
- •Contents
- •Unit 1
- •1. Read and translate the text money
- •2. Learn the vocabulary:
- •3. Give the equivalents to the following words or phrases
- •4. Using the information in the passage, say what is true and what is false. Correct the false sentences
- •5. Translate and answer the following questions:
- •6. Сomplete each sentence with a word or phrase from the box
- •7. Make up questions to the words in italics:
- •8. Read and translate vocabulary notes. Try to remember different meanings of the term ‘money’
- •9. Questions for discussion
- •10. Read the dialogue. Try to complete it with your partner
- •11. Home reading. Read and translate the text. Suggest the title
- •11. Give a short summary of the text about different forms of money. Unit 2
- •1. Read and translate the following text the demand for money and money supply
- •Learn the vocabulary:
- •3. Find synonyms:
- •4. Using the information in the passage, say what is true and what is false. Correct the false sentences
- •5. Answer the following questions on the text
- •6. Find proper definition
- •7. Complete each sentence with a word or phrase from the box
- •9. Render the following sentences in English
- •10. Questions for discussion
- •11. Home reading text. Read and translate the following text Electronic money
- •12. What does it mean ‘to persuade people to have faith in their currency’? Try to explain in English. Give a short summary of the text
- •1. Read and translate the following text banking system
- •2. Learn the vocabulary:
- •3. Answer the following questions on the text
- •4. Fill in the blanks with proper words or phrases:
- •5. Find a proper definition:
- •8. Read and translate vocabulary notes.
- •9. Substitute the relative clauses with appropriate Participles
- •10. Read the dialogue and make a short summary in English structure and functions of a bank
- •11. Home reading. Read and translate the text. Give a short summary of it the british banking system
- •The Bank of England
- •1. Read and translate the text banking business
- •2. Learn the vocabulary:
- •3. Find equivalents in Russian
- •4. Using the information in the passage, say what is true and what is false. Correct the false sentence
- •5. Find proper definition
- •6. Answer the following questions on the text:
- •7. Read and translate the text
- •8. Your mission is to increase the profits and sales of Citibank. Complete this table with your project partner(s):
- •9. Test. Choose the correct answer
- •10. Questions for discussion
- •11. Home reading text. Read and translate the following text The parallel “shadow” banking system needs fixing
- •12. Comprehension questions on the text
- •13. Give a short summary of your home reading text unit 5
- •1. Read and translate the text accounting
- •2. Learn the vocabulary
- •3. Answer the following questions on the text:
- •4. Review the content of the text and complete the statements
- •5. Classify the following words into two groups
- •6. Match the terms with proper definitions
- •7. Translate into English
- •9. Read the text and fill in the blanks with words from the box. Summarize the functions of accounting:
- •10. Read the following dialogue with your partner:
- •11. Discuss with your partner what kind of problem Paul has got?
- •12. Home reading. Read and translate the text. Suggest the title and give a presentation on the difference between financial and managerial accounting
- •Unit 6
- •1. Read and translate the text types of accounts
- •2. Learn the vocabulary:
- •3. Find equivalents in Russian
- •4. Using the information in the passage, say what is true and what is false. Correct the false sentences
- •5. Answer the following questions on the text:
- •6. Find proper definitions
- •7. Using the words in brackets as a guide, explain the meaning of the following terms:
- •8. Read and translate vocabulary notes. Try to remember different meanings of the term ‘account’
- •9. A new customer would like to meet with you about doing business with your bank.
- •10. Say what you have learnt from the text about
- •11. Read the dialogue and give a short summary in English time deposits and savings accounts
- •12. Home reading. Read and translate the following text.
