Chapter 13 - Monetary Policy
Fact
(FED)=central bank- a type of bank whose financial obligations underlie an economy's money supply
Commercial banks
(PNC) borrow money from the Fed.
Yield Curve
A curve that shows the relationship between interest rates and bonds time to mature
Intermediate Targets
Consumer Confidence/Stock Prices/Interest Rates Spread/Housing Starts
Fact
Contractionary policy is the policy that decreases the money supply and increases the interest rate. It decreases investment and output.
Fact
Expansionary policy is the policy that increase the money supply and decreases the interest rate. it increases investment and output.
How Monetary Policy Works in Models
Expansionary policy shifts the AD curve to the right Contractionary policy shifts the AD curve to the left
Fact
If inflation is ABOVE target, the Fed raises the Federal Funds Rate by selling thereby decrease the money supply.
Fact
If inflation is below target, and if the economy is going into a recession the Fed LOWERS the Federal Fund Rate by buying bonds thereby increasing the money supply.
Fed Tools
Open Market Operation, Discount Rate, Reserve Requirement
Inverted Yield Curve
a yield curve in which the short term rate is higher than the long term
Fed Funds
loans of excess reserves banks charge one another for Fed Funds.
The minimum is reserve requirement
the amount of reserves a bank must have.
Federal Open Market Committee
the feds chief body that decided monetary policy
Federal Funds Rate
the interest rate banks charge one another for Fed Funds.
Monetary Base
vault cash, deposits at the Fed, plus currency in circulation
The primary way the Fed changes the amount of reserves in the system is Open Market Operations
which is the Fed buying and selling treasury bills and bonds.
Fact
12 regional banks & main Federal Reserve Bank makes up the Fed.
Operating Target
Fed Funds Rate
Monetary Regime
is the predetermined statement of the policy that will be followed in various situations
Fact
Monetary Policy is controlled by the U.S. central bank which is the Fed.
The discount rate
is the rate of interest the Fed charges for loans it makes for banks.
Ultimate Targets
Stable Prices/Sustainable Growth/Acceptable Employment/Long Run Rates
Facts
To expand the money supply, the Fed buys bonds. To contract the money supply, the Fed sells bonds.
Monetary Policy
is the policy of influencing the economy through changes in banking systems reserves that influence the money supply, credit availability, and interest rates in the economy.