What are the official measures of money? Are all the measures really money?

What will be an ideal response?

The official measures of money are M1 (the sum of currency, traveler's checks, and checking deposits owned by individuals and businesses) and M2 (the sum of M1, savings deposits, time deposits, and money market mutual funds and other deposits). All of the components of M1 are truly money because all the components serve as a means of payment. Some of the components of M2 are not truly money because they are not a means of payment. (For instance, funds at money market mutual funds cannot be used as a means of payment for small purchases.) But all of these "non-money" assets are highly liquid so they are operationally similar to money.

Economics

You might also like to view...

Analysis of adverse selection indicates that financial intermediaries, especially banks

A) have advantages in overcoming the free-rider problem, helping to explain why indirect finance is a more important source of business finance than is direct finance. B) despite their success in overcoming free-rider problems, nevertheless play a minor role in moving funds to corporations. C) provide better-known and larger corporations a higher percentage of their external funds than they do to newer and smaller corporations which rely to a greater extent on the new issues market for funds. D) must buy securities from corporations to diversify the risk that results from holding non-tradable loans.

Economics

Which statement is false?

A. All oligopolies have only a few firms. B. Most firms in the United States are oligopolies. C. Administered prices are most likely to occur under oligopoly. D. In all market structures, price is always read off the demand curve.

Economics