Chapter Four Multiple Choice Test Bank for Midterm and Final test PDF

Title Chapter Four Multiple Choice Test Bank for Midterm and Final test
Course Introduction to Finance
Institution University of Waikato
Pages 10
File Size 139.7 KB
File Type PDF
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Summary

This document is a PDF of the multiple choice test bank for chapter 4 of FINAN101 - Introduction to Finance. The question and answers in this document are used for the final and midterm test for the paper, this is the multiple choice test bank that they use....


Description

Multiple-choice questions 1. Which of the following is part of M1? A. B. C. *D.

Loans made by banks to the private nonbank sector. Bank term deposits held by the private nonbank sector. Bank saving deposits held by the private nonbank sector. Bank current accounts held by the private nonbank sector.

2. Which of the following is part of M1? *A. B. C. D.

Bank current accounts held by the private nonbank sector. Accounts held by banks at the central bank. Loans made by banks to the private nonbank sector. Accounts held by the government at the central bank.

3. _______________ is included as part of M1. *A. B. C. D.

Currency held by nonbank businesses. Bank saving deposits held by nonbank businesses. Borrowing by nonbank businesses from banks. Bank term deposits held by nonbank businesses.

4. Which of the following is part of M1? A. Bank loans to the private nonbank sector. B. Interbank loans. C. Foreign currency held by the private nonbank sector. *D. Domestic currency held by the private nonbank sector.

5. M1 includes: *A. B. C. D.

Bank current accounts held by households. Bank saving deposits held by households. Bank term deposits held by households. Current accounts held by households in nonbank financial institutions.

6. Which of the following does NOT belong to M1? A. Currency held by nonbank businesses. B. Currency held by households. C. Bank current accounts held by the private nonbank sector. *D. Bank saving accounts held by the private nonbank sector.

Module 4 : The Reserve Bank of Australia and interest rates

7. Which of the following is included in the money base? *A. B. C. D.

Accounts held by the banks at the central bank. Accounts held by the government at the central bank. Bank term deposits held by the private nonbank sector. Bank current accounts held by the private nonbank sector.

LO 4.1: Explain how the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) measures the money supply.

8. When the government provides social benefits to households: A. B. *C. D.

the currency held by banks increases. the money supply decreases. the money supply increases. the currency held by banks decreases.

9. The supply of ESF increases when: A. B. *C. D.

commercial banks pay back their loans to the central bank. the government sells foreign currencies to the private sector. the government provides social benefits to Australian households. the government issues Treasury bonds that are bought by the private sector.

10. In order to reach its cash rate target, the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA): *A. influences the supply of ESF. B. influences the demand for ESF. C. assists the government in its issuance of securities. D. imposes the interest rate on interbank overnight loans.

11. A decrease in reserve requirements will definitely cause: A. B. *C. D.

an increase in the Fed Funds rate. inflation expectations to fall. excess reserves to increase. expenditures to fall.

12. The cash rate is the interest rate: A. on the balances of the ESAs. *B. on overnight interbank loans. C. on deposits at commercial banks. D. on the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) overnight provisions of ESF to commercial banks. 13. Which of the following statements is NOT correct? The cash rate

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Testbank to accompany: Finance essentials 1e by Kidwell et al.

A. B. *C. D.

is the result of the demand and supply of ESF. is the interest rate on overnight interbank loans. is determined by a decree of the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA). is used as a reference rate by banks for the determination of other interest rates.

14. An increase in the supply of ESF: *A. B. C. D.

decreases the cash rate. increases the cash rate. decreases the cash rate target. increases the cash rate target.

15. In order to reach its cash rate target, the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA): A. lends to banks at the cash rate target. B. imposes the rate used by banks when they lend to each other. *C. brings the ESF supply to a level so that it intersects with the demand for ESF at the level of the cash rate target. D. brings the demand for ESF to a level so that it intersects with the supply of ESF at the level of the cash rate target. 16. If the actions of the government bring the cash rate above the cash rate target, A. *B. C. D.

the RBA will sell securities from banks to make the cash rate decrease. the RBA will buy securities from banks to make the cash rate decrease. the RBA will sell securities to banks to make the cash rate target increase. the RBA will buy securities from banks to make the cash rate target increase.

17. If the actions of the government bring the cash rate below the cash rate target, *A. B. C. D.

the RBA will sell securities from banks to make the cash rate increase. the RBA will buy securities from banks to make the cash rate increase. the RBA will sell securities from banks to make the cash rate target decrease. the RBA will buy securities to banks to make the cash rate target decrease.

18. Which of the following statements is NOT correct? In Australia open market operations are implemented: A. daily. B. through auctions. C. mainly through repos. *D. using exclusively Commonwealth government securities. 19. When making open market purchases the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) does not accept: A. B. *C. D.

