ECON 201 Chapter Notes - Chapter 14: Fractional-Reserve Banking, Money Market Fund, Federal Reserve System

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Barter economy: economy that doesn"t use money people trade goods and services directly for other goods and services. Money: an asset people are generally willing to accept in exchange for goods or services or in payments of debt. Commodity money: good used as money that also has value independent of its use as money: medium of exchange, unit of account, store of value, standard deferred payment. Fiat money: paper currency, no value except as money. M1: money supply includes currency, checking account balances, traveler"s checks. M2: everything in m1, savings accounts, small-denomination time deposits such as certificates of deposits (cd), money market deposit accounts in banks, non institutional money market fund shares. Reserves: deposits that a bank has retained rather than loaned out of invested. Required reserves: reserves a bank are legally required to hold. Required reserve ratio: fraction of reserves banks are required to hold. Excess reserves: reserves held of legal minimum requirement.

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