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Chapter 15 Sections 1 and 2 The Fed and Money Supply Clip of the Day The Federal Reserve (AKA – The Fed) The central bank of the United States of America. The Fed The “Fed” is a system/network of banks. Responsible for Monetary Policy. Cont. Monetary Policy – Changing the growth of money supply in circulation. Federal Open Market Committee Board of Governors, head of NY Fed Bank, and 4 rotating heads of the other 11 district banks. Meet 8 times a year to set MONETARY POLICY Extremely important decision making body. Banking System 12 District Banks – 25 branch banks underneath it. All national banks must become members of the Federal Reserve System. Monetary Policy Changing the growth of money supply Loose Money Policy “Expansionary” Credit is abundant and inexpensive to obtain. Encourages economic growth Tight Money Policy “Contractionary” Credit is in short supply and expensive to obtain. Used to control inflation Think money when money is “tight” it is harder to get, not as much available. Fractional Reserve Banking Only a fraction of bank deposits must be kept on hand or in reserves the rest can be lent out. Reserve Requirements A requirement by the Fed – % of Money that banks must keep on reserve from deposits. Example – Sam deposits $1000 into a checking account. The reserve requirement is 10%. The bank must therefore hold $100 and may loan out the remaining $900. Multiple Expansion of the Money Supply Chapter 15 Section 3 Regulating the Money Supply The Federal Reserve The main goal of the Federal Reserve is to keep the money supply growing steadily and the economy running smoothly Tool #1 – Changing Reserve Requirements Reserve Requirements – The % of money that banks must hold from a deposit. Increase Requirements – Less money available to lend out Decrease Requirements – More money available to lend out #2 – Discount Rate Banks can borrow money from the Fed (to meet reserve requirements). The interest charged by The Fed on these loans is the Discount Rate Cont. Prime Rate – Interest rate banks charge its best business customers. Banks pass on discount rate changes to customers. Cont. Decrease Interest Rate = Loans become cheaper to obtain = Loans INCREASE in Quantity Demanded Increase interest rates – Loans become more expensive – discourages borrowing #3 – Open Market Operations Buying and selling government securities (Most common tool Fed uses to control money supply Fed buys securities it is increasing money supply Fed sells securities it is decreasing money supply Federal Funds Rate Interest rate that banks charge each other for short-term loans. Banks that cannot meet reserve requirements must borrow or pay a penalty. Cont. Fed tries to indirectly change this rate through open market operations. Delays in Effects of Monetary Supply Full effects can take months, sometimes up to a year Criticisms of Fed Policies Fed has increased money supply during times of inflation (creating worse inflation) Fed has decreased money supply during recessions (thereby making the recession worse) Cont. Some Recommend – Money supply increased at same rate each year (no monetary policy) Gov’t (spending and taxation) also has a dramatic affect on the economy.