Inflation and its Effects Slides By John Dawson and Kevin Brady Begin Interactive Examples To navigate, please click the appropriate green buttons. (Do.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Slides By Timothy Diette and Kevin Brady Profit in Competition Begin Interactive Examples CoreEconomics, 2e To navigate, please click the appropriate green.
Advertisements

Slides By Timothy Diette and Kevin Brady Shifts of Supply and Demand Begin Interactive Examples To navigate, please click the appropriate green buttons.
Instruction: Use mouses left button. Use mouses left button. If mouse buttons dont work, use arrow keys of keyboard for slide show. If mouse buttons dont.
Instruction: Use mouses left button. Use mouses left button. If mouse buttons dont work, use arrow keys of keyboard for slide show. If mouse buttons dont.
Saving Money. What does it mean to save money? Saving means putting some of your money away for emergencies and/or short-term (less than one year) financial.
Chapter 23 Monetary Policy
Number of US Bank Failures
Slides Created By Kevin Brady and Eric Chiang Money Creation Process Interactive Examples To navigate, please click the appropriate green buttons. (Do.
Ch 4. Time Value of Money Goal:
Number of US Bank Failures 1 FDIC usually closes banks on Fridays Total No. of YearFailed banksGA portion
1 The Consumer Price Index (CPI) n The Bureau of Labor Statistics collects price data on… –100,000 items –85 different locations around the country –19,000.
Introducing the Mathematics of Finance
THE LEVEL OF INTEREST RATES
CHAPTER 4 THE LEVEL OF INTEREST RATES Copyright© 2012 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.
To navigate, please click the appropriate green buttons. (Do not use the arrows on your keyboard) Worked Out Problems Slides Created By Dr. John Dawson.
The Consumer Price Index (CPI) n The Bureau of Labor Statistics collects price data on… –100,000 items –85 different locations around the country –19,000.
The Multiplier Effect and Crowding Out Slides By John Dawson and Kevin Brady Begin Interactive Examples CoreEconomics, 2e To navigate, please click the.
Future Value Present Value Annuities Different compounding Periods Adjusting for frequent compounding Effective Annual Rate (EAR) Chapter
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved. Chapter 5 Time Value of Money.
Chapter 3 Price Floors / Minimum Wage
Slides By Timothy Diette and Kevin Brady Input Markets Begin Interactive Examples To navigate, please click the appropriate green buttons. (Do not use.
The Time Value of Money Module 24.
Slides By John Dawson and Kevin Brady Bond Prices and Interest Rates Begin CoreEconomics, 2e Interactive Examples To navigate, please click the appropriate.
Who wants to be a Millionaire? Click to begin game.
Do Now 1)What does it mean to "invest"? 2) Why do you think it is best to start saving at a young age?
Chapter 19 Aggregate Demand and Supply
Chapter 9: Mathematics of Finance
CHAPTER 4 THE LEVEL OF INTEREST RATES. Copyright© 2003 John Wiley and Sons, Inc. What are Interest Rates? Rental price for money. The time value of consumption.
Chapter 5 Interest Rates. © 2013 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved Discuss how interest rates are quoted, and compute the effective annual.
Slides By John Dawson and Kevin Brady Begin Exchange Rates Interactive Examples Material from this presentation can be found in: Chapter 26 To navigate,
Slides By John Dawson and Kevin Brady Begin Money Multiplier Interactive Examples To navigate, please click the appropriate green buttons. (Do not use.
Contemporary Engineering Economics, 6 th edition Park Copyright © 2016 by Pearson Education, Inc. All Rights Reserved Nominal and Effective Interest Rates.
Chapter 5 Interest Rates.
1) You took a 1,000$ borrower, with an annual interest rate of 3 percent. How much money you will have to return after one year? After 2 years? After.
Chapter 4 Money and Inflation
CHAPTER ONE PERSONAL FINANCIAL PLANNING. Chapter 1 Objectives… How to create a financial plan How to develop your personal financial goals The opportunity.
Slides Created By Kevin Brady and Eric Chiang Market for Loanable Funds Interactive Examples To navigate, please click the appropriate green buttons. (Do.
Begin Slides By David Gillette and Kevin Brady Fiscal Policy and the Multiplier Material from this presentation can be found in: Chapter 19 Chapter 20.
Slides by John Dawson and Kevin Brady Begin Comparative Advantage Interactive Examples CoreEconomics, 2e To navigate, please click the appropriate green.
Chapter Six Real Interest Rates. Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.6 | 2 Investors care about how much they can purchase with.
Interest Rates & Inflation Real vs. Nominal Interest Rates.
GDP Calculations Slides By John Dawson and Kevin Brady Begin CoreEconomics, 2e Interactive Examples To navigate, please click the appropriate green buttons.
Slides By Timothy Diette and Kevin Brady Elasticity of Supply Begin Interactive Examples CoreEconomics, 2e To navigate, please click the appropriate green.
Copyright © 2009 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved. Chapter 4 Time Value of Money.
Slides by Timothy Diette and Kevin Brady Comparative Advantage Begin Interactive Examples To navigate, please click the appropriate green buttons. (Do.
Macroeconomics Lecture 12. Review of the Previous Lecture Quantity Theory of Money (Cont.) –Money Demand –Inflation and Money Growth –Inflation and Interest.
Growth Rates Slides By John Dawson and Kevin Brady Begin Interactive Examples To navigate, please click the appropriate green buttons. (Do not use the.
Copyright 2014 © W. Seth Hunter ConsumerMath.org L9.1 Understanding Interest Interest can be a life long friend or an unforgiving master. Making interest.
Slides Created By Kevin Brady and Eric Chiang Keynesian Macroeconomics Interactive Examples To navigate, please click the appropriate green buttons. (Do.
COST OF MONEY TEST PREP. INTEREST RATES GOING DOWN NO INFORMATION RATES WILL INCREASE LOCK UP CURRENT RATE FOR A LONG PERIOD OF TIME.
Peer Pressure: Saying NO to Drugs. In the last activity, you identified some of the common things peers might say to get you to use drugs. Today you are.
Annuities, Loans, and Mortgages Section 3.6b. Annuities Thus far, we’ve only looked at investments with one initial lump sum (the Principal) – but what.
Module 24: The Time Value of Money Present Value : The use of interest rates to compare the value of a dollar realized today with the value of a dollar.
Copyright © 2010 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved. Chapter 5 Interest Rates.
CHAPTER 4 THE LEVEL OF INTEREST RATES. Copyright© 2006 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.2 What are Interest Rates? Rental price for money. Penalty to borrowers.
5-1 CHAPTER 5 THE LEVEL OF INTEREST RATES. 5-2 What are Interest Rates? l Rental price for money. l The time value of consumption. l Opportunity cost.
Business Studies Find your chair: Look at the picture what does this mean to you? Be prepared to answer if called upon: This does not require any verbal.
Measuring the Price Level and Inflation Chapter 9.
Number US Bank Failures
Click here for the answer. Click here for the answer.
Click here for the answer. Click here for the answer.
Click here for the answer. Click here for the answer.
Rule of 72 Years to Double Your Money
CLICK HERE TO BEGIN THE GAME!!
Real Rate of Return.
 Click on a present to go to a question
Interest rate, Nominal Interest Rate & Real Interest Rate.
any financial decisions.
Importance of Higher Returns
Presentation transcript:

