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Chapter 1 Why Study Money, Banking, and Financial Markets.
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Chapter 2 Overview of the Financial System.
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Chapter 3 What is Money?
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Chapter 4 Understanding Interest Rates.
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Chapter 5 Interest Rate Behavior.
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Chapter 6 Risk Structure and Term Structure of Interest Rates.
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Chapter 7 **Markets, Rational Expectations Theory and Efficient Market Assumptions.
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Chapter 8 Economic Analysis of Financial Structure.
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Chapter 9 Management of Banking and Financial Institutions.
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Chapter 10: Banking: Structure and Competition.
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Chapter 11 Economic Analysis of Banking Regulation.
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Chapter 12 ** Bank Structure and Federal Reserve System.
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Chapter 13 Multiple-Deposit Creation and Money Supply Process.
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Chapter 14 Determinants of Money Supply.
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Chapter 15 Monetary Policy Tools.
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Chapter 16 What Should Banks Do? Objectives, strategies, and tactics of monetary policy.
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Chapter 17 Foreign Exchange Market.
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Chapter 18 International Financial System.
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Chapter 19 Money Demand.
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Chapter 20: IS-LM Model.
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Chapter 21 Monetary and Fiscal Policy in the IS-LM Model.
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22. Aggregate Demand and Aggregate Supply Analysis.
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Chapter 23: An Empirical Analysis of the Transmission Mechanism of Monetary Policy.
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Chapter 24 Money and Inflation.
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Chapter 25: Rational Expectations: Policy Implications.
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Appendix A: 7th Edition Chapter 12 Non-Bank Financial Institutions.
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Appendix B: 7th Edition Chapter 13 Derivative Financial Instruments.
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Appendix C: 7th Edition, Chapter 2l Monetary Policy Strategy: International Experience.
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Chapter 1: Why Study Money, Banking, and Financial Markets.
Chapter 2 Overview of the Financial System.
Chapter 3 What is Money?
Chapter 4 Understanding Interest Rates.
Chapter 5 Interest Rate Behavior.
Chapter 6 Risk Structure and Term Structure of Interest Rates.
Chapter 7 **Markets, Rational Expectations Theory and the Efficient Market Hypothesis.
Chapter 8 Economic Analysis of Financial Structure.
Chapter 9 Management of Banking and Financial Institutions.
Chapter 10: Economic Analysis of Financial Regulation.
Chapter 11: Banking: Structure and Competition.
Chapter 12: Financial Crisis.
Chapter 13 **Banks and the Federal Reserve System.
Chapter 14 Money Supply Process.
Chapter 15 Monetary Policy Tools.
Chapter 16 Monetary Policy Operations: Strategy and Tactics.
Chapter 17 Foreign Exchange Market.
Chapter 18 International Financial System.
Chapter 19 Quantity Theory of Money, Inflation and Money Demand.
Chapter 20 IS Curves.
Chapter 21: Monetary Policy and the Aggregate Demand Curve.
Chapter 22: Aggregate Demand-Aggregate Supply Analysis.
Chapter 23 Theory of Monetary Policy.
Chapter 24: The Significance of Rational Expectations for Monetary Policy.
Chapter 25 Transmission Mechanism of Monetary Policy.
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"Mishkin Monetary Finance" is a book published by China Petrochemical Press. Tell about the classic textbook tutoring series at home and abroad? Finance?
Mishkin Money and Finance (8th Edition) is one of the most popular classic textbooks of finance in the world. As a learning guide for this textbook, "Classic Textbook Tutorial Series at Home and Abroad? Finance?
Myshkin's Monetary and Financial Studies (8th Edition) basically follows the chapter layout of the 8th edition.
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First of all, the theory of efficient markets, like our g-capitalism, has never been realized in human history, and there is no hope for the future.
1.Equilibrium annual rate of return. It's like the efficient market theory, you think of it as a perfect average rate of return over many years...
2.The answer to 3 is why the current price rises and falls, investors are rational in the efficient market theory. Therefore, the rise in the current price will increase their risk awareness and continue to prompt rational investors to reduce RE (in fact, in reality, there are sometimes rational investors, such as 07 when the stock index reached the point, many more rational investors left the market, because they expected that the future growth space is already low).
And the reason why RE stops buying when it falls to the equilibrium annual rate of return is because if the expected optimal rate of return is lower than the historical average return, then rational investors will inevitably stop buying (because they won't make any money at all).
Yes, finance falls under the category of economics.
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