Money and Banking: An International Text

Front Cover
Routledge, Oct 22, 2009 - Business & Economics - 256 pages

This book focuses on the core issues in money and banking. By using simple applications for anyone that understands basic economics, the lessons in the book provide any student or reader with a background in how financial markets work, how banks as businesses function, how central banks make decisions, and how monetary policy affects the global economy.

Money and Banking is split into sections based on subject matter, specifically definitions and introductions, financial markets, microeconomic issues, macroeconomy policy, and international finance. It also covers:

- derivative and currency markets

- the microeconomics of banking

- trade and currency movements

- asymmetric information and derivative markets

- the future of financial markets and their participants

By providing a mix of microeconomic and macroeconomic applications, focusing on both international examples and open economy macroeconomics, this book reduces the minutiae seen in competing books. Each chapter provides summaries of what should be learned along the way and why the chapter’s topic is important, regardless of current events. For undergraduate business, economics or social science students otherwise, this book is a concise source of information on money, banking and financial markets.

 

Contents

List of figures ix
Understanding money 1
Interest rates and financial markets 10
Risk and risk aversion 25
Equity markets stock markets and real estate 37
47
Derivative asset and insurance markets 50
Financial intermediaries 66
The domestic market for money 119
Money employment inflation and expectations 134
Money and the macroeconomy 155
Monetary policy in the open macroeconomy 184
eS 196
The world economy and monetary policy choices 203
The future of banking private and central 216
Notes 224

The microeconomics of banking 81
market 87
5a Excess reserves at US banks available funds not lent 2008
Connections between commercial and central banking 103
References 227
Index 232
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About the author (2009)

Robert Eyler is Professor and Chair of Economics at Sonoma State University, and has been a visiting scholar at both the University of Bologna and Stanford University. He has a PhD in economics from University of California, Davis, USA.