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Key Terms
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classical quantity theory  See quantity theory of money .
flight out of money  Tendency of people to hold goods rather than assets during periods of high inflation.
income elasticity  Amount that demand for real money balances changes, in percentage terms, when income increases by 1 percent.
income velocity of money  Ratio of income to the money stock.
interest elasticity  Percentage change in the demand for real money balances resulting from a 1 percent increase in the interest rate.
liquid (assets)  Assets that can be easily and quickly converted into the unit of account (dollars in the United States). Easily used to make transactions.
M1  Currency plus checkable deposits.
M2  M 1 plus small time and savings deposits, overnight repurchase agreements (RPs) and eurodollars, and money market funds.
medium of exchange  One of the roles of money; asset used to make payments.
money  Assets that can be used for making immediate payment.
money illusion  Belief that the numbers used to express prices have significance—that changes in the nominal price of a good are meaningful in and of themselves.
opportunity cost  What is forgone to take an action. For example, one opportunity cost of attending college is the lost wages the student could be earning in a full-time job.
own rate of interest  The interest rate paid on money (often zero).
portfolio  The mix of assets someone owns.
precautionary motive  A reason people hold money; they do not know how much they'll need to spend.
quantity equation  Money times velocity equals price times quantity ( M Χ V = P Χ Y ).
quantity theory of money  Theory of money demand emphasizing the relation of nominal income to nominal money. Sometimes used to mean a vertical LM curve.
real balances  Real value of the money stock (number of dollars divided by the price level).
risky asset  Asset whose future payoff is uncertain.
speculative motive  A reason people hold money; although the return on holding money is small, people hold it because it reduces the risk associated with their portfolio of assets.
standard of deferred payment  Asset normally used for making payments due at a later date.
store of value  Asset that maintains its value over time.
transactions motive  A reason people hold money—they use it to purchase goods and services.
unit of account  Asset in which prices are denoted.







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