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Majd, Mariam; Page-Hoongrajok, Amanda – Journal of Economic Education, 2023
The authors of this article propose a classroom simulation designed for advanced economics or finance courses whereby student teams role-play Moody's sovereign credit risk analysts. Despite the importance of sovereign credit risk ratings in affecting the funding liquidity of countries, the process generating ratings is a black box. The authors use…
Descriptors: Economics Education, Finance Occupations, Risk, Credit (Finance)
Ihrig, Jane; Wolla, Scott – Journal of Economic Education, 2022
The topic of the Federal Reserve's (the Fed's) implementation of monetary policy has a significant presence in economics textbooks. Unfortunately, as the Fed purposefully shifted the way it implements monetary policy to an environment with ample reserves in the banking system, many textbooks have not kept up. The authors walk through the key…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Economics Education, Financial Policy, Textbooks
Johnson, Paul; Staveley-O'Carroll, James – Journal of Economic Education, 2020
In this article, the authors describe a classroom experiment on exchange rates appropriate for undergraduate courses in macroeconomics, international economics, and money and banking. Student teams compete by managing virtual portfolios of six foreign currencies over a period of several weeks. Trading requires a few minutes in class. Students gain…
Descriptors: Economics Education, Undergraduate Students, Class Activities, Educational Experiments
Neveu, Andre R. – Journal of Economic Education, 2020
The money creation and monetary policy chapters in the leading introductory textbooks commonly present an outdated and misleading approach that is now largely irrelevant. A preferable model would help students understand that money and monetary policy are about bank and household motives, the importance of capital, and the role of credit. An…
Descriptors: Macroeconomics, Introductory Courses, Economics Education, Monetary Systems
Poutineau, Jean-Christophe; Vermandel, Gauthier – Journal of Economic Education, 2015
This article introduces macroprudential policy using a static New Keynesian Macroeconomics model with financial frictions. The authors analyze two related questions: First, they show how the procyclicality of financial factors, captured by the financial accelerator, amplifies the transmission of supply and demand shocks and impacts the intuition…
Descriptors: Macroeconomics, Policy, Models, Supply and Demand
Buttet, Sebastien; Roy, Udayan – Journal of Economic Education, 2015
The authors modify the Dynamic Aggregate Demand-Dynamic Aggregate Supply model in Mankiw's widely used intermediate macroeconomics textbook to discuss monetary policy when the natural real interest rate is falling over time. Their results highlight a new role for the central bank's inflation target as a tool of macroeconomic stabilization. They…
Descriptors: Macroeconomics, Credit (Finance), Models, Economic Climate
Staveley-O'Carroll, James – Journal of Economic Education, 2016
This article describes an innovative pedagogical technique, applicable to most economics courses, that offers students a deeper understanding of market equilibrium, inflation, real and nominal interest rates, intertemporal choice, and financial markets. Students earn extra credit, pooled together for the entire class, by correctly answering…
Descriptors: Economics Education, Marketing, Instructional Innovation, Audience Response Systems
Staveley-O'Carroll, James – Journal of Economic Education, 2018
Over the course of one semester, six empirical assignments that utilize FRED are used to introduce students of money and banking courses to the economic analysis required for the conduct of monetary policy. The first five assignments cover the following topics: inflation, bonds and stocks, monetary aggregates, the Taylor rule, and employment.…
Descriptors: Economics Education, Graphs, Assignments, Macroeconomics
Hazlett, Denise – Journal of Economic Education, 2016
In this classroom experiment, students see how low bank equity requirements can interact with deposit insurance to encourage excessive risk-taking. The experiment fills a niche Admati and Hellwig (2013) have noted: citizens in a democracy must understand why bank owners argue for low equity requirements and why society as a whole is better off…
Descriptors: Banking, Educational Experiments, Economics Education, Financial Services
Suiter, Mary C.; Taylor, Keith G. – Journal of Economic Education, 2016
The Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis has a long history of providing economic and financial information to the public that continues today, although the format, delivery, and amount of information have changed over the years. Today, the St. Louis Fed provides Web-based data and information services, including FRED® and FRASER®, and publications,…
Descriptors: Banking, Economics Education, Mass Instruction, Information Dissemination
Gertler, Mark – Journal of Economic Education, 2013
In this article, the author describes conceptually how to think about the dramatic changes in monetary policy since the sub-prime crisis of August 2007. He also discusses how to incorporate these changes and related economic concepts in the teaching of an undergraduate class in macroeconomics. A distinction is made between conventional and…
Descriptors: Macroeconomics, Economics Education, Public Policy, Financial Policy
Friedman, Benjamin M. – Journal of Economic Education, 2013
The standard workhorse models of monetary policy now commonly in use, both for teaching macro-economics to students and for supporting policymaking within many central banks, are incapable of incorporating the most widely accepted accounts of how the 2007-9 financial crisis occurred and are incapable too of analyzing the actions that monetary…
Descriptors: Financial Policy, Economic Climate, Macroeconomics, Banking
Pearlman, Sarah; Rebelein, Robert P. – Journal of Economic Education, 2013
In this article, the authors outline a classroom exercise involving goldsmiths designed to improve undergraduate students' understanding of how banks create money. This concept is important to macroeconomics and money and banking courses, yet students frequently struggle with it, largely due to the nonphysical nature of deposits and reserves.…
Descriptors: Economics Education, Macroeconomics, Class Activities, Banking
Kassis, Mary Mathewes; Hazlett, Denise; Ygosse Battisti, Jolanda E. – Journal of Economic Education, 2012
This classroom experiment uses double oral auction credit markets to illustrate the role of banks as financial intermediaries. The experiment demonstrates how risk affects market interest rates in the presence of asymmetric information. It provides fodder for a discussion of the moral-hazard problem of deposit insurance and its impact on depositor…
Descriptors: Economics Education, Educational Experiments, Class Activities, Banking
Balkenborg, Dieter; Kaplan, Todd; Miller, Timothy – Journal of Economic Education, 2011
Once relegated to cinema or history lectures, bank runs have become a modern phenomenon that captures the interest of students. In this article, the authors explain a simple classroom experiment based on the Diamond-Dybvig model (1983) to demonstrate how a bank run--a seemingly irrational event--can occur rationally. They then present possible…
Descriptors: Class Activities, Experiments, Economics Education, Banking