ECB3143

The economics of money and banking

Ms Judith Tennant

6 points · One 2-hour lecture and one 1-hour tutorial per week · Second semester · Berwick · Prerequisites: ECB1102, ECB2120

Objectives Building on the foundations of macroeconomics and microeconomics, this subject aims to extend and deepen knowledge of the theoretical structure of an open economy, with particular emphasis on monetary policy formulation and implementation. Students will acquire an understanding of the institutional structure of the Australian financial system in order to develop skills in creative analysis and prediction when faced with internal and external market shocks. This will be achieved within the framework of a general equilibrium model that allows for competitive international capital markets and floating exchange rates.

Synopsis The subject covers the concept of money, the financial system and financial intermediation, the nature and roles of the Reserve Bank, banks, money market dealers and non-bank financial institutions. It deals with the role and interaction of financial markets and the determination of interest rates, foreign exchange markets and the determination of exchange rates, the interaction between foreign exchange and money markets and implication for policy and Reserve Bank prudential regulation.

Assessment Two assignments (each 2000 words) 30% · Examination (3 hours): 70%

Prescribed texts
Lyell, Crane, Crowley and Fraser Financial institutions and markets 4th edn, LBC, 1997

Back to the 1999 Business and Economics Handbook