- T-account (balance sheet):
-statements of assets and liabilities
- Assets(amounts owned):
-items to which a bank holds legal claim
-uses of funds by financial intermediaries
- Liabilities(amounts owed):
-legal claims against a bank
-sources of funds for financial intermediaries
- Federal Reserve Bank :
-uses paper currency
-holds reserves of the banks
-lends money and charges interests
-check clearing service for the bank
-personal bank for the government
-supervises members of banks
-control money supply in economy
- Reserve Requirement:
-federal requires bank to always have some money readily available to meet consumer's demand for cash
-amount set by the federal is required reserve
-the required reserve ratio is the % of demand deposits (checking account balance) that must not be loaned out
-typically its 10%
- Three types of multiple deposit expansion question:
- Calculate the initial change in excess reserves: aka the amount a single bank can loan from the initial deposit
- Calculate the change in the money supply
- Calculate the change in the money supply: sometime type 2 and type 3 will have the same result (if no Fed involvement)
1) The Reserve Requirement:
-only a small % of your bank deposit is in the safe the rest of your money has been loaned out
-this is called "Fractional Reserve Banking"
- the FED sets the amount that banks must hold
-the reserve requirement (reserve ratio) is the % of deposits that banks must hold in reserve and not loan out
-when the FED increases the money supply it increases the amount of money held in bank deposits
-if there is a recession, what should the FED do to the reserve requirement?
- decrease the RR
- Banks hold less money and have more ER
- Banks create more money by loaning out excess
- Money increase, interest rates fall, AD goes up
-if there is inflation what should the FED do to the reserve requirement, what should the FED do to the reserve requirement?
- decrease the RR
2) The Discount Rate:
- Banks hold more money and have less ER
- Banks create less money
- Money Supply decrease, interest rates rise, AD goes down
-Discount Rate is the interest rate that the FED charges commercial banks
-Ex: If the banks of America needs $10 million, they borrow it from the U.S Treasury (which the FED controls, but they must pay it back with interest)
-To increase the Money Supply, FED should DECREASE the Discount Rate (Easy Money Policy)
-To Decrease the Money Supply, the FED should INCREASE the Discount Rate (Tight Money Policy)3) Open Market Operations:
-FED buys/sell government bonds (securities)
-This is the most important and widely used monetary policy
-To increase the MS, the FED should BUY government securities
-To decrease the MS, the FED should SELL government securities
- Monetary policy:
-Expansionary: buy bonds, decrease discount rate, decrease RR = increase in loan, AD increases, GDP increase, MS increases. interest rate decreases
-Contractionary: sell bonds, increase discount rate, increase RR= loans decrease, AD decrease. GDP decrease, MS decrease, interest rate increases*Federal Fund Rate: where FDIC member bank loans each other overnight funds
* Prime Rate: interest rate that banks give to their most credit- worthy customers
I like how you listed out what happens in expansionary and contractionary policy, but it might be easier to remember if it was in a chart. Your notes really helped me though! Keep up the good work!
ReplyDeleteIn your notes you stated that during a period of inflation the Fed should decrease the Reserve Requirement. However, this is incorrect. If there is inflation, the Fed should increase the Reserve Requirement, so that banks can create less money.
ReplyDeleteI would like to add that the crowding out effect occurs when increased interest rates lead to a reduction in private investment spending such that it dampens the initial increase of total investment spending.
ReplyDelete