Ch. 24 Section 2
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Transcript Ch. 24 Section 2
Ch. 24
Section 2
The Federal Reserve
System
Structure and Organization
The Federal Reserve System (FED) is the central
bank of the U.S.
It is the bank for banks; when banks need money,
they borrow from the FED
Established in 1913, the government did not have
the money to set up the central bank, larger banks
had to help by buying stock into it.
Structure and Organization (cont.)
The U.S. is divided into 12
Federal Reserve Districts
Each has one main Federal
Reserve Bank and most
have branch banks
Boston
Philadelphia
NY
Cleveland
Richmond
Atlanta
Chicago
St. Louis
Minneapolis
K.C.
Dallas
San Francisco
Structure and Organization (cont.)
Federally chartered commercial banks must be
members of the FED; state chartered banks may join
Member banks buy stock in the FED and earn
dividends from it.
Structure and Organization (cont.)
A Board of Governors (7) is appointed by the
President and he selects one to chair the board for a
4 year term.
The Board of Governors is supposed to be
independent of the President and Congress
Without political pressure, economic decisions can
be made freely in the countries best interest.
Structure and Organization (cont.)
Officials of the district banks serve on the FEDs
advisory councils which keep the FED informed of:
- economic conditions within each district
- financial institutions
- issues related to consumer loans
Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) is the
FEDs major policy making group.
FOMC
Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) makes
decisions that affect the economy as a whole by
manipulating/controlling the money supply
Functions of the FED
The FED oversees most large commercial banks. It
can block a merger between banks if the merger
would lessen competition.
Oversees the international business of American
banks and foreign banks that operate in this country.
Enforces laws that deal with consumer borrowing;
creates laws that require lenders to spell out the
details of a loan before a consumer borrows
Functions of the FED (cont.)
Acts as the government’s bank. Government
deposits revenues in the FED and withdraws it to
buy goods.
Sells U.S. government bonds and Treasury bills,
which the government uses to borrow money.
Issues the nation’s currency. Government agencies
produce the money, but the FED controls its
circulation.
Conducting Monetary Policy
Monetary Policy – controlling the supply of money
and the cost of borrowing money (interest rates)
according to the needs of the economy.
The FED can change interest rates by changing the
money supply
Conducting Monetary Policy (cont.)
If the FED wants a lower interest rate, it expands the money
supply, which moves the supply curve to the right.
If the FED wants a higher interest rate, it contracts the money
supply, which moves the supply curve to the left.
The FED manipulates the money supply by 3 means:
- discount rate
- reserve requirement
- open market operations
Discount Rate
Discount Rate – the rate the FED charges member banks for
loans.
If the FED wants to stimulate the economy, it lowers the
discount rate.
Lower rates encourage banks to borrow from the FED and that
means more loans to their customers (lower interest rates)
If the FED wants to slow down the economy, discount rates are
raised to discourage borrowing. This contracts the money
supply and raises interest rates
Reserve Requirement
Member banks must keep a certain % of their money
in the Federal Reserve Banks as a reserve.
The FED can raise the reserve requirement to
reduce the money banks have available to lend.
It can lower the reserve requirement to increase the
money banks have to lend.
Open Market Operations
Open Market Operations – the purchase or sale of U.S.
government bonds and Treasury bills.
Buying bonds from investors puts more cash into investors
hands thus increasing the money supply; this shifts the supply
curve of money to the right lowering interest rates
Selling bonds to investors takes cash out of investors hands
thus decreasing the money supply; this shifts the supply curve
of money to the left raising interest rates
Implementation of Monetary Policy
Can be done more quickly this way than by allowing
politicians to argue their views on Capitol Hill.
FED can always adjust its actions when needed
Manipulation of interest rates is key when trying to
influence business investments and consumer
spending
Loose Money Policy
Loose Money Policy:
–
Can lead to inflation.
1.
Easy to borrow
2. Consumers buy more
3.
Business expansion
4.
Employment increases
5. Spending increases
Tight Money Policy
Tight Money Policy:
–
Can lead to recession
1.
Difficult to borrow
2.
Consumers buy less
3.
No business expansion
4.
Unemployment increases
5. Production decreases