Look at a short article or video with the latest economic news. Ask students
to highlight or write down terms or concepts they don't understand. Print
out the financial crisis glossary (below). If the words are not in the glossary, divide
the class into groups to use the internet to research the remaining concepts.
As a class review any major concepts .
Divide the class again, this time
into pairs, and have students explain the current melt down to each other using
their own words. Once all students have had time to explain to their partner pick
two or three students to present to the whole group. Ask the rest of the class
to vote on who had the most succinct and correct explanation of the situation.
Lastly,
ask each pair of students to brainstorm further questions about the current situation
using new vocabulary and concepts. You can enter those questions at Paul Solman's
Business Desk -- make sure you mention that you are a class using this assignment.
Include an email where we can send the answers.
FINANCIAL
CRISIS GLOSSARY -
401(K) plan - An investment and savings plan that enables
workers to put away money tax free into an account they can access when they retire
(around age 65). 401Ks create a tax incentive to save money for retirement.
Bank
- a business establishment which keeps money for saving or commercial purposes.
Banks also loan money and exchange foreign currencies.
Bank run (bank
panic) - A series of unexpected cash withdrawals caused by a sudden decline
in confidence or fear that the bank will be closed, i.e. many depositors withdraw
cash almost simultaneously. Since the cash reserve a bank keeps on hand is only
a small fraction of its deposits, a large number of withdrawals in a short period
of time can deplete available cash and force the bank to close and possibly go
out of business.
Capital -The wealth - cash or other assets - used
to fuel the creation of more wealth. Within companies, often characterized as
working capital or fixed capital.
Central bank - The principal monetary
authority of a nation, which performs several key functions, including issuing
currency and regulating the supply of credit (see credit) in the economy. The
Federal Reserve is the central bank of the United States.
Central bank
intervention - The buying or selling of currency, foreign or domestic, by
central banks in order to influence market conditions or exchange rate movements.
Commercial
bank - Bank that offers a broad range of deposit accounts, including checking,
savings deposits and extends loans to individuals and businesses. Commercial banks
can be contrasted with investment banking firms, such as brokerage firms, which
generally are involved in arranging for the sale of corporate or municipal government
bonds and securities.
Credit - When you borrow money, you promise
to pay in the future. A "line of credit" is permission from a bank to
borrow money.
Credit crunch - The situation created when banks hugely
reduce their lending to each other because they are uncertain about how much money
they have and whether the institution they lend to will be able to pay it back.
This in turn results in more expensive loans and mortgages for ordinary people.
Debt - Money owed; also known as liability.
Default
- Failure to meet the terms of a credit agreement.
Equity - Ownership
interest in an asset after liabilities are deducted. For example, the value of
your house after deducting the total amount of your mortgage.
Federal
Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) - An independent deposit insurance agency
created by Congress in 1933 to maintain stability and public confidence in the
nation's banking system. The FDIC identifies, monitors and addresses risks to
the deposit insurance funds. The FDIC protects bank accounts up to $250,000 (the
amount was $100,000 before Congress passed the rescue plan in October 2008)
Federal
Reserve Bank - One of the 12 operating arms of the Federal Reserve System,
located throughout the nation, that together with their 25 branches carry out
various functions, including operating a nationwide payments system, distributing
the nation's currency and coin, supervising and regulating member banks and bank
holding companies and serving as banker for the U.S. Treasury.
Federal
Reserve System - The central bank of the United States, created by Congress
and made up of a seven-member Board of Governors in Washington, D.C., 12 regional
Federal Reserve Banks, and their 25 branches.
Finance company - A
company that makes loans to individuals.
Foreclosure - The legal
process used to force the payment of debt secured by collateral (such as a house)
whereby the property is sold to satisfy the debt. Usually means a family needs
to leave their house because they cannot pay their mortgage.
Inflation
- An increase in the general price level of goods and services.
Interest
- When you borrow money from a bank, you pay interest, a fee for the use of money
over time. For instance, if you borrow $100,000 for a house, you may end up paying
back $300,000 at the end of the 30 year mortgage. Interest also refers to the
money earned on a savings account.
Investing - Buying part of a company,
enterprise or fund in the hopes of making more money.
Liquidity -
The liquidity of something is how easy it is to convert it into cash. Your current
bank account, for example, is more liquid than your house. If you needed to sell
your house quickly to pay bills you would have drop the price substantially to
get a sale.
Liquidity risk - The risk that a bank will not have
sufficient cash or liquid assets to meet borrower and depositor demand.
Loan
- When you borrow money and promise to pay it back-with or without interest.
Moral
hazard - The risk that someone is cheating, has provided misleading information,
or has an incentive to take unusual risks in a desperate attempt to earn a profit.
Mortgage
- When you borrow money from a bank to buy a house.
Mortgage-backed securities
- From about 2001 to 2006, Wall Street firms bought the mortgages on lots of houses
and put them all together in a pool. They then sold slices of the whole pool of
mortgages to investors. The repackaged debt from the pool of mortgages were then
traded and re-traded. As the mortgages were moved around, more funds were freed
up to lend to more homeowners.
Regulation - A principle rule, or
law designed to control or govern how the financial system works. For instance,
banks are required to keep a certain amount of cash on hand, but those regulations
were scaled back at certain times.
Security - Essentially, a contract
that can be assigned a value and traded. It could be a stock, bond or mortgage
debt, for example.
Sub-prime mortgages - Home loans offered to people
who have had financial problems or who have low or unpredictable incomes. These
loans often had high interest or interest rates that went up after a certain number
of payments.
Students can write an essay on how the financial crisis is affecting them on a
personal, community or state level. Send completed essays to extra@newshour.org