
Glossary Terms:
Focus on Economic Data: The Federal Reserve and Monetary Policy, April 25, 2012
Glossary terms from:
http://www.econedlink.org/e1095
Asset
Something of monetary value owned by an individual or an organization.
Balance Sheet
An itemized statement listing the total assets and total liabilities of a given business to portray its net worth at a given moment in time.
Bank
A financial institution that provides various products and services to its customers, including checking and savings accounts, loans and currency exchange.
Bank Reserves
The percentage of a bank's deposits that it keeps on hand, i.e., does not lend out.
Banking
The industry involved with conducting financial transactions. Also, conducting business with a bank, e.g., maintaining a checking or savings account or obtaining a loan.
Benefit
Monetary or non-monetary gain received because of an action taken or a decision made.
Board of Governors
The Federal Reserve's governing and monetary policy-making body; consists of seven governors appointed by the President to staggered 14-year terms.
Budget
A spending-and-savings plan, based on estimated income and expenses for an individual or an organization, covering a specific time period.
Business
Any activity or organization that produces or exchanges goods or services for a profit.
Business Cycles
Fluctuations in the overall rate of national economic activity with alternating periods of expansion and contraction; these vary in duration and degrees of severity; usually measured by real gross domestic product (GDP).
Capital
Resources and goods made and used to produce other goods and services. Examples include buildings, machinery, tools and equipment. In the context of credit transactions, capital is one of the Three Cs of Credit. It is an indicator of how creditworthy a prospective borrower is likely to be as determined by the borrower's current financial assets and net worth.
Cash
Money in the form of paper currency or coins (as distinct from checks, money orders or credit).
Consumers
People who use goods and services to satisfy their personal needs and not for resale or in the production of other goods and services.
Credit
The opportunity to borrow money or to receive goods or services in return for a promise to pay later.
Debt
Money owed to someone else. Also the state or condition of owing money. Can be individual, corporate or government debt.
Decision
A conclusion reached after considering alternatives and their results.
Deflation
A sustained decrease in the average price level of all the goods and services produced in the economy.
Economic Growth
An increase in real output as measured by real GDP or per capita real GDP.
Economics
The study of how people, firms and societies choose to allocate scarce resources with alternative uses.
Federal Reserve
The central bank of the United States. Its main function is controlling the money supply through monetary policy. The Federal Reserve System divides the country into 12 districts, each with its own Federal Reserve bank. Each district bank is directed by its nine-person board of directors. The Board of Governors, which is made up of seven members appointed by the President and confirmed by the Senate to 14-year terms, directs the nation's monetary policy and the overall activities of the Federal Reserve. The Federal Open Market Committee is the official policy-making body; it is made up of the members of the Board of Governors and five of the district bank presidents.
Full Employment
The natural rate of employment; generally considered to be about 93-95 percent of the labor force, allowing for frictional unemployment of 5-7 percent.
Goal
Something a person or organization plans to achieve in the future; an aim or desired result.
Housing
Accommodation in houses, apartments, etc.
Inflation
A rise in the general or average price level of all the goods and services produced in an economy. Can be caused by pressure from the demand side of the market (demand-pull inflation) or pressure from the supply side of the market (cost-push inflation).
Interest
Money paid regularly, at a particular rate, for the use of borrowed money.
Interest Rate
The price paid for using someone else's money, expressed as a percentage of the amount borrowed.
Investment
The purchase of capital goods (including machinery, technology or new buildings) that are used to produce goods and services. In personal finance, the amount of money invested in stocks, bonds, mutual funds and other investment instruments.
Job
A piece of work usually done on order at an agreed-upon rate. Also a paid position of regular employment.
Labor
The quantity and quality of human effort available to produce goods and services.
Labor Market
The labor supply and labor demand curves. The intersection of the labor supply and labor demand curves determines the equilibrium wage and the quantity of hours people work at this equilibrium wage.
Lend
To grant someone the use of something, on condition that the object borrowed or its equivalent will be returned (often with interest, in the case of money).
Liquidity
The ease with which savings or investments can be turned into cash.
Markets
Places, institutions or technological arrangements where or by means of which goods or services are exchanged. Also, the set of all sale and purchase transactions that affect the price of some good or service.
Monetary Policy
Changes in the supply of money and the availability of credit initiated by a nation's central bank to promote price stability, full employment and reasonable rates of economic growth.
Money
Anything that is generally accepted as final payment for goods and services; serves as a medium of exchange, a store of value and a standard of value. Characteristics of money are portability, stability in value, uniformity, durability and acceptance.
Money Supply
Narrowly defined by economists as currency in the hands of the public plus checking-type deposits; also called M1. Other definitions of the money supply (M2, M3) include various savings deposits, money market deposits and money market mutual fund balances.
Open Market Operations
The buying and selling of government bonds by the Federal Reserve to control bank reserves and the money supply.
Portfolio
A person's or an institution's collection of savings and investments.
Price
The amount of money that people pay when they buy a good or service; the amount they receive when they sell a good or service.
Price Level
The weighted average of the prices of all goods and services in an economy; used to calculate inflation.
Price Stability
The absence of inflation or deflation; a broad social goal and criterion for measuring the performance of an economic system.
Principal
An original amount of money invested or lent.
Producers
People and firms that use resources to make goods and services.
Product
A good or service that can be used to satisfy a want.
Production
A process of manufacturing, growing, designing, or otherwise using productive resources to create goods or services used to to satisfy a want.
Purchases
In a credit arrangement, the total amount spent during the billing cycle.
Purchasing Power
The amount of goods and services that a monetary unit of income can buy.
Recession
A decline in the rate of national economic activity, usually measured by a decline in real GDP for at least two consecutive quarters (i.e., six months).
Resources
The basic kinds of resources used to produce goods and services: land or natural resources, human resources (including labor and entrepreneurship), and capital.
Risk
The chance of losing money.
Supply
The amount of a good or service that producers are willing and able to offer for sale at each possible price during a given period of time.
Trade-off
The giving up of one benefit or advantage in order to gain another regarded as more favorable.
Unemployment
The number of people without jobs who are actively seeking work.
Unemployment Rate
The number of unemployed people, expressed as a percentage of the labor force.
Wants
Desires that can be satisfied by consuming or using a good or service. Economists do not differentiate between wants and needs.