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Multiple Choice
A) the banking legislation of the Great Depression.
B) Supreme Court decisions in the 1950s.
C) the Depository Institutions Deregulation and Monetary Control Act of 1980.
D) the Treasury-Federal Reserve Accord of 1951.
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Not Answered
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verified
Multiple Choice
A) instrument independence.
B) goal independence.
C) both A and B of the above.
D) neither A nor B of the above.
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Multiple Choice
A) Board of Governors.
B) Federal Open Market Committee.
C) Chairman of the Board of Governors.
D) Shadow Open Market Committee.
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True/False
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Multiple Choice
A) 4-year terms.
B) 6-year terms.
C) 14-year terms.
D) as long as the appointing president remains in office.
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Not Answered
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Multiple Choice
A) Bank of England
B) European Central Bank
C) Bank of Japan
D) Federal Reserve System
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Multiple Choice
A) Philadelphia
B) New York
C) Boston
D) San Francisco
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Multiple Choice
A) the First Bank of the United States served its intended role of lender of last resort.
B) the Second Bank of the United States not been abolished in 1836 by President Andrew Jackson.
C) the Second Bank of the United States served its intended role of lender of last resort.
D) the Federal Reserve served its intended role of lender of last resort.
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Multiple Choice
A) the Federal Reserve needed greater control over the banking system.
B) the Federal Reserve needed greater authority to deal with problem banks.
C) a central bank was needed to prevent future financial panics.
D) both A and B of the above.
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Not Answered
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True/False
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Multiple Choice
A) Americans' fear of centralized power.
B) the traditional American distrust of moneyed interests.
C) Americans' desire to remove control of the money supply from the U.S. Treasury.
D) all of the above.
E) only A and B of the above.
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True/False
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Multiple Choice
A) impart an inflationary bias to monetary policy.
B) force monetary authorities to sacrifice the long-run objective of price stability.
C) make the so-called political business cycle even more pronounced.
D) do all of the above.
E) do only A and B of the above.
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Not Answered
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Multiple Choice
A) to maximize its own welfare, meaning that it seeks additional power and prestige.
B) to maximize consumers' surplus, meaning that it seeks additional regulatory powers.
C) to protect the industry it regulates, meaning that it seeks additional regulatory powers.
D) none of the above.
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) remarkably free of the political pressures that influence other government agencies.
B) more responsive to the political pressures that influence other government agencies.
C) probably somewhat constrained in its policymaking by the congressional threat to reduce Fed independence.
D) both A and C of the above.
Correct Answer
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