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Chapter 15 Monetary Policy
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Money Market – determines interest rate Demand for Money Transactions Speculative Precautionary Supply of money – controlled by the FED Equilibrium
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Monetary Chain Change the money supply Change the interest rate Change in borrowing Change in spending (C & I) Change aggregate demand Change GDP, price level, and unemployment
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Monetary Policy – changing the amount of money in circulation to affect interest rate Loose (Easy) Policy interest rates are lowered and borrowing increases Tight Policy interest rates are raised and borrowing decreases
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Tools Open Market Operations – buying and selling of U.S. Treasury securities to people and banks by the FED Buying bonds involves the FED offering a higher price for them causing interest rates to fall Selling bonds involves the FED offering a lower price for them causing interest rates to rise Bond prices and interest rates are inversely related Changes the Federal Funds Rate − Rate at which banks borrow from each other on overnight loans Discount Rate – rate at which banks borrow from the FED Reserve Requirement – percentage of deposits that cannot be lent and must be held in the FED or the bank itself
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Changing the Aggregate Demand Direct Effect – people have more money so they spend more causing the AD to increase Indirect Effect – people with more money might save and cause a banks cash to increase which they want to loan so they lower interest rates, people and businesses borrow and spend more causing the AD to increase Money and Inflation – in the long run increasing the money supply causes inflation In the short run there are other factors (OPEC, Government spending. Taxation)
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Monetary Policy in Action Contractionary Gap Buy bonds Lower the discount rate Lower the reserve requirement Expansionary Gap Sell bonds Raise the discount rate Raise the reserve requirement
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Theories Monetary Rule – change the money supply at a constant rate every year to insure anticipated inflation Increase the MS by 3% will cause inflation rate to be 3% Inflation Targeting – Setting a certain Inflation Rate as the goal (example: 3% If the actual inflation rate is greater than the target use tight money policy If the actual inflation rate is less than the target use easy money policy
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