FOMC. GDP Review economics/uploads/newsletter/2013/PageOneCE0513. pdf

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Money and the Banking System
Advertisements

Money and the Banking System. slide 2 Chapter objectives Money supply – how the banking system creates money – three ways the Fed can control the money.
25 MONEY, THE PRICE LEVEL, AND INFLATION © 2012 Pearson Addison-Wesley.
LESSON 24 THE FED’S TOOLBOX 24-1 HIGH SCHOOL ECONOMICS 3 RD EDITION © COUNCIL FOR ECONOMIC EDUCATION, NEW YORK, NY Bank reserves: Currency held by banks.
Chapter 15 Monetary policy
Notebook # 24- Economics 15-2 Monetary Policy. Monetary Policy ESSENTIAL QUESTIONS: What is the purpose of the Federal Reserve System? What are the structures.
SESSION 5: THE FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM TALKING POINTS THE FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM 1.The Federal Reserve System (often referred to as “the Fed”) is the central.
The Federal Reserve System and Monetary Policy
Connecting Money and Prices: Irving Fisher’s Quantity Equation M × V = P × Y The Quantity Theory of Money V = Velocity of money The average number of times.
Functions of the Fed Controlling the Money Supply! –Vary money supply to meet seasonal fluctuations in the demand for money. Helps keep interest rates.
The Fed’s Toolbox What tools does the Federal Reserve System have at its disposal? The Fed’s Toolbox.
MONEY, BANKS, AND THE FEDERAL RESERVE. Objectives After studying this chapter, you will able to  Explain why fiat money exists and why it is important.
The Federal Reserve Started in 1913 is response to yet another financial crisis Is Quasi-public Serves three purposes Regulates the payment system Supervises.
Government & the U. S. Economy What does the government do to keep the U.S. economy from acting like a roller coaster: INFLATION rising prices & increasing.
The fed’s open market policy and Money supply
Interest Rates and Monetary Policy
Introduction to Economics: Social Issues and Economic Thinking Wendy A. Stock PowerPoint Prepared by Z. Pan CHAPTER 22 MONETARY POLICY AND THE FEDERAL.
Monetary Policy Using the amount of money and credit available to consumers to influence the economy.
Today’s Warm Up Based on the functions of the Fed you studied yesterday, which do you think is most important and why?
Monetary Policy Section 5 Modules In Plain English--The Federal Reserve Video  Take notes  Focus on the Board of Governors (BoG) Federal Reserve.
1. Review Money Market and Loanable Funds Market HW and Practice FRQ 2. Notes: The Federal Reserve System Unit 3 Exam is postponed until Monday/Tuesday.
Monetary Policy Tools. Monetary Policy Federal Reserve Act of 1913 created the Federal Reserve System –“The Fed” provides the U.S. banking system with.
Copyright © 2010 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. Chapter 16 Money Creation, the Demand for Money, and Monetary Policy.
Money Fiat/Legal Tender – money that has value because a government fiat, or order, has established it as acceptable for payment of debts. Medium of Exchange.
Monetary Tools. Tools of Monetary Policy  Changing the reserve requirement  Changing the discount rate  Executing open market operations (buying and.
1 Chapter 5 The Federal Reserve. 2 The Federal Reserve (the Fed) The U.S. Central Bank I.The Role of the Federal Reserve System A.The purpose is to control.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2011 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Chapter 19: Monetary Policy and the Federal Reserve 1.Describe.
The Federal Reserve System. Powers of a Central Bank  Acts as a banker to the central government  Acts as a banker to banks  Acts as a regulator of.
