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 Monetary Policy – actions the Fed takes to influence the level of real GDP and the rate of inflation in the economy  (The Fed = The Federal Reserve)

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Presentation on theme: " Monetary Policy – actions the Fed takes to influence the level of real GDP and the rate of inflation in the economy  (The Fed = The Federal Reserve)"— Presentation transcript:

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2  Monetary Policy – actions the Fed takes to influence the level of real GDP and the rate of inflation in the economy  (The Fed = The Federal Reserve)

3 The Board of Governors  Headquartered in Washington, D.C.  7 members  Appointed by President, confirmed by Senate  Staggered terms of 14 years  Why?  Geographical restrictions

4 Chairman of the Board Appointed by President, confirmed by Senate 4-year terms, renewable Alan Greenspan was a notable Chairman (took office in 1987 - 2006)

5 Chairman of the Fed until February 2014 This is Ben Bernanke. Does anyone know the newest Chairman of the Federal Reserve?

6 Newest Chairperson of the Fed! Janet Yellen was sworn in as Chair of the Fed in February 2014. She is the first woman to hold this position!

7 12 federal reserve districts One federal reserve bank located in each Each monitors and reports on economic and banking conditions in its district Each bank has board of nine directors that represents many groups’ interests In which district is Pittsburgh located? Where is our district Fed bank, then? Color your maps

8  All nationally chartered banks are required to join Federal Reserve System  Many state-chartered banks join voluntarily  Approximately 4,000 Fed member banks  FAC (Federal Advisory Council) collects info about each district and reports to Board of Governors

9  Makes key decisions about interest rates and growth of money supply  Meet 8 times a year  Members come from Board of Governors and district reserve bank presidents

10  Serving Government  Federal Government’s banker  Government securities (bonds, bills, and notes) selling  Issuing currency

11  Check Clearing – how banks record whose account gives up money and whose account receives money

12 Supervising lending practices ▪ Monitors bank reserves to make sure banks don’t lend out too much money at one time ▪ Study proposed bank mergers to make sure there is competition ▪ Enforce truth-in-lending laws – must give full and accurate info about loan terms

13  Lender of Last Resort ▪ Usually, banks borrow from each other to meet their daily reserve requirement (fed funds rate) ▪ Sometimes they need to borrow from Federal Reserve (discount rate)

14  Reserves – fractions of funds that banks have to hold (can’t loan out and earn interest)  Banks report to Fed about their reserves daily  Bank examinations  Examiners make unexpected bank visits to make sure banks aren’t being too risky

15  The Fed considers M1, M2, and M3 – compares the money supply to the demand for money  Factors that Affect Demand for Money  Cash needed on hand  Interest rates  Price levels in the economy  General level of income

16  Stabilizing the Economy  Too much money in the economy leads to inflation  Fed tries to increase MS to match the growth in demand for money

17  Reserve Requirement Ratio  Rates (Fed Funds Rate and Discount Rate)  Open Market Operations

18  The fraction of reserves that banks MUST hold (what they cannot lend out)  If the Fed wants to increase the money supply, they can lower this  Would free up more money for them to lend out  If the Fed wants to contract the money supply, they can raise this.  Would make banks hold on to more money and able to lend out less.

19  Both the fed funds rate and the discount rate are the interest rates that BANKS must pay to borrow money  Fed funds rate – the rate banks pay to borrow money from OTHER BANKS  Discount rate – the rate banks pay to borrow money from the Fed  If the Fed wants to increase the money supply, they will lower these rates so that banks can borrow more money (and then lends out more money to customers)

20  The buying and selling of treasury securities  (Think savings bonds, war bonds, etc.)  If the Fed wants to increase the money supply, they will BUY bonds from the public (because this will put money in people’s hands)  If the Fed wants to decrease the money supply, they will SELL bonds to the public (because this will take money out of people’s hands)


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