In 2007, as stock prices in general were falling, many investors began switching their funds into purchasing bonds. Surveys suggest that many of these investors did not understand the basic relationship between bond prices and interest rates. Using a numerical example, illustrate how an increase in the demand for bonds would affect the interest rate paid on bonds

If there is an increase in the demand for bonds, this would increase the price paid for a particular bond, increasing the price from, for example, $500 to $600 . If the bond paid guaranteed an interest payment of $20 per year, the effective rate of interest would fall from 4 percent ($20/$500 × 100) to 3.3 percent ($20/$600 × 100). Thus, the increase in the price of the bond would decrease the interest rate. The general rule is that bond prices and interest rates are indirectly related. As bond prices change, interest rates change in the opposite direction.

Economics

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Economics

A monopsonistic employer's marginal resource (labor) cost curve:

A. is always more elastic than the labor supply curve. B. coincides with the labor supply curve. C. lies below the labor supply curve because the higher wage paid to an additional worker must also be paid to all other employed workers. D. lies above the labor supply curve because the higher wage paid to an additional worker must also be paid to all other employed workers.

Economics