ADI issued securities. State government securities. Nonbank corporate securities. Commonwealth government securities (CGS).

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Module 4 : The Reserve Bank of Australia and interest rates

20. When making open market purchases, the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) accepts: A. B. C. *D.

Shares. Nonbank corporate securities. Foreign government securities. Commonwealth government securities.

21. Monetarists believe that an increase in the money supply, all else equal, will cause: A. B. C. *D.

national income to fall. investment spending to fall. government expenditures to rise. consumption expenditures to rise.

22. Structural unemployment implies that: A. B. *C. D.

there is actually full employment. unemployed people are in transition between jobs. people in search of work do not match the available jobs. only people who do not wish to work are unemployed.

23. Which of the following is not an aim for the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) stipulated in the Reserve Bank Act 1959? A. B. *C. D.

Full employment in Australia. Stability of the currency of Australia. Equality of opportunity for the people of Australia. Economic prosperity and welfare of the people of Australia.

24. Which of the following is an official aim for the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) stipulated in the Reserve Bank Act 1959? A. B. C. *D.

Individual rights of the people of Australia. Equitable distribution of wealth in Australia. Equality of opportunity for the people of Australia. Economic prosperity and welfare of the people of Australia.

25. Price stability implies that: A. B. C. *D.

the purchase power of a given amount of money significantly decreases. the purchase power of a given amount of money significantly increases. every price in the economy does not change or changes by a small percentage only. the average price in the economy does not change or changes by a small percentage only.

26. Which of the following statements is not correct? Natural rate of unemployment is: A. the irreducible unemployment rate. B. the lowest rate of unemployment that can be reached.

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Testbank to accompany: Finance essentials 1e by Kidwell et al.

C. the unemployment rate that is tolerated by economic policy makers. *D. the unemployment rate capturing unemployed people that do not actually look for a job. 27. In the short term, there are possible conflicts between the following monetary policy aims: A. B. C. *D.

Full employment versus economic prosperity. Stability of the currency versus low inflation. Economic prosperity versus economic welfare. Full employment versus stability of the currency.

28. Unemployment should fall if: A. B. *C. D.

the money supply decreases. wages increase and people expect prices to rise. wages increase and people expect prices to be stable. interest rates rise more than prices are expected to rise.

29. The intended longer run goal of monetary policy is: A. B. C. *D.

to raise security prices. to lower interest rates. to reduce government spending. to increase consumption and investment spending.

30. The “tools” of monetary policy include all of the following except: A. open market operations. B. changing the discount rate. *C. changes in the government budget deficit. D. changes in reserve requirements. 31. Inflation is defined as: A. a one-time increase in prices. *B. a continuous increase in the average price level. C. changes in the relative prices of goods and services. D. the difference between the interest rate and the exchange rate. LO 4.3: Discuss the objectives of the RBA in conducting monetary policy.

32. An expansion in the Australian money supply: *A. will cause Australian exports to increase. B. will increase domestic interest rates C. will cause Australian imports to increase. D. will cause the exchange value of the dollar to increase.

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Module 4 : The Reserve Bank of Australia and interest rates

33. Which of the following is not a consequence of a decrease in the cash rate target? a. b. *c. d.

A decrease in the interest rates in the Australian financial markets. An increase in the prices of fixed income securities. An increase in the value of the Australian Dollar in foreign currencies. A decrease in the interest rates for financial products in the banking sector.

34. Which of the following is NOT a consequence of a decrease in the cash rate target? *A. B. C. D.

Imports increase. Exports increase. Consumption increases. Investment in housing increases.

35. Which of the following is not a consequence of a decrease in the cash rate target in an economy with unemployment and underused capital? A. *B. C. D.

Real GDP increases. Net exports decrease. Business investment increases. Investment in housing increases.

36. Which of the following is NOT a consequence of a decrease in the cash rate target in an economy operating at full capacity? A. *B. C. D.

Inflation increases. Real GDP increases. Consumption increases. Value of the dollar with respect to other currencies decreases.

37. A contraction in the Australian money supply should: A. B. *C. D.

cause Australian exports to increase. cause the exchange value of the Australian dollar to decrease. increase domestic interest rates. all of the above.

38. Monetary policies directed toward increased economic activity are likely to ________ the value of the domestic currency in relation to other currencies. A. B. C. *D.

have an ambiguous effect on. have no effect on. increase. decrease.

39. An increase in the money supply, all else equal, will cause:

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Testbank to accompany: Finance essentials 1e by Kidwell et al.

A. B. *C. D.

national income to fall. investment spending to fall. consumption expenditures to rise. government expenditures to rise.

