances rise and real interest rate falls |
|
|
Term
How does an increase in the interest rate on money balances affect AD and why |
|
Definition
Shifts the AD curve to the left because money demand rises and real int rate rises |
|
|
Term
Effect that an increase of expected future output had on AD curve and why |
|
Definition
Shifts AD curve to the right because C is rising |
|
|
Term
How would an increase in govt purchases affect the AD curve and why |
|
Definition
Shift AD curve to the right because G is increasing |
|
|
Term
How would an increase in the expected future profitability shift AD curve |
|
Definition
Would shift AD curve to the right because I would increase |
|
|
Term
How would an increase in business taxes affect the AD curve |
|
Definition
Would shift the AD curve to the left because I would be declining. |
|
|
Term
What changes in the goods market will affect AD? |
|
Definition
Changes in Saving/Investment
Government Purchases
Net exports |
|
|
Term
What does new classical view say about SRAS compared to the Keynsian view |
|
Definition
-New classical says that relative prices matter to determine output(supply)
-Keynsian says that in the SR, the SRAS curve curves up and LRAS curve is straight up |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
|
|
Term
What would be the typical business cycle response to a recession (output gap between actual and potential) |
|
Definition
-Fed cuts interest rates to increase AD growth
Year 2 : Supply side growth (AS shifts right 3%) and demand side growth (GSP) 5%
Year 3 : Same growth and AD=AS but inflation is still rising
**Fed can aim for a soft landing by raising rates near end of expansion to soften the inflation** |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
-Minimize inflation
-Minimize unemployment rate. @ full employment, unemployment rate is approx. 5%
-Maintain that ADgrowth is roughly equal to ASgrowth |
|
|
Term
What is the "speed limit" for growth |
|
Definition
AS ( increase r to slow down, reduce r to speed up) |
|
|
Term
In current crisis, the PIMCO report about "new normal" said what about :
-Monetary policy (Fed funds rate)
-Options of buying L/T debt, and effect that buying up L/T debt has on the market
-Although banks will get more reserves, will consumers and firms borrow at low rate?
-Fiscal policy options? |
|
Definition
-Fed funs rate @ .15%, cant really drop any lower
-Buying L/T debt makes real rate fall slightly
-Banks are reluctant to lend because, on a net basis, people are paying off debt..Firms need more demand to create supply, but cant sell existing stock
-Obama trying to extend tax cuts for all but top earners, but can we really increase Govt spending(G) with such a giant deficit? |
|
|
Term
2 Main critics of fed during the current economic crisis regarding :
-Cost of borrowing
-Arbitrage |
|
Definition
-cost of borrowing too low, savers(lenders) gaining too little
-Banks are taking in savings at almost 0% and using for arbitrage opportunities instead of lending |
|
|
Term
What components of GDP drive real gdp growth during first year of the recovery from a recession? |
|
Definition
-Consumption 58.3% of gdp (typically 20%)
-Residential Investment (new houses) : 20% (typically 5.5%)
-Inventory Adjustment (21.8%(typically less than 1%) |
|
|
Term
What is avg increase in GDP during first year of recovery from a recession? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
What happened to greece in the eurozone? |
|
Definition
-Stability agreement limits deficit a country can have
-Greece was buying USD denom debt and trading for Euro denom debt
-Had to have a 110mill euro bailout to meet debt obligation
-Basically bailing out banks from default risk from greece. |
|
|
Term
When looking at two stocks, what is the main driver of value for a stock. Assuming 100% reinvestment |
|
Definition
-The growth of the dividend yield |
|
|
Term
CAPM and what it measures |
|
Definition
-Risk of a stock
-Measured by beta
-Can diversify all systemic risk |
|
|
Term
What is an ADR and how would this affect a US only portfolio if added. |
|
Definition
American Depository Receipt : Foreign companies traded on US exchanges in USD
-Would open the investor to international risk |
|
|
Term
What do the Loanable funds market and Bond market determine? |
|
Definition
Funds : Interest rates
-Bond : Determines bond prices |
|
|
Term
In the loanable funds market, what variable is on each axis |
|
Definition
y axis - int rate
x axis- Q of loanable funds |
|
|
Term
How would each of the following affect the loanable funds market?
-Investment Tax Credit
-Increase in expected profitability of capital
-Economic stimulus by govt
-Increase in exports
-Changes in bus cycle (recession/expansion)
-Increased consumer demand |
|
Definition
-Would cause an increase in purchase of capital equipment so demand for loanable funds increases
-Would cause demand to increase (is a derived demand of capital demand)
-Causes demand to increase (G increasing)
-Demand increases ( NX increasing)
-Demand decreases in recession, increases in expansion
-Firms expand to meet demand, and demand for loanable funds increases |
|
|
Term
What affect would the following have on the loanable funds market?
-Increased return on savings
-Increased wealth |
|
Definition
-Both would increase supply for loanable funds |
|
|
Term
The latest census said what about:
-Marriages
-Census gap (between rich and poor) |
|
Definition
-Marriages @ all time low. 52% of americans over 18 said they were married in 2009, in 2000, 57.7% were married
-Gap between rich and poor is largest it has ever been. Top 20% earn 49.4% of income. bottom 20% makes 3.4% of all us income
-The income ratio of top vs bottom earners was 2008 was 13.6-1 in 2009 it increased to 14.5-1. Lowest was in 1968 7.69-1
- |
|
|
Term
Effect that a sudden estimate of the risk of default on bonds is 25% would have on the corp bond market |
|
Definition
- Would see demand for these bonds drop which drops price, and increases yield. |
|
|
Term
-Effect that an increase in govt spending would have on the treasury market? |
|
Definition
-Supply of treasuries would increase as the govt tries to raise money. Decreasing price, and increasing yield |
|
|
Term
-Effect that an increasing budget deficit has on the bond mkt (treasuries) and loanable funds mkt |
|
Definition
-Increases supply of treauries which drops price and increases yield
-reduces supply in loanable funds market which increases int rates. |
|
|
Term
Small open economy vs large open economy |
|
Definition
-Small (SOE) doesn't influence prices due to changes in their own demand or supply
-Large open econs influence price changes in the market |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
-Rate that you can get buy one currency using another currency |
|
|
Term
-Real exchange rate
-Formula |
|
Definition
-Includes prices of goods in the exchange rate calculation
- EXr = Ex * P/Pf
-Ex : nom fx rate, with local currency on bottom
-P : Price domestically
-Pf : foreign price in foreign currency |
|
|