Monetary Policy Using the amount of money and credit available to consumers to ……. influence the economy.
The FED and Monetary Policy
Chapter 15 Monetary Policy. Money Market – determines interest rate Demand for Money Transactions Speculative Precautionary Supply of money – controlled.
The Federal Reserve System and Monetary Policy. Money Final payment for goods and services Purposes of money: – Medium of Exchange: It can be used to.
The Federal Reserve In Action. What is the Fed?  Central bank of the United States  Established in 1913 (Federal Reserve Act of 1913)  Purpose is to.
Actions of the Federal Reserve
Monetary Policy Chapter 15 Section 2. What is monetary policy? The Fed can expand or contract the money supply by influencing the cost of credit What.
Chapter 13-4 The Federal Reserve System. The Federal Reserve  A central bank is an institution that oversees and regulates the banking system and controls.
Monetary Policy Using the amount of money and credit available to consumers to influence the economy.
Ch16 Federal Reserve and Monetary Policy. Federal Reserve Bank History The Federal Reserve Bank is the central bank of the U.S., created by the Federal.
Federal Reserve Created in 1914 after a series of bank failures Central bank: bank that can lend to other banks in times of need.
The Federal Reserve System. Prior to 1913, hundreds of national banks in the U.S. could print as much paper money as they wanted They could lend a lot.
Chapter 20 The Instruments of Central Banking. Copyright © 2004 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved KEY WORDS AND CONCEPTS BANK RESERVES.
Chapter 14: The Federal Reserve System Copyright © 2013 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin 13e.
FOMC. GDP Review What is GDP how is it calculated? What does Keynesian economics have to do with fiscal policy? What are the two limitations of fiscal.
a. Describe the organization of the Federal Reserve System.
Monetary Policy It influences the Model of the Economy.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Chapter 17: Interest Rates and Monetary Policy Copyright © 2010 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
What can the government do when GDP growth decreases and unemployment increases?
Chapter 16: The Federal Reserve and Monetary Policy Section 3.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2006 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., All Rights Reserved. The Federal Reserve System Chapter 14.
Monetary Policy Tools Describe how the Federal Reserve uses the tools of monetary policy to promote price stability, full employment, and economic growth.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin ©2008 The McGraw-Hill Companies, All Rights Reserved The Federal Reserve System Chapter 14.
The Federal Reserve. Federal Reserve Act of 1913  Created 12 regional independent banks.
1 Objective – Students will be able to answer questions regarding monetary policy. SECTION 1 Chapter 15- Mechanics of Monetary Policy © 2001 by Prentice.
November 15, 2016 SSEMA1: The student will illustrate the means by which economic activity is measured. SSEMA2: The student will explain the role and.
The Federal Reserve System and Monetary Policy
SESSION 2 Financial & Monetary Policies
Fiscal and Monetary Policy
The Federal Reserve System
Monetary Policy - Money Creation and FED Tools
Federal Reserve (Monetary Policy).
Terms to Know Bank reserves: Currency held by banks in their vaults plus their deposits at Federal Reserve Banks. Required reserves: Funds that a depository.
BANKING & MONETARY POLICY
Monetary Policy.
Monetary Policy.
Monetary Policy.
The Federal Reserve: Functions & Monetary Policy Tools
The Federal Reserve: Functions & Monetary Policy Tools
Presentation transcript:

