货币金融学米什金版本课后习题答案1-11章.pdf
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PART THREE
Answers
to End-of-Chapter
Problems
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 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
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 the 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 firm’s shares means that it can raise a smaller amount of funds, so investment in
facilities and equipment will fall.
11. Higher stock 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 American 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
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