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Questions
APS1050H F LEC0101 Broken Money Quiz
Single choice
For the author, the concept of "monetary hardness" is described as: 1. The difficulty in accessing the favor of credit facilities. 2. The presence of tangible assets like precious metals within the reserves of the banking system, including the central bank. 3. The challenge in altering the financial ledger to increase the quantity of money (both the base and the broad money). 4. The risk of creating a duplicate through a process known as a hard fork affecting the total monetary supply. 5. The proportion of precious metals contained within the physical form of currency. 6. In many underdeveloped nations, the local fiat currency is often regarded as extremely fragile, making it difficult to increase financial leverage. 7. The extent to which money exists in a physical form, such as banknotes and coins. A. 3 is True. B. 3 & 6 are True. C. 5 & 7 are True. D. 1 is True. E. 4 is True.
Options
A.A
B.B
C.C
D.D
E.E
View Explanation
Standard Answer
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Approach Analysis
Question restatement: The author’s concept of 'monetary hardness' is described via several statements (1 through 7), and we must evaluate which of these statements are true.
Option-by-option analysis:
1) The difficulty in accessing the favor of credit facilities.
This statement speaks to access to credit rather than to a structural property of money itself. It treats monetary hardness as a barrier to obtaining credit rather than as a characteristic of the monetary system’s design or supply mechanics. If the author defines monetary hardness in terms of expansion constraints or intrinsic properties of money, this phrasing would not directly capture that, making it unlikely to be the core definition.
2) The presence of tangible assets like precious metals within the reserves of the banking system, including the central bank.
Here the focus is on asset composition (tangible reserves, gold, etc.) rather than on the operational or theoretical notion of monetary hardness. If monetary hardness is about the ease or difficulty of expanding money supply, reserve composition is an indi......Login to view full explanationLog in for full answers
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