Inflation and its Effects Slides By John Dawson and Kevin Brady Begin Interactive Examples To navigate, please click the appropriate green buttons. (Do not use the arrows on your keyboard) Material from this presentation can be found in: Chapter 16 CoreEconomics, 2e

Answer QUESTION 1: Suppose a close friend asks you to loan her $1,000 for one year and agrees to pay interest on the loan. So, you withdraw the $1,000 from your savings account and must now decide what interest rate to charge your friend for the loan. A.After doing some research, you conclude that you could invest your money elsewhere and earn a real return of 3% during the next year. How does this information influence the nominal interest rate you charge your friend for the loan? Should you charge her an interest rate of 3%? B.Suppose on the night before you agree to terms on the loan with your friend, you hear a reputable news report that inflation over the coming year will be 4%. How will this influence the nominal interest rate you quote your friend for the loan? C.Suppose the actual inflation rate over the course of the loan turns out to be 5%. How does this affect you? Your friend? Interactive Examples Inflation and its Effects

ANSWER: A.If you require a 3% real return on the loan, you would want to charge your friend at least a 3% nominal interest rate on the loan. In addition, you would also need to account for inflation over the course of the loan. For example, if you expect inflation to run at 2% over the next year (expected inflation is what matters here because we don’t know the actual inflation rate in the future), you would need to charge 3% + 2% = 5% to realize the real return of 3% during a period of 2% inflation. B.If you believe the forecast of 4% inflation over the coming year, you would need to charge your friend a nominal interest rate of 7% on the loan in order to realize the 3% real return you require. Note that the higher the expected rate of inflation, the higher is the nominal interest rate on the loan required to achieve an expected real rate of 3%. C.If the actual inflation rate turns out to be 5% during the year and you charge your friend a nominal interest rate of 7%, you will realize a real return of only 2% (less than the 3% you wanted at the beginning of the loan). In other words, you as a lender are harmed by the higher-than-expected inflation while your friend, the debtor, benefits. Interactive Examples Inflation and its Effects The End Back