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1.Created in 1913 2.Responsible for: a. overseeing the money supply b. coordinating commercial bank operations c. regulating depository institutions.

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Presentation on theme: "1.Created in 1913 2.Responsible for: a. overseeing the money supply b. coordinating commercial bank operations c. regulating depository institutions."— Presentation transcript:

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3 1.Created in 1913 2.Responsible for: a. overseeing the money supply b. coordinating commercial bank operations c. regulating depository institutions

4 The Public: Households & businesses Commercial Banks Savings & Loans Credit Unions Mutual Savings Banks The Board of Governors is at the center of the banking system in the U.S. The seven members of the Board of Governors also serve on the Federal Open Market Committee The FOMC is a 12- member board that establishes Fed policy regarding the buying and selling of government securities. Federal Reserve Board of Governors 7 members appointed by the president, with the consent of the U.S. Senate 12 Federal Reserve District Banks (25 branches) Open Market Committee Board of Governors & 5 Federal Reserve Bank Presidents (alternating terms, New York Bank always represented).

5 200020142012 2010 2008200620042002 1.Board of Governors – 7 members appointed by President - 14 yr terms at 2 yr intervals for continuity & independence -not more than one from each district http://www.federalreserve.gov/

6 3 12 1 4 9 11. (Board of Governors) 10 7 5 2 6 8 Each district bank monitors the commercial banks in their region and assists them with the clearing of checks. The Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System is located in Washington D.C.

7 3 12 1 4 9 11. 10 7 5 2 6 8 1.____________________ 2.____________________, ____________________ 3.____________________ 4._________________, _________________, _________________ 5.________________, _________________, _________________, 6._________________, ________________, _________________, _________________, _________________, _________________ 7._________________, _________________ 8._________________, ________________, _________________, _________________ 9._________________, _________________ 10._________________, ________________, ________________, __________________ 11._________________, _________________, _______________, 12._________________, ________________, _________________, _________________, _________________, _________________

8 1 Boston 2 New York City, Buffalo 3 Philadelphia 4 Cleveland, Pittsburgh, Cincinnati 5 Richmond, Baltimore, Charlotte 6 Atlanta, Nashville, Birmingham, Miami, Jacksonville, New Orleans 7 Chicago, Detroit 8 St. Louis, Louisville, Memphis, Little Rock 9 Minneapolis, Helena 10 KC, Denver, Omaha, Oklahoma City 11 Dallas, San Antonio, El Paso 12 SF, Salt Lake City, LA, Port., Seattle, Honolulu

9 2. Federal Open Market Committee -12 members = 7 Governors (for majority) plus 5 Pres or VP from 1 NY 2 Bost, Phila, or Richmond, 3 Atl, Dallas, or StL 4 Minn, KC, or SF, LA 5 Clev, or Chicago set policy on buying & selling bonds on open mkt 3. Federal Advisory Council outsiders 12 members - 1 each selected by Board of each Region

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11 Make sure they are following the rules Makes clearing check easier Replace money or increase or decrease money in circulation Moves checks from region to region Borrows, writes checks, takes deposits

12 1.Price stability 2.High employment 3.Stability of financial markets and institutions 4.Economic growth

13 1. Monetary Policy Tools: a. The Reserve Requirement -reducing it encourages loans and increases the money supply -increasing it discourages loans and decreases the money supply

14 Type of Deposit Current Requirement Limits Checkable Deposits $0 - $14.5 million 0 % 3% $14.5 - $130.6 million 3 3 Over 130.6 million 10 8-14 savings 0 0-9

15 b. The Discount Rate 3 rates 1. Discount Rate 2. Federal Funds Rate 3. Prime Rate federal reserve to member banks bank to bank banks to best customers

16 b. The Discount Rate Raising Discount Rate discourages bank borrowing decreases money supply Lowering Discount Rate encourages bank borrowing increases money supply

17 c. Open Market Operations Buying and Selling Securities (Bonds) -selling bonds puts bonds out and take money out of circulation -buying bonds puts money back in circulation and takes bonds in What effect will this have on the economy??

18 Fed Buys

19 Fed Sells

20 Changing the Interest Rate The original equilibrium occurs at E 0. Expansionary monetary policy shifts supply to the right. reduces the interest rate from 8% to 6%. Contractionary monetary policy shifts supply to the left. raises the interest rate from 8% to 10%.

