The Federal Reserve System

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Presentation transcript:

The Federal Reserve System Structure and Policy Tools ECO 285 – Macroeconomics – Dr. D. Foster

The Origins of U.S. Central Banking 1791–1836 Bank of England The Bank of North America (1781) The First Bank of the United States The Second Bank of the United States 1837–1865 The Free-Banking period. The Civil War & Greenbacks – a money

1865–1912 The National Banking Act The Gold Standard Brief foray into bi-metalism. Panics of 1873, 1893 and 1907 Federal Reserve Act of

The Federal Reserve Banking System

The Early Fed (1913–1935) & Fed 2.0 Accommodates the Treasury Dept. during WWI. Buys Treasury bonds to finance G spending. From 1916 to 1918, this increases MS by 70%. Huge risk of The Great Depression - Failure of the Fed (?) Initially increased liquidity, but pulled back. By 1933, 33% of banks fail, MS Banking Act of 1935 – a new Fed Centralized power in Board. Board of Governors reconstituted. created to conduct policy.

The Federal Reserve Banking System Purposes: Develop, supervise & control the nation’s money. Serve as a “lender of last resort.” Serve as a national check-clearing system. Serve as for federal gov’t. funds. Structure: Board of Twelve District Banks. Federal Open Market Committee. Regulatory bureaucracy.

The Federal Reserve Banking System Board of Governors: Selected for one [Except…] Staggered selection; geographic diversity. Chairman & Vice Chairman selected for Can’t be members of the executive branch. Policy Tools: Open Market Operations. Buy and sell U.S. Treasury bonds. Set bank required reserve ratio. Set rate of interest.

The Banking System Reserves (Cash in vault) Assets Liabilities & Equity +$10,000 +$2,000 Reserves (Cash in vault) T-Bills (Liquidity & income) Loans (Banks’ earnings) Demand Deposits (Checking; Transaction) Equity +$10,000 +$8,000 Accounting Identity: M1 +$8,000

The Fed & the Banking System Assets Liabilities & Equity Reserves (Cash in vault) T-Bills (Liquidity & income) Loans (Banks’ earnings) Demand Deposits (Checking; Transaction) Equity M1

The Evolution of the Modern Fed WWII - working “for” the U.S. Treasury Federal Reserve–Treasury Accord (1951) “Leaning Against The Wind” Martin (1953-1970) The technocratic Fed Burns (1970-1978) . . . the “political business cycle” Coping with inflation Volcker (1979-1987) Keeping the economy stable? Greenspan (1987-2006) Coping with recession Bernanke (2006-2014) Yellen (2014-?)

The Fed’s Balance Sheet – 12/2007 In millions of dollars.

The Fed – 2012 Treasury Securities ……… Holdings of MBS …………. Total Assets ………………… $2.9 trillion

The Fed – 2014 Treasury Securities ……… Holdings of MBS …………. Total Assets ………………… $4.5 trillion

The Fed – Q2 2017 Treasury Securities ……… $2.56 trillion Holdings ……… $1.8 trillion Total Assets ….… $4.47 trillion

FRS – Total Assets; 2007-2017 Sept. 2017: $4.46 t. $2.46 t. $1.77 t.

Bank reserve deposits …. Total Liabilities ……….…… $2.9 trillion 2012 The Fed – 2012 FR Notes outstanding ….. Bank reserve deposits …. Total Liabilities ……….…… $2.9 trillion

The Fed – 2014 FR Notes outstanding ….. Bank reserve deposits …. Total Liabilities ……….…… $4.5 trillion

The Fed – Q2 2017 FR Notes outstanding ….. $1.49 trillion …. $2.15 trillion Total Liabilities ……… $4.47 trillion

FRS – Total Liabilities; 2007-2017 Sept. 2017: $4.46 t. $2.31 t. $1.58 t. $0.41 t.

Federal Reserve Policy Tools Open Market Operations Buy/sell Treasury bonds to affect bank reserves. The major form of monetary policy. What will the Fed do if we run out of Treasury bonds? Discount Window Lend to member banks to affect bank reserves. Purpose is to target the “federal funds rate” – iff This is the rate that banks charge each other for very short term loans. Required Reserve Ratio (rrD) Changing this affects bank excess reserves directly. Used more to reflect structural changes. Was used in 1937 and precipitates more Great Depression. Time to let this go? New policy – Pay banks i for ER (!!)

Goals of Monetary Policy Inflation goals: Low/no inflation with limited year-to-year variability. Output goals: High and stable economic growth. Employment goals: Stable employment growth with low unemployment. FOMC Press Release Sept. 20, 2017 Q&A June 22, 2016 Presser Sept. 20, 2017

Intermediate Targets of Monetary Policy Limited long-term information about the economy available to policymakers means that they pick an intermediate target. Characteristics: --Frequently observable --Consistency with ultimate goals --Definable and measurable --Controllable Usual target variables: Monetary aggregates M1, M2, MZM Interest rates (fed’l funds, prime …) Others …

Getting from bond purchases to interest rates $ $ $ $ $ $ $$$ mm/yyyy What is price of $1000 FV bond, matures in 2 years, $50 coupon with i=7%? Face value (FV) Maturity date (in n years) Coupons & value (C) Usually, we talk of annual coupons Market price of the bond = present value of income stream discounted at interest rate i: When the Fed buys bonds, their prices will ___ and interest rates will ___.

What is interest? Payment made to savers to compensate them for foregoing consumption. “The most powerful force in the universe is compound interest.” Interest rates embody our expectations of the future.

Some simple bond pricing problems A bond has a face value (FV) of $1000, will mature in seven years, has an annual coupon of $74. The market rate of interest is 8.1%. What is the current market price of this bond? Suppose that the current market interest rate rises to 8.7%. What will be the new market price for this bond? Suppose that when the bond was first sold, it’s market price was $1000. What must have been the market rate of interest then? Consider a bond with FV=$1000, maturity = 2022, C=$81 and i=7.25% What is the current price of this bond? If the Fed jumps into the bond market, even though it just buys U.S. Treasuries, it will affect all interest rates to some extent. If they buy lots of bonds and interest rates fall to 6.88%, what will happen to the price of your bond? What do you think about the Fed’s actions?

The Federal Reserve System Structure and Policy Tools ECO 285 – Macroeconomics – Dr. D. Foster