Chapter 25: Problem 3
What is hyperinflation? Why do governments sometimes allow it to occur?
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Key Concepts
These are the key concepts you need to understand to accurately answer the question.
Chapter 25: Problem 3
What is hyperinflation? Why do governments sometimes allow it to occur?
These are the key concepts you need to understand to accurately answer the question.
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Get started for freeWhat are the four functions of money? Can something be considered money if it does not fulfill all four functions?
Why do businesses accept paper currency when they know that, unlike a gold coin, the paper the currency is printed on is worth very little?
An article in the American Free Press quoted Professor Peter Spencer of York University in England as saying, "This printing of money 'will keep the [deflation] wolf from the door." The same article quoted Ambrose Evans- Pritchard, a writer for the London-based newspaper The Telegraph, as saying, "Deflation has ... insidious traits. It causes shoppers to hold back. Once this psychology gains a grip, it can gradually set off a self-feeding spiral that is hard to stop." a. What is price deflation? b. What does Spencer mean by the statement "This printing of money 'will keep the [deflation] wolf from the door'"? c. Why would deflation cause "shoppers to hold back," and what does Evans- Pritchard mean by saying "Once this psychology gains a grip, it can gradually set off a self-feeding spiral that is hard to stop"?
In a newspaper column, author Delia Ephron described a conversation with a friend who had a large balance on her credit card with an interest rate of 18 percent per year. The friend was worried about paying off the debt. Ephron was earning only 0.4 percent interest on her bank certificate of deposit (CD). She considered withdrawing the money from her \(\mathrm{CD}\) and loaning it to her friend so her friend could pay off her credit card balance: "So I was thinking that all of us earning 0.4 percent could instead loan money to our friends at 0.5 percent.... My friend would get out of debt [and] I would earn \$5 a month instead of \$4." Why don't more people use their savings to make loans rather than keep the funds in bank accounts that earn very low rates of interest?
An article in the New York Times stated that "income is only one way of measuring wealth." Do you agree that income is a way of measuring wealth?
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