Monetary Policy
Real Gross Domestic Product
A measure of the constant dollar value of all final goods and services produced in a country during a fixed period of time
Money Multiplier
The amount by which a one dollar change in reserves will change the money supply
Excess Reserves
The amount of reserves that a bank can lend out to earn interest; equal to total reserves minus required reserves
Required Reserves
The amount of reserves that a bank must keep on hand to meet regulatory requirements; equal to deposits times the reserve requirement
Spread
The difference between the interest rate a bank earns on a loan and the interest rate it pays
Federal Open Market Committee
A committee of the Federal Reserve System that is responsible for monetary policy decisions, specifically for open market operations for the Federal Reserve System. The FOMC consists of the Federal Reserve Board, the president of New York Fed, and 4 of the other 11 regional bank presidents
Money Market
A market in which the demand for and supply of money determine an interest rate, or opportunity cost of holding money balances
Aggregate Demand
A schedule or curve that represents the relationship between the quantity of real GDP demanded in the economy and the price level, all else held constant
Aggregate Supply
A schedule or curve that represents the relationship between the quantity of real GDP supplied in the economy and the price level
Contractionary monetary Policy
The actions taken by a country's central bank to contract the money supply and raise interest rates with the objective of decreasing real GDP and controlling inflation.
Expansionary Monetary Policy
The actions taken by a country's central bank to expand the money supply and lower interest rates with the objective of increasing real GDP and reducing unemployment.
Monetary Policy
The actions taken by a country's central bank to influence the supply of money and credit in the economy
Gross Investment
The dollar value of all new capital purchased and and the expansion of inventories in an economy during a given time period. It is categorized into business fixed, residential, and inventory
Reserve Requirement
The fraction of check-able deposits that banks must keep on hand as reserves, either as currency or on deposit with the Federal Reserve
Discount Rate
The interest rate at which banks can borrow money directly from the Federal Reserve
Federal Funds Rate
The interest rate that banks pay when borrowing reserves from other banks
Prime Rate
The lowest commercially available interest rate
Federal Funds Market
The market for borrowing and lending reserves between banks
Investment Demand
The negative relationship between the quantity of new physical capital demanded by firms and the prevailing interest rate
Interest Rate
The payment made to agents that lend or save money, expressed as an annualized percentage of the monetary amount lent or saved
Open Market Operations
The purchase or sale of government securities by a central bank; used to influence the money supply and interest rates