this chapter addresses the following: ◦ how does government control the amount of money in the...

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This chapter addresses the following:◦ How does government control the amount of

money in the economy?◦ Which government agency is responsible for

exercising this control?◦ How are banks and bond markets affected by the

government’s policies?

The fed’s control over the supply of money is the key mechanism of monetary policy.

Monetary policy is the use of money and credit controls to influence macroeconomic activity.

Each of the twelve (12) Federal Reserve banks act as a central banker for the private banks in their region.

The Federal Reserve performs the following services:

Clears checks between private banks Holds bank reserves. Provides currency to the public. Provides loans to private banks.

The Fed is controlled by a seven person Board of Governors.

Each governor is appointed to a 14-year term by the President (with confirmation by the U.S. Senate).

The long term is intended to give the Fed a strong measure of political independence.

The President selects one of the governors to serve as chairman for a 4-year term.

Private banks(depository institutions)

Federal Reserve banks(12 banks, 24 branches)

Boardof

Governors(7 members)

Federal Open Market

Committee (12 members)

Federal Advisory Council and

other committees

The Federal Reserve controls the money supply using the following three policy instruments:◦ Reserve requirements◦ Discount rates◦ Open-market operations

The Fed requires banks to keep a minimum amount of required reserves.◦ Required reserves – The minimum amount of

reserves a bank is required to hold; equal to required reserve ratio times transactions deposits.

Required reserves = required reserve ratio X total deposits

The fed directly alters the lending capacity of the banking system by changing the reserve requirement.

By changing the reserve requirement, the Fed changes the level of excess reserves in the banking system.

Excess reserves = Total reserves – Required reserves

Excess reserves are bank reserves in excess of required reserves.

By raising the required reserve ratio, the Fed can immediately reduce the lending capacity of the banking system.

A change in the reserve requirement causes changes in:

Excess reserves. The money multiplier. The lending capacity of the banking

system.

Required Reserve Ratio

20 percent 25 percent

Total deposits $100 billion $100 billion

Total reserves 30 billion 30 billion

Required reserves 20 billion 25 billion

Excess reserves 10 billion 5 billion

Money multiplier 5 4

Unused lending capacity $ 50 billion $ 20 billion

Excess reserves earn no interest. Banks have a tremendous profit incentive to

keep their reserves as close to their required reserve level as possible.

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1930

4

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1935 1940 1945 1950 1955 1960 1965 1970 1975 1980 1985 1990 1995 2000

Borrowings atFederal Reserve banks

Excess reserves

The federal funds market is where a bank that finds itself short of reserves can turn to other banks for help.

The federal funds rate is the interest rate for inter-bank reserve loans.

Reserves borrowed in this manner are called “federal funds” and are lent for short periods - usually overnight.

A bank that is low on reserves can also sell securities.

Banks use some of their excess reserves to purchase government bonds.

Discounting refers to the Federal Reserve lending of reserves to private banks.

A bank can deal with a reserve shortage by going to the Fed’s “discount window” to borrow reserves directly.

The discount rate is the rate of interest the Federal Reserve charges for lending reserves to private banks.

By raising or lowering the discount rate, the Fed changes the cost of money for banks and the incentive to borrow reserves.

Open-market operations are the principal mechanism for directly altering the reserves of the banking system.

The portfolio decision is the choice of how (where) to hold idle funds.

People do not hold all their idle funds in transactions accounts or cash.

The Fed’s open-market operation focus on the portfolio choices people make.

The Fed attempts to influence the choice by making bonds more or less attractive, as circumstances warrant.

When the Fed buys bonds from the public, it increases the flow of deposits (reserves) to the banking system.

Bond sales by the Fed reduce the flow. Likewise, when the Fed sells bonds, it

removes money from the banking system.

Open market

operations

Fed BUYS bonds

Buyers spend

account balances

Sellers deposit

bond proceeds

BanksThe Fed

Fed SELLS bonds Reserves

decrease

Reserves increase

The Public

Not all of us buy and sell bonds, but a lot of consumers and corporations do.

A bond is a certificate acknowledging a debt and the amount of interest to be paid each year until repayment.

It is nothing more than an IOU.

The current yield paid on a bond is the rate of return on a bond.

It is the annual interest payment divided by the bond’s price.

A principal objective of Federal Reserve open market activity is to alter the price of bonds, and therewith their yields.

The less you pay for a bond, the higher its yield.

Federal Reserve open-market activity alters the price of bonds, and their yields.

By doing so, the Fed makes bonds a more or less attractive alternative to holding money.

Open market operations are Federal Reserve purchases and sales of government bonds for the purpose of altering bank reserves.

If the Fed offers to pay a higher price for bonds, it will effectively lower bond yields and market interest rates.

By buying bonds, the Fed increases bank reserves.

Federal OpenMarket Committee

Regional FederalReserve bank

Privatebank

Step 2: Bond seller deposits Fed check

Step 3: Bank deposits check at Fed bank, as a reserve credit

Public

Step 1: FOMC purchases government bonds; pays for bonds with Federal

Reserve check

Fed funds rate act as a market signal of the changing reserve flows.

If the Fed is pumping more reserves into the banking system, the federal funds rate will decline.

If the Fed is reducing bank reserve by selling bonds, the federal funds rate will increase.

The volume of trading in U.S. government securities exceeds $100 billion per day.

Each dollar in reserves represents approximately $10 in potential lending due to the money multiplier.