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Published byJohnathan McDaniel Modified over 8 years ago
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Monetary Policy and the Interest Rate
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Fed Goals ● Fed Goals: Economic growth and price stability (inflation control) ● When the Fed wants to lower interest rates, they engage in expansionary monetary policy ● When the Fed wants to raise interest rates, they engage in contractionary monetary policy.
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Expansionary Monetary Policy ● The Fed observes that the economy is in a recessionary gap. ● The Fed buys bonds--increases the money supply. ● The interest rate falls. ● Investment and consumption increase. ● AD shifts to the right. ● Real GDP increases, unemployment rate decreases, the aggregate price level rises
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Contractionary Monetary Policy ● The Fed observes that the economy is in a recessionary gap. ● The Fed buys bonds--increases the money supply. ● The interest rate falls. ● Investment and consumption increase. ● AD shifts to the right. ● Real GDP increases, unemployment rate decreases, the aggregate price level rises
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Monetary Policy & Interest Rate ● Usually the Fed adjusts the money supply to target a specific federal funds rate. ● If the current federal funds rate is higher than the target, the Fed will increase the money supply so that the rate falls to the target. ● If the current federal funds rate is lower than the target, the Fed will decrease the money supply so that the rate rises to the target.
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Interest Rate Graph
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Real v. Nominal Interest Rate Real interest rate = Nominal interest rate — Inflation rate ● Nominal interest rate is the rate actually paid for a loan ● Real interest rate is nominal interest rate adjusted for inflation ● For borrowers, the true cost of borrowing is the real interest rate. ● For lenders, the true payoff to lending is the real interest rate.
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