- •13. Write the annotation of the text about the money market mutual fund unit 7
- •1. Read and translate the text
- •Interest rates
- •2. Learn the vocabulary
- •3. Answer the following questions on the text:
- •4. Find proper definitions to the terms
- •5. Fill in the blanks with prepositions
- •6. Read the text using the words from the right column
- •7. Change “of”-groups into noun groups
- •8. Put the verbs in brackets into a proper form according to the model
- •9. Home reading. Read and translate the text. Monetary Policy and Interest Rates
- •10. Give a two-minute talk on the subject of monetary policy and interest rates. Unit 8
- •1. Read and translate the text financial analysis
- •2. Learn the vocabulary
- •3. Answer the following questions on the text
- •4. Find the words with opposite meanings
- •5. Fill in the blanks with the following prepositions: by, for, from, into, of, on, over, to
- •6. Read and translate vocabulary notes. Try to remember different meanings of the terms ‘ratio’ and ‘analysis’
- •7. Explain in English the flow chart. Ask five questions to your partner
- •8. Use the verbs in correct forms (infinitive or gerund)
- •9. Translate the following sentences into English
- •10. Home reading. Read and translate the text. Be ready to discuss the contents of the text
- •11. Make a short summary of the text unit 9
- •1. Read and translate the text financial management
- •2. Learn the vocabulary
- •3. Answer the following questions
- •4. Match the titles in the left column with their duties from the right column
- •5. Change the verb groups into corresponding noun groups
- •6. Translate into Russian paying attention to the forms of comparison
- •7. Translate into Russian sentences with noun groups. Pay attention to the elements detecting the beginning and the end of a group noun
- •8. Formulate the definitions of the terms, choosing a proper information from the right column
- •9. Translate the following sentences:
- •10. Home reading. Read and translate the text the basis of financial management
- •10. Discuss the following questions with your partner:
- •11. Make a short summary of the text using the graph
- •Unit 10
- •1. Read and translate the text financial markets
- •2. Learn the vocabulary
- •3. Find equivalents in Russian
- •5. Using the information in the passage, say what is true and what is false. Correct the false sentences
- •6. What kind of risk do inventors face in the financial market?
- •7. Analyze the financial terms in the box. Match them with the definitions below
- •8. Revise the following conjunctions. Read and translate the examples:
- •9. Review the forms and the use of Participles
- •10. Questions for discussion
- •11. Homereading. Read and translate the text Raising the capital
- •12. Comprehension questions
- •13. Speak about the classification of financial markets and their role. You can use the following graph
- •1. Read and translate the text
- •2. Learn the vocabulary
- •3. Answer the following questions on the text
- •4. There is a mistake in each sentence. Find and correct them
- •5. Read the dialogue and dramatize it
- •7. Using the words in brackets, explain the meaning of the following terms
- •8. Choose a proper word in the brackets
- •9. Home reading. Read and translate the text
- •10. Give a summary of your home reading text
- •11. Translate the following sentences into English
- •Unit 12
- •1. Read and translate the text economic policy
- •2. Learn the vocabulary
- •3. Translate these word combinations
- •4. Answer the following questions on the text about economic policy
- •5. Find proper definitions
- •6. Make up sentences using the following words
- •7. Complete each sentence with a word or phrase from the box
- •8. Read the text using the words from the right column
- •9. Read and translate vocabulary notes. Try to remember different meanings of the term ‘policy’
- •10. Read and translate the dialogue. Discuss the following question: What should the government do? Take action? Or trust the markets to put matters right?
- •11. Translate the following sentences into English
- •12. Homereading. Read and translate the text Policies with Floating Exchange Rates
- •13. Give a summary of your home reading text unit 13
- •1. Read and translate the text
- •Inflation and its features
- •2. Learn the vocabulary
- •3. Translate these words and word combinations
- •4. Choose the correct word
- •5. Find proper definitions
- •6. Make up questions on the text and ask them in the group.
- •7. Translate the following sentences paying attention to the usage of ing-forms. Define their functions in the sentences
- •8. Translate the following sentences into English
- •9. Discuss the following with your partner. How do you think inflation affects the people and organizations listed below? Try to match the people and organizations 1-4 with the effects a-d
- •10. Home reading. Read and translate the text How Does Inflation Affect?
- •11. Give a short summary of your home reading text about inflation
- •12. Give a two-minute talk on the subjects of:
- •13. Read and translate the dialogue. Agree or disagree with the speakers’ ideas
- •14. Questions for discussion:
- •2. Why does your personal inflation rate differ from the cpi?
