The Federal Reserve and Monetary Policy
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Transcript The Federal Reserve and Monetary Policy
Chapter 16
The Federal Reserve
and
Monetary Policy
Chapter 16
Economics
Mr. Moreno
The Federal Reserve and
Monetary Policy
What the Fed Does
Monetary policy
includes all the Federal
Reserve actions that
change the money
supply in order to
influence the economy.
Its purpose is to curb
inflation or to reduce
economic stagnation or
recession.
Chapter 16
Section 1 - The Federal Reserve System
Creating the Fed
Chapter 16
Government struggled to stabilize
economy until Federal Reserve Act
Central bank—a nation’s monetary
authority
monetary means “relating to money”
Federal Reserve System—central bank of
the U.S., called the Fed
independent organization within government;
established 1913
Duties of a Central Bank
Chapter 16
Most countries have a central bank- oversees banking system
Holding Reserves: reserves set aside for loans from the banks
funds
Assuring Stability: in national banking and monetary system
Control the way money is circulated
Supervise banks
Lending Money: Unlike other banks The Central
Bank lends without the purpose of making money.
To serve private banks rather than individuals.
The Duties of the Fed
Chapter 16
Fed uses regulation, oversight to protect bank
customers, borrowers
Banking services for private banks and
government include
holding deposits, transferring funds, making loans
Helps finance wars, stabilize economy in national
emergencies
Regulates money supply; distributes currency—
coins and paper money
The Structure of the Fed
Chapter 16
Fed not a single national bank; has national and
regional structure
has some independence from political influence;
accountable to Congress
The Structure of the Fed
Chapter 16
Board of Governors—sets policy; supervises operations of
the Fed
chairman is most influential member and spokesperson
Ben Bernanke
12 district banks carry out policy; serve as central bank for
regions
Member banks: all nationally-chartered banks; state banks
may apply
must buy district bank stock; cannot sell in open market
The Structure of the Fed
Chapter 16
Federal Open Market Committee—supervises government
security sales
Federal Advisory Council—represents commercial banking
industry
Consumer Advisory Council—advises on consumer
protection laws on borrowing
Thrift Institutions Advisory Council—needs of savings
institutions
thrifts not regulated by Fed; must meet reserve
requirements; may borrow
Questions
What are the three duties of a central bank?
How is the Fed different from other central
banks?
What are the five elements of the Fed?
Chapter 16 Section 2
Functions of the Federal Reserve
Functions of the Federal Reserve
Lending Money
Banks often lend to each other on short-term basis
In natural disaster, all banks in region lack cash
flow
Fed lends to banks with enough assets and capital to
qualify
Small banks with seasonal cash flow needs may
borrow from Fed
Fed serves as lender of last resort to prevent
banking crisis
Functions of the Federal Reserve
Regulating and Supervising Banks
Fed banks supervise state-chartered members,
bank holding companies
bank holding company owns, has controlling
interest in several banks
Fed banks enforce truth-in-lending laws
Conduct bank exams—audit financial practices
of banks in district
Monitor bank mergers to ensure competition
Serving the Federal Government
KEY CONCEPTS
Fed serves as federal government’s banker
helps carry out taxation and spending activities
Serving the Federal Government
3 Services of the Fed
Service 1: Paying Government Bills
Tax revenues are deposited with the Fed
Fed issues checks, makes electronic payments
via U.S. Treasury
for transfer payments, employee wages, direct
spending, tax refunds
deducts amounts from government’s account
Processes postal money orders, food stamps
Serving the Federal Government
Service 2: Selling Government Securities
Fed processes U.S. savings bonds, auctions
other securities
provides information, collects payment, credits
funds, delivers bonds
Pays interest on bonds
Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC)
supervises sales of securities
purpose is to stabilize the economy
Serving the Federal Government
Service 3: Distributing Currency
Federal Reserve notes are official paper currency
of U.S.: fiat money
Treasury Department prints notes that go to Fed
district banks
Fed banks distribute notes to depository
institutions in amounts needed
currency then goes to people and businesses
Fed also distributes coins produced by U.S. Mint
Creating Money
Creating money—how money enters circulation
through deposits, loans
Fed establishes required reserve ratio (RRR) for banks
fraction of bank’s deposits that it must keep in reserve
Reserve may be stored as cash in bank’s vault or
deposited with Fed
Creating Money
Example: Money Creation
Banking system creates money whenever banks
get deposit and make loan
Level of the RRR determines how much money
may be loaned
Money supply increases by total loans made
after initial cash deposit
deposit multiplier formula tells how much money
supply will increase
Questions
Why might the Fed help a small bank in an agricultural
region stabilize its cash flow?
How are the banking services the fed provides to the
government similar to the services it provides to banks?
If the Fed raised the RRR from 10% to 12%, how would it
affect the money supply?
You have been planning your college finances and you know
that you’ll have to take a bank loan to cover tuition costs.You
read that the Fed intends to raise the RRR rate from 10% to
20%. How will this change affect the money supply and your
ability to borrow money for college tuition?
