- •Unit 1: the job of a manager
- •Vocabulary:
- •Vocabulary:
- •Vocabulary:
- •Vocabulary:
- •Unit 2: business of your own
- •Vocabulary
- •The sole proprietor
- •Vocabulary
- •Unit 3: marketing
- •Vocabulary
- •Rover to begin job drive
- •Vocabulary
- •We don't phone you we don't have to
- •Vocabulary
- •Unit 4: success in business
- •Vocabulary
- •Vocabulary
- •Businesses set to vie for north top awards
- •Vocabulary
- •Unit 5: competition
- •Vocabulary
- •Vocabulary
- •Unit 6: people who made a fortune
- •Vocabulary
- •Henry Ford: bringing the automobile to the common man
- •Vocabulary
- •Unit 7: market and command economies
- •Market and command economies
- •Vocabulary:
- •Unit 8: demand and supply
- •Vocabulary:
- •The Pope and the Price of Fish
- •Unit 9: investment: bonds and shares
- •Vocabulary:
- •Vocabulary:
- •Unit 10: income and credit
- •Income From Work
- •Income From Wealth.
- •Vocabulary:
- •Vocabulary:
- •Vocabulary:
- •Unit 11: a mortgage
- •Vocabulary:
- •Vocabulary:
- •Unit 12: taxes and public spending
- •Taxes and public spending
- •Vocabulary:
- •Fiscal policy
- •Unit 13: money and its functions
- •Money and its functions
- •Vocabulary:
- •Money and its functions
- •Vocabulary:
- •Money as a medium of exchange
- •Unit 14: monetary system and monetary policies
- •Monetary system and monetary policies
- •Vocabulary:
- •Reserve Requirement as a Tool of Monetary Policies
- •Unit 15: inflation
- •Iflation
- •Vocabulary:
- •Vocabulary:
- •1. Accounting and financial problems.
- •2. Falling sales.
- •3. High interest rates.
- •4. Higher costs.
- •Vocabulary:
- •Unit 16: foreign trade
- •Foreign trade
- •Vocabulary:
- •Приложения Приложение 1: Тексты для дополнительного чтения содержание:
- •Text 1: management: an overview
- •Text 2: the concept of strategic management
- •Importance of Strategic Management
- •Text 3: managerial knowledge, skills and performance
- •Text 4: manageral job types
- •Vertical Dimension: Hierarchical Levels
- •Text 5: defining operations management
- •Text 6: strategic human resource management
- •Text 7: how leaders influence others
- •Text 8: control as a management process
- •Text 9: the nature of managerial communication
- •Text 10: the nature of international management
- •The first modern economists text 11: the mercantilists
- •Text 12: the physiocrats
- •Text 13: adam smith and the wealth of nations
- •Text 14: david ricardo (1772-1823) Classical Champion of Free Trade
- •Text 15: alfred marshall (1842-1924) Price Theory Pioneer
- •Text 16: john maynard keynes (1883-1946) Theorist Who Brought Economics into the Twentieth Century
- •Text 17: thomas robert mafthus (1766-1834) Prophet of the "Dismal Science"
- •Text 18: irving fisher (1867-1947) Pioneer In Monetary Theory
- •Text 19: karl marx (1818-1883) Prophet of Socialism and Communism
- •Text 20: a brief history of statistics
- •Text 21: types of businesses in the u.K.
- •Text 22: english banks
- •Text 23: foreign trade of the u.K.
- •Text 24: forms of accounting
- •Text 25: how the markets work
- •Text 26: gross domestic product
- •Text 27: forms of businesses in the u.S.A.
- •Text 28: federal reserve system of the u.S.A.
- •Text 29: two tales of trade
- •Text 30: a little learning
- •Text 31: play it again, samuelson
- •Text 32: car crash ahead
- •Text 33: fun for the masses
- •Text 34: stranded on the farm?
- •Text 35: eastern promise
- •Text 36: the law of the market
- •Text 37: a new start for europe?
- •Список использованной литературы
Unit 14: monetary system and monetary policies
Text 1: Read and translate the text:
Monetary system and monetary policies
Today every country has a Central Bank. It acts as a lender to commercial banks and it acts as a banker to the government, taking responsibility for the funding of the government's budget deficit and the control of the money supply which includes currency outside the banking system plus the sight deposits of the commercial banks against which the private sector can write cheques. Thus, money supply is partly a liability of the Central Bank (currency in private circulation) and partly a liability of commercial banks (chequing accounts of the general public).
The Central Bank controls the quantity of currency in private circulation and the one held by the banks through purchases and sales of government securities. In addition, the Central Bank can impose reserve requirements on commercial banks, that is, it can impose the minimum ratio of cash reserves to deposits that banks must hold. The Central Bank also sets discount rate which is the interest rate commercial banks have to pay when they want to borrow money. Having set the discount rate, the Central Bank controls the money market.
Thus, the Central Bank is responsible for the government's monetary policy. Monetary policy is the control by the government of a country's currency and its system for lending and borrowing money through money supply in order to control the level of spending in the economy.
The demand for money is a demand for real money, that is, nominal money deflated by the price level to undertake a given quantity of transactions. Hence, when the price level doubles, other things equal, we expect the demand for nominal balances to double, leaving the demand for real money balances unaltered. People want money because of its purchasing power in terms of the goods it will buy.
The quantity of real balances demanded falls as the interest rate rises. On the other hand, when interest-bearing assets are risky, people prefer to hold some of the safe asset, money. When there is no immediate need to make transactions, this leads to a demand for holding interest-bearing time deposits rather than non-interest-bearing sight deposits. The demand for time deposits will be larger with an increase in the total wealth to be invested.
Interest rates are a tool to regulate the market for bonds. Being sold and purchased by the Central Bank, bonds depend on the latter for their supply and price.
Interest rates affect household wealth and consumption. Consumption is believed to depend both on interest rates and taxes. Higher interest rates reduce consumer demand. Temporary tax changes are likely to have less effect on consumer demand than tax changes that are expected to be permanent.
There also exists a close relationship between interest rates and incomes. With a given money supply, higher income must be accompanied by higher interest rates to keep money demand unchanged.
A given income level can be maintained by an easy monetary policy and a tight fiscal policy or by the converse.