21 c. Open Market Operations Buy or Sell? a. The Reserve Requirement Raise or Lower? Increase or decrease? b. The Discount Rate

22 c. Open Market Operations Buy or Sell? a. The Reserve Requirement Raise or Lower? Increase or decrease? b. The Discount Rate

23 Fed’s Past Policies

24 Episode 1 1979 and 1980, high inflation (over 10%), the Fed raised interest rates 5.5% in 1977 to 16.4% in 1981. By 1983, inflation was down to 3.2%, (may have caused back-to-back recessions in 1980 and in 1981–1982) Episode 2 In early 1980s, the Fed felt inflation was declining, Fed reduced the federal funds rate from 16.4% in 1981 to 6.8% in 1986. Episode 3 From 1986 to 1989, inflation rose from 2% to 5%. the Fed raised the federal funds rates from 6.6% to 9.2%. Inflation fell from above 5% in 1990 to under 3% in 1992 (but it helped to cause the recession of 1990–1991, and the unemployment rate rose from 5.3% in 1989 to 7.5% by 1992.) Episode 4 In the early 1990s, the Fed reduced interest rates 8.1% 3.5%. The unemployment rate declined from 7.5% in 1992 to less than 5% by 1997.

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26 Episodes 5 and 6 With a risk of inflation the federal funds rate was raised from 3% to 5.8% from 1993 to 1995. No Inflation. In 1999 and 2000, the Fed was concerned that inflation seemed to be creeping up so it raised the federal funds rate from 4.6% in 12/98 to 6.5% in 6/00. By early 2001, inflation was declining again, but a recession occurred in 2001. Between 2000 and 2002, the unemployment rate rose from 4.0% to 5.8%. Episodes 7 and 8 the Fed slashed the federal funds rate from 6.2% in 2000 to 1.7% in 2002, and to 1% in 2003. In 2004, the unemployment rate declined and the Federal Reserve began to raise the federal funds rate until it reached 5% by 2007. Episode 9 Great Recession in 2008, the Fed slashed interest rates 2% to nearly 0%. the economy was still deep in recession

27 Consumption. Lower interest rates lower the cost of durable goods and reduce the return to saving, leading households to save less and spend more. Investment. Lower interest rates increase the demand for stocks and make it less expensive for firms and households to borrow, thereby increasing investment. Net exports. If interest rates in the United States decline relative to interest rates in other countries, the value of the dollar will fall and net exports will rise.

28 AD 1 If the increase in AD is when the economy is below capacity, the policy will help direct the economy toward long-run full-employment equilibrium Y F. Price Level LRAS Y F Y1Y1 AD 2 Goods & Services (real GDP) P2P2 SRAS 1 P1P1 E2E2 e1e1

29 AD 1 If the increase is at full-employment Y F, they will lead to excess demand, higher product prices, and temporarily higher output Y 2. Price Level LRAS YFYF P2P2 Goods & Services (real GDP) P1P1 SRAS 1 E1E1 Y2Y2 AD 2 e2e2

30 AD 1 Price Level LRAS Y F P2P2 Goods & Services (real GDP) P1P1 SRAS 1 AD 2 E1E1 e2e2 Y2Y2 In the long-run, the strong demand pushes up resource prices, shifting short run aggregate supply (from SRAS 1 to SRAS 2 ). P3P3 SRAS 2 The price level rises (from P 2 to P 3 ) and output falls back to Y F from its temporary high,Y 2. E3E3

31 Too Low for Zero: The Fed Tries “Quantitative Easing” and “Operation Twist” Quantitative easing - purchasing securities—including certain mortgage- backed securities—beyond the short-term Treasury securities that are usually involved in open market operations. (Nov. 2008 and June 2011)

32 The economic recovery remained weak Operation Twist - the Fed announced it would purchase $400 billion in long-term Treasury securities while it would sell an equal amount of shorter-term Treasury securities. (Sept 2011) Both tried to reduce interest rates on long-term Treasury securities, which typically move closely with those on home mortgage loans, in order to increase aggregate demand.

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34 The Federal Reserve can provide reserves for banks to loan. They can’t make them loan them out.

35 Becoming unpredictable.

36 = * * M V P Y V elocity P rice Output - the amount of money in circulation - the number of times each $ is spent in a year (considered to be stable) - the actual output of goods and services - the level of prices M one y M V P Y

37 = * * M V P Y V elocity P rice Y =output If V and P are constant, then an increase in M will lead to a proportional increase in Y GDP increases. but if V and Y are constant (at full employment), then an increase in M will lead to a proportional increase in P =Inflation. P Y Total Sales (GDP) = *

38 Which to target?

39 1.It would draw the public’s attention to the fact that the Fed can affect inflation but not real GDP in the long run., 2.The Fed would make it easier for households and firms to form accurate expectations of future inflation, improving their planning and the efficiency of the economy.

40 3.It get would help institutionalize good U.S. monetary policy that is subject to fewer abrupt changes as members join and leave the FOMC. 4.It would promote accountability for the Fed by providing a yardstick against which Congress and the public could measure the Fed’s performance.

41 1.A numeric target reduces the flexibility of monetary policy to address other policy goals. 2.It assumes that the Fed can accurately forecast future inflation rates, which is not always the case. 3.Holding the Fed accountable only for an inflation goal may make it less likely that the Fed will achieve other important policy goals.


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