40. Monetary policy is thought to affect the economy through: A. B. C. *D.

the business investment channel. the consumer spending channel. the net exports channel. all of the above

41. Monetary policies directed toward increased economic growth may have what impact upon the value of the dollar in relation to other currencies? A. B. *C. D.

an unpredictable effect. no effect. decrease. increase.

42. The price of borrowing money is called: A. *B. C. D.

return. interest. inflation. all of the above.

43. The nominal rate of interest is: *A. the unadjusted return rate. B. the inflation adjusted cost rate. C. the inflation-adjusted return rate. D. a commodity cross-indexed return rate.

44. At a basic level, the real rate of return can be justified by: A. *B. C. D.

compensation for the level of international borrowing. compensation for deferring consumption. compensation for inflation. all of the above.

45. If inflation is anticipated to be 5 per cent during the next year, while the real rate of interest for a one-year loan is 5 per cent, then what should the nominal rate of interest be for a riskfree one-year loan? A. 25 per cent.

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Module 4 : The Reserve Bank of Australia and interest rates

*B. 10 per cent. C. 5 per cent. D. none of the above.

46. During an economic expansion, we would expect: A. B. *C. D.

interest rates to remain the same. the price of money to decrease. interest rates to increase. interest rates to decrease.

47. If the supply of loanable funds decreases relative to the demand for those funds, then we would expect: A. B. *C. D.

the price of money to remain unchanged. interest rates to decrease. interest rates to increase. interest rates to remain unchanged.

48. The allocative function of interest rates allocates between: A. between banks, non-banks institution and borrowers. B. banks and borrowers. *C. surplus spending units (SSUs) and deficit spending units (DSUs) and among financial markets. D. Both A and B. 49. Which of the following factors influences the real rate of interest? A. the rate of inflation B. return on capital investments. C. investor's positive time preference. *D. both B and C. 50. The _____________ is called the equilibrium rate of interest. A. B. *C. D.

market interest rate. nominal interest rate. real rate of interest. bank lending rate.

51. An increase in consumer saving caused by a tax cut in savings by the government would: A. increase wealth. B. increase spending. C. increase interest rate. *D. increase the supply of loanable funds and bring down interest rates.

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Testbank to accompany: Finance essentials 1e by Kidwell et al.

52. The Consumer Price Index (CPI), used to calculate the ‘headline’ rate of inflation, is the most generally accepted measure of the: *A. price level. B. lending rate. C. real rate of interest. D. nominal interest rate. 53. If the actual rate of inflation is less than the rate expected during a period, A. both borrowers and lenders benefited. B. neither borrowers nor lenders benefited. C. borrowers benefited at the expense of lenders. *D. lenders benefited at the expense of borrowers.

54. Which of the following statement is false? *A. The real rate of interest is the rate unadjusted for inflation. B. The nominal rate of interest is the rate of interest unadjusted for inflation. C. The real rate of interest is the interest rate that would exist in the absence of inflation. D. None of the above. 55. Fluctuations in the real rate of interest occurs because of: A. monetary policies. B. changes in taxation system. C. technological changes. *D. all of the above. 56. Fisher’s equation states that: A. B. *C. D.

the nominal interest rate is equal to the real interest rate minus expected inflation rate. the nominal interest rate is equal to the real interest rate plus expected inflation rate. the real interest rate is equal to the expected inflation rate plus nominal interest rate. the nominal interest rate is equal to real interest rate multiplied by the expected inflation rate.

57. The current 1-year Treasury rate is 10 per cent. It is predicted that the annual inflation rate is going to be 0.50 per cent higher than originally expected. The higher inflation forecasts reflect unexpectedly strong macroeconomic conditions. What is the current inflation premium? (Assume that the real rate of interest is 9.0 per cent.) A. *B. C. D.

0.5%. 1%. 1.5%. 11%.

58. The current 1-year Treasury rate is 10 per cent. It is predicted that the annual inflation rate is going to be 0.50 per cent higher than originally expected. The higher inflation forecasts

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reflect unexpectedly strong macroeconomic conditions. When the market opens tomorrow, what should the Treasury rate be? (Assume that the real rate of interest is 9.0 per cent.) A. B. *C. D.

9%. 10%. 10.5%. 11%.

59. The current 1-year Treasury rate is 10 per cent. It is predicted that the annual inflation rate is going to be 0.50 per cent lower than originally expected. The lower inflation forecasts reflect the unexpected drop in world prices. When the market opens tomorrow, what should the Treasury rate be? (Assume that the real rate of interest is 9.0 per cent.) *A. 9.5%. B. 10%. C. 10.5%. D. 11%.

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