FOMC

GDP Review economics/uploads/newsletter/2013/PageOneCE0513. pdf economics/uploads/newsletter/2013/PageOneCE0513. pdf

Objectives Identify monetary policy tools available to the Federal Reserve System; describe the relationship between bank reserves, interest rates, and the economic goals of maximum employment and price stability; describe the key components of the Federal Reserve’s dual mandate; identify the ways in which monetary policy tools can be used to achieve economic objectives; and analyze policy strategies given economic conditions

The Fed’s Toolbox What tools does the Federal Reserve System have at its disposal? The Fed’s Toolbox

Slide 1: Vocabulary Bank reserves – The sum of cash that banks hold in their vaults and the deposits they maintain with Federal Reserve Banks. Required reserves – Funds that a depository institution must hold in reserve against specified deposits as vault cash or deposits with Federal Reserve Banks. Excess reserves – The amount of funds held by a depository institution in its account at a Federal Reserve Bank in excess of its required reserve balance. Interest – The price of using someone else's money. Interest rate – The percentage of the amount of a loan that is charged for a loan. It is also the percentage paid on a savings account. The Fed’s Toolbox

What would happen if a bank wanted to make a loan but did not have enough excess reserves to do so?

Slide 2: Vocabulary Federal funds market – The market in which banks can borrow or lend reserves, allowing banks temporarily short of their required reserves to borrow from banks that have excess reserves. Federal funds rate – The interest rate at which a depository institution lends funds that are immediately available to another depository institution overnight. Federal Reserve System – The central bank system of the United States. Central bank – An institution that oversees and regulates the banking system and quantity of money in the economy. The Fed’s Toolbox

Slide 3: Monetary Policy Tools Monetary policy – The actions of a central bank to influence the cost and availability of money and credit to achieve the national economic goals. Discount rate – The interest rate charged by the Federal Reserve to banks for loans obtained through the Fed's discount window. Open market operations – The buying and selling of government securities through primary dealers by the Federal Reserve in order to control the money supply. Reserve requirements – Funds that banks must hold in cash, either in their vaults or on deposit at a Federal Reserve Bank. (last changed in 1992) Interest on reserves – Interest paid by Federal Reserve Banks on required and excess reserves held by banks at Federal Reserve Banks. The Fed’s Toolbox

Slide 6: Expansionary Policy Borrowing Increases Federal Reserve Primary Dealers Fed Buys Bonds Money Bonds Expansionary monetary policy – Actions taken by the Federal Reserve to increase the growth of the money supply and the amount of credit available. Banks Investors Bank Reserves Increase Interest Rates Decrease The Fed’s Toolbox

Questions What would happened to the level of reserves in the banking system if the Fed purchases government securities? What likely happens to interest rates when more excess reserves are available for loans in the banking system? How will consumers and businesses likely respond? How will producers respond?

Borrowing Decreases Federal Reserve Primary Dealers Fed Sells Bonds Money Bonds Banks Investors Bank Reserves Decrease Interest Rates Increase Contractionary monetary policy – Actions taken by the Federal Reserve to decrease the growth of the money supply and the amount of credit available. Slide 7: Contractionary Policy The Fed’s Toolbox

Dual mandate – The Federal Reserve’s responsibility to use monetary policy to promote maximum employment and price stability. Price stability – A low and stable rate of inflation maintained over an extended period of time. The Fed has a longer-run goal of 2 percent inflation. Maximum employment – The Fed does not have a specific unemployment target, but it does regularly publish its forecast for the longer-run rate of unemployment. Slide 8: Dual Mandate The Fed’s Toolbox

Questions Inflation Given the Fed’s ability to influence the level of reserves in the banking system, how do you think the Fed can provide price stability? Employment How do you think the Fed can influence employment?

Questions Does the Fed set the federal funds rate? How does the Fed influence the federal funds rate? Does the Fed set the discount rate, the rate banks pay to borrow reserves from the Fed? Is the discount rate usually higher or lower than the federal funds rate?

Interest on Reserves Since 2008, the Federal Reserve has paid interest on reserve balances held at a Federal Reserve Bank. Both required and excess reserves can earn interest. Banks can choose to either hold reserves on deposit at a Federal Reserve Bank and earn interest or use their excess reserves to make loans to businesses and individuals and charge interest. The Federal Reserve can influence banks’ decisions to hold reserves at the Fed or lend to customers by increasing or decreasing the interest rate paid on excess reserves.

Interest Questions What would likely happen to the incentive for banks to lend money if the Federal reserve were to increase the interest rate it pays on reserves?

Headline: Unemployment Soars While Deflation Fears Grow What should the Fed do?

Headline: Prices Rising: Inflation Worries Grow What should the Fed do?

What is the name of the market in which banks can borrow or lend reserves, allowing banks temporarily short of their required reserves to borrow from banks that have excess reserves? a. The bank reserve market b. The federal funds market c. The excess reserves market d. The required reserves market

Last week the Second Bank of Middleville borrowed reserves from the Federal Reserve’s discount window. For the use of this money, the Second Bank of Middleville will now be required to pay which of the following rates? a. The reserve rate b. The discount rate c. The federal funds rate d. The monetary rate

Assume the Second Bank of Middleville has $100,000 in total deposits and has a required reserves ratio of 15 percent. How much does the Second Bank of Middleville have in excess reserves? a. $15,000 b. $85,000 c. $100,000 d. $150,000

If the Federal Reserve purchases a total of $50,000 in government securities through two different primary dealers, what will happen to the level of money/reserves in the banking system? a. Money/reserves will increase by $50,000. b. Money/reserves will increase by $100,000. c. Money/reserves will decrease by $50,000. d. Money/reserves will decrease by $100,000.

Keynes versus Hayek Keynes vs. Hayek Round two economics/uploads/newsletter/2011/201103_Classroo mEdition.pdf economics/uploads/newsletter/2011/201103_Classroo mEdition.pdf