- •Past Simple Tense
- •Participle 1
- •The Infinitive
- •Bibliography
- •1. Е.Н. Рудская. Финансы и кредит. Учебное пособие. Ростов-на-Дону: Феникс, 2008. – 357 с.
- •2. Gray r.H., d.L. Owen & c.Adams (1996) Accounting and Accountability: Changes and Challenges in Corporate Social and Environmental Reporting (London: Prentice Hall), Ch 1.
- •450000, Уфа-центр, ул.К Маркса, 12
1. Read and translate the text banking business
Banking business. In order to understand the factors that determine the supply of money, one must first understand the role of the banking sector in the money-creation process. Banks perform two crucial functions. First, they receive funds from depositors and, in return, provide these depositors with a checkable source of funds or with interest payments. Second, they use the funds that they receive from depositors to make loans to borrowers; that is, they serve as intermediaries in the borrowing and lending process.
When banks receive deposits, they do not keep all of these deposits on hand because they know that depositors will not demand all of these deposits at once. Instead, banks keep only a fraction of the deposits that they receive. The deposits that banks keep on hand are known as the banks' reserves. When depositors withdraw deposits, they are paid out of the banks' reserves. The reserve requirement is the fraction of deposits set aside for withdrawal purposes. The reserve requirement is determined by the nation's banking authority, a government agency known as the central bank. Deposits that banks are not required setting aside as reserves can be lent to borrowers, in the form of loans. Banks earn profits by borrowing funds from depositors at zero or low rates of interest and using these funds to make loans at higher rates of interest.
A balance sheet for a typical bank is given in Table 1 . The balance sheet summarizes the bank's assets and liabilities. Assets are valuable items that the bank owns and consist primarily of the bank's reserves and loans. Liabilities are valuable items that the bank owes to others and consist primarily of the bank's deposit liabilities to its depositors. The bank's assets (reserves and loans) total $1 million. The bank's liabilities (deposits) total $1 million.
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You can infer from Table 1 that the reserve requirement in this example is 10%.
How banks create money. Consider what happens when the same bank receives a $100,000 deposit from one of its depositors. The bank is required to set aside 10% of this deposit, or $10,000, as reserves. It then lends out its excess reserves—in this case, the remaining $90,000 of the initial deposit. Suppose, for the sake of simplicity, that all borrowers redeposit their loans into the same bank. The bank thus receives $90,000 in new deposits of which it sets $9,000 aside as reserves and lends out all of its excess reserves. Suppose again that all borrowers redeposit their loans in the same bank, that the bank sets aside a portion of these deposits, and that the bank then lends out the remainder, which is again redeposited in the bank and so on and so on. This repeated chain of events is summarized in Table 2 .
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If one were to follow this multiple deposit expansion process to its completion, the end result would be that the bank's deposits would increase by $1 million, its loans would increase by $900,000, and its reserves would increase by $100,000, all due to the initial deposit of $100,000.
Money multiplier. The amount by which bank deposits expand in response to an increase in excess reserves is found through the use of the money multiplier, which is given by the formula
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Money multiplier = 1: reserve requirement
In the example of deposit expansion found in Table 2 , the reserve requirement is 10%; so, the money multiplier in this case is (1/.10) = 10. The excess reserves resulting from the initial deposit of $100,000 are $90,000. Multiplying $90,000 by the money multiplier, 10, yields $900,000, which is the amount of additional deposits created by the banking system as the result of the initial $100,000 deposit.
In reality, loan recipients do not deposit all of their loan funds into a bank. More typically, they hold a fraction of their loan funds as currency. If some loan funds are held as currency, then there is a leakage of money out of the banking system. In this case, the money multiplier will still be greater than 1, but it will be less than the inverse of the reserve requirement.
Central banking and the supply of money. A portion of each nation's money supply (M1) is controlled by a government agency known as the central bank. The central bank is unique in that it is the only bank that can issue currency. The U.S. central bank is called the Federal Reserve Bank but is frequently referred to as “the Fed.” The Fed issues all U.S. dollar bills, known as Federal Reserve Notes. Thus, the Fed has control over the supply of the U.S. currency. The Fed also has control over the private bank reserves that banks entrust to the Fed.