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Chapter 14 Presentation 1- Monetary Policy Ways the Fed Controls the Money Supply • 1. Open Market Operations (**Most used) • 2. Changing the Reserve Ratio • 3. Changing the Discount Rate Open Market Operations • Buying or selling government securities (bonds, treasury bills) by the Fed from the general public or commercial banks Buying Securities • When the Fed buys bonds from the commercial banks or the public, this increases the reserves of the bank • This allows the banks to make more loans Selling Securities • When the Fed sells securities, the amount of reserves in the banking system goes down • There is now less money to loan out Changing the Reserve Ratio • Raise the reserve ratio- lowers the money supply by making banks hold more $$ • Lower the reserve ratio- changes the amount of excess reserves and the multiplier---allows banks to loan more money Changing the Discount Rate • If the Fed lowers this rate, banks are able to borrow more and increase their loans to the public and vice versa Asset Demand for Money • The amount of money people hold as a store of value • People like to hold money since it is the most liquid asset Transaction Demand for Money • The amount of money people want to hold to use as a medium of exchange to make purchases • People hold cash to buys goods/services • Varies directly with nominal GDP Interest Rate • The payment made for the use of money Money Market Graph Sm Rate of Interest, I percent 10 7.5 5 2.5 Dm 0 50 100 150 200 250 300 Amount of Money Demanded and Supplied (Billions of Dollars) Bond Prices and Interest Rates • When interest rate fall, existing bond prices rise • When interest rates rise, existing bond prices fall • Inverse relationship Bond Prices • % interest yield = Amount of interest paid/bond cost Bond Prices Example • A $1000 bond pays 5% fixed interest rate and is selling for face value (which pays $50). Now the interest rates go up to 7.5%. The new bonds pay $75 interest. In order to sell the old bond, the sale price must fall to $667 • 50/X = .075 • X = 667 • The original bond still pays $50 interest