Instructor’s Manual
Money, Banking, And The Economy
Paperback
Book
Second Edition
By
Thomas Mayer
University of California, Davis
James S. Duesenberry
Harvard University
Robert Z. Aliber
University of Chicago
This edition of the Manual contains a new of of multiple choice questions
A number of questions include an “all the above” or “none of the above” option
Book contents
Standard attempt to motivate students by telling them how important monetary economics is
Overview of the financial system, setting the stage for the more detailed discussions of different financial institutions
Banks, FDIC
Savings, federal funds
Analyzing the determination of deposit rates as a price theory problem
Operation of financial markets and analysis of their operations
Organization of Fed
Financial reform
Definition of money
Deposit creation
Bank reserves
Various approaches to the demand for money in relation to income, wealth, real and nominal interest rates
Keynesian macro model
Quantity theory of money
St. Louis equation, the Brunner-Meltzer model and the real balance effect
Keynesian-monetarist debate
Inflation in terms of demand-pull models and cost-push factors
Goals of macro-policy and goals specific to Fed
Federal reserve
The money stock, long term interest rates and a credit or debit variable
Channels by which monetary policy affects the economy
Stabilization policy, lags, rational expectations, and political pressures
How the Fed operates
Monetarists and Keynesians
Evolution of the international payments mechanism from the gold standard of the later part of the nineteenth and the early twentieth century International currencies, importers, exporters, and international investors
International banking
International financial arrangements
Paperback edition, published in 1984 by WW Norton and company
Book dimensions:
6” x 9” x 0.4”
182 pages
ISBN
0-393-95353-x
Impeccable preowned condition. All pages clean. Binding tight. Smoke and pet free home
Shipping is $5.00
Check out Very Desperate Housewife Online Store for More Scarce Books!