Interest Rates and Income Distribution
In an economy consisting only of lenders who provide capital and borrowers who use that capital for productive projects, explain the chain of events that leads from a decision to raise the primary interest rate to a change in the overall level of income inequality. Describe how the income shares of both groups are affected.
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Ch.9 Lenders and borrowers and differences in wealth - The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
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Consider a simplified economy where total income is generated from projects funded by a single lender. Initially, with a 10% interest rate on loans, the lender's share of the total income is 20%, and the borrowers' collective share is 80%. If the interest rate is increased to 25%, and all other factors (like the profitability of the projects) remain constant, what is the most likely outcome for income distribution and a standard measure of economic inequality?
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Interest Rates and Income Distribution
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In a simplified economy consisting only of lenders who provide capital and borrowers who use that capital for profitable projects, match each economic event with its most direct outcome on income distribution and the Gini coefficient, assuming all other factors remain constant.
In an economy composed solely of lenders and borrowers who use loans for profitable ventures, a central authority decides to increase the primary interest rate. Arrange the following consequences in the logical causal sequence that follows this decision, assuming all other economic factors remain unchanged.
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Consider a simplified economy where total income is generated from projects funded by a single lender. Initially, with a 10% interest rate on loans, the lender's share of the total income is 20%, and the borrowers' collective share is 80%. If the interest rate is increased to 25%, and all other factors (like the profitability of the projects) remain constant, what is the most likely outcome for income distribution and a standard measure of economic inequality?
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In a simplified economy composed only of a single lender and multiple borrowers who use loans for profitable ventures, a government-mandated decrease in the lending interest rate would, all else being equal, cause the Gini coefficient for that economy to decrease.
Interest Rates and Income Distribution
Explaining the Link Between Interest Rates and Inequality
In a simplified economy consisting only of a lender and multiple borrowers who use loans for profitable ventures, match each economic change to its most direct and immediate consequence on income distribution. Assume all other factors remain constant for each scenario.
In a simplified economy, a single lender provides a $10,000 loan to each of 10 identical borrowers. Each borrower invests the loan in a project that generates a total profit of $5,000 before interest payments. Initially, the interest rate is 10%, giving the lender 20% of the total profit. If the interest rate increases to 30%, the lender's share of the total profit will become ____%.
In a simplified economy composed solely of lenders and borrowers where loans are used for profitable ventures, a central authority's policy change causes the primary lending rate to increase. Arrange the following events in the correct logical sequence to show how this action leads to a change in measured income inequality.
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Critique of a Policy Statement on Interest Rates and Wealth Distribution