Federal Reserve Structure & Policy
Fractional-reserve system
Banks hold only a fraction of deposits as reserves
Open-Market Operations
Buying/selling government securities to control money supply
Tight-Money Policy
Contractionary policy raising interest rates to slow economy
Easy-Money Policy
Expansionary policy lowering interest rates to boost economy
Discretionary Spending
Gov't actions to correct economic instability, authorized annually
Fiscal Policy
Gov't use of taxes and spending to influence the economy
Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC)
Group monitoring money supply, inflation, and interest rates
Central Bank
Institution overseeing banking system and regulating money quantity
Discount Rate/Overnight Rate
Interest rate Fed charges member banks for loans
Commodity Money
Items with intrinsic value used as money
Chairman of the Fed
Leader of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve
Federal Reserve Act of 1913
Legislation creating the Federal Reserve as the central bank of the U.S.
Medium of Exchange
Money facilitating goods and services exchange
Store of Value
Money retaining value over time, exchangeable for goods/services
Standard of Value
Money used to express costs and compare worths of goods
Fiat Money
Money valuable due to government declaration
Representative Money
Paper money exchangeable for something valuable
Monetary Policy
Policy influencing money supply to impact credit availability and cost
Reserve Ratio Requirements
Regulations on minimum reserves banks must hold against deposits
Mandatory Spending
Spending required by current law, including entitlements