Match each participant or strategy in a financial intermediation system with its corresponding role or benefit.
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Introduction to Macroeconomics Course
Ch.6 The financial sector: Debt, money, and financial markets - The Economy 2.0 Macroeconomics @ CORE Econ
The Economy 2.0 Macroeconomics @ CORE Econ
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Analysis in Bloom's Taxonomy
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Analyzing a Bank's Lending Strategy
A financial institution pools funds from numerous individual savers to lend to a diverse group of business ventures. Which statement best analyzes how this arrangement can simultaneously benefit the savers, the business ventures, and the institution?
The act of a financial institution pooling funds from many depositors to provide loans to a wide array of borrowers ensures a mutually beneficial outcome for all parties, regardless of the institution's success in managing its loan portfolio.
Explaining the Benefits of Financial Intermediation
The Conditions for Successful Financial Intermediation
Match each participant or strategy in a financial intermediation system with its corresponding role or benefit.
A financial institution lends a large portion of its depositors' funds to businesses concentrated in a single, rapidly growing but volatile industry. After an unexpected market downturn, a majority of these businesses fail and cannot repay their loans. Which of the following outcomes is the most direct consequence of this lending strategy, disrupting the typically mutually beneficial arrangement between the institution, its depositors, and its borrowers?
Evaluating a Bank's High-Concentration Loan Decision
Consider a financial system involving savers who desire low-risk returns, entrepreneurs who need capital for inherently risky projects, and a financial institution that connects them. For this system to be simultaneously advantageous for all three parties, which of the following conditions is most essential for the institution to uphold?
Critique of the Financial Intermediation Model