Chapter 16 Section 3
The Fed’s Monetary Tools
Approaches to Monetary Policy
Policy 1: Expansionary Policy
Expansionary monetary policy also called easy-
money policy
In recession, Fed increases money supply to
increase aggregate demand
Fed can buy bonds on open market, decrease
RRR or discount rate
most common practice is to buy bonds to make
interest rates fall
Approaches to Monetary Policy
Policy 2: Contractionary Policy
Tight-money policy is another name for
contractionary monetary policy
Fed decreases money supply to check aggregate
demand, inflation
Fed can sell bonds on open market, increase
RRR or discount rate
most common action is to sell bonds to raise interest
rates
Alan Greenspan: Fighting Inflation
Managing Monetary
Policy
Greenspan served as
chair of Fed’s Board of
Governors over 18
years
his insight and
persuasiveness made
him extremely
influential
Alan Greenspan: Fighting Inflation
Was very successful at
growing economy
without inflation
great knowledge of
tools of monetary
policy and economic
indicators
sense of timing: knew
just when to expand or
contract money supply
Impacts and Limitation of Monetary
Policy
Purposes of monetary policy—curb inflation
and halt recessions
Changes in monetary policy have both shortterm and long-term effects
Impacts and Limitation of Monetary
Policy
Impact 1: Short-Term Effects
The short-term effect is a change in the price of
credit
Open market operations influence FFR fairly
quickly
change loanable reserves banks have
Easy-money policy lowers interest rates; tight-
money raises them
Impacts and Limitation of Monetary
Policy
Impact 2: Policy Lags
Delays in getting information to identify
problems delays Fed action
Policy adjustments may take a long time to take
effect in the economy
example: businesses may delay expansion until
interest rates drop
Impacts and Limitation of Monetary
Policy
Impact 3: Timing Issues
Monetary policy must be coordinated with
business cycle for stability
bad timing may exaggerate a phase of the business cycle
Monetarism holds that rapid changes in money
supply cause instability
Milton Friedman found inflation goes with rapid growth
in money supply
little or no inflation when money supply growth slow
and steady
Impacts and Limitation of Monetary
Policy
Other Issues
Monetary policy more effective if coordinated
with fiscal policy
Goals of Fed may clash with those of Congress
or President
governors serve 14 years; have less political pressure
than politicians
Questions
Which open market operation causes the money supply to
expand? Why?
Compare and contrast expansionary fiscal policy and
expansionary monetary policy on the chart below.
What will happen to interest rates when the Fed sells bonds
in open market operations? Why?
What are the Fed’s underlying assumptions about the state of
the economy, based on these Fed actions?
The Fed’s open market operations caused the FFR to drop from
6.25% to 1%.
The FFR rose from 1% to 4.2%
Section 4: Monetary Policy
Monetary Policy & Macroeconomic
Stabilization
Applying Monetary and Fiscal Policy
Fiscal and monetary policies impact each other
Both have limitations: policy lags, political constraints,
timing issues
timing also affected by people’s actions based on
rational expectations
Opponents of discretionary policy favor a stable
monetary policy
thus people, businesses will not make decisions ahead
of policies
Policies to Expand the Economy
Example: Expansionary Monetary and Fiscal Policy
Expansionary policy meant to reduce
unemployment, increase investment
Expansionary fiscal policy raises interest rates;
monetary lowers them
actual change in rates depends on relative strength of
the two policies
amount of investment spending depends on rates
Policies to Control Inflation
Goal of contractionary monetary policy is to
stabilize economy
decrease inflation and increase interest rates
Policies to Control Inflation
Example: Contractionary Monetary and Fiscal
Policy
Contractionary policies decrease aggregate
demand, control inflation
Fiscal policy lowers interest rates; monetary
policy raises them
actual change in rates depends on relative strength of
the two policies
amount of investment spending depends on rates
Policies to Control Inflation
Example: Wage and Price Controls
Government may establish non-mandatory wage and
price guidelines
Wage and price controls—limits on increases in wages
and prices
mandatory and enforced by government
WWII: President Roosevelt used to control inflation due to
shortages
1970s: President Nixon used to try to combat stagflation
Policies in Conflict
Coordinated policies usually produce desired
effect on economy
If uncoordinated, one policy can counter effects
of the other
creates economic instability
Policies in Conflict
Example: Conflicting Monetary and Fiscal Policies
Example: CPI is 6% and rising; unemployment is
7%
Fed tries to fix inflation by selling bonds, raising
discount rate
government tries to lower unemployment by cutting
taxes, more spending
Only clear result of conflicting policies is higher
interest rates
Interpreting Signals from the Fed
Background
Economists and financial observers scrutinize everything the Fed
chairman says in an attempt to predict how his statements will affect
the economy. A hint that the Fed might change interest rates can lead
to a great deal of activity in the stock market.
What’s the Issue
How much does the market rely on signals from the Fed to make
economic decisions?
Thinking Economically
How do articles A and C illustrate the rational expectations theory?
Based on these three sources and your own knowledge, how would
you describe the differences and similarities between Greenspan and
Bernanke and their impact on the market?
Questions
What effects would government borrowing to finance
increased spending have on interest rates and why?
Why do tax cuts and increased government spending result
in a rise in interest rates?
What are the results of each of the following?
Expansionary Policies Contractionary Policies Conflicting Policies -