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Monetary policy
The actions the Federal Reserve takes to manage the money supply and interest rates to pursue macroeconomic policy goals.
Goals of Monetary policy
1) Price stability 2) High employment 3) Stability of financial markets and institutions 4) Economic growth
Monetary tools
Open market operations discount policy reserve requirements
Monetary targets
money supply the interest rate
Shifts in money demand curve
Shift to left: a decrease in real GDP or a decrease in the price level Shift to right: an increase in real GDP or a increase in the price level
The money market model
• Concerned with short-term nominal rate of interest • Most relevant for the Fed: changes in money supply directly affect this interest rate
Federal funds rate
The interest rate banks charge each other for overnight loans
How interest rate affect consumption
Lower interest rates encourage buying on credit, which typically affects the sale of durables. Lower rates also discourage saving.
How interest rates affect investment
Lower interest rates encourage capital investment by firms: • By making it cheaper to borrow (sell corporate bonds). • By making stocks more attractive for households to purchase, allowing firms to raise funds by selling additional stock. Also encourages new residential investment
How interest rates affect net exports
High U.S. interest rates attract foreign funds, raising the $US exchange rate, causing net exports to fall; and vice versa.
Expansionary monetary policy
The Federal Reserve's decreasing interest rates to increase GDP
Contractionary monetary policy
The Federal Reserve's increasing interest rates to reduce inflation.
Keeping interests rate low for too long
The Fed encourages real GDP to go far beyond potential GDP which means • High inflation • The next recession will be more severe
Taylor Rule
A rule developed by John Taylor that links the Fed's target for the federal funds rate to economic variables.
Federal funds target rate formula
Current inflation + ral equilibrium federal funds + (.5 X inflation gap) + (.5 X output gap)
Inflation gap
the difference between current inflation and a target rate
Output gap
the percentage difference between real GDP and potential GDP
Inflation targeting
Conducting monetary policy so as to commit the central bank to achieving a publicly announced level of inflation.
A bubble in the market
A situation in which prices are too high relative to the underlying value of the asset. Bubbles can form due to: • Herding behavior: failing to correctly evaluate the value of the asset, and instead relying on other people’s apparent evaluations; and/or • Speculation: believing that …
Recent fed policies
Creation of secondary market in mortgages Investment banks participation is secondary market for mortgages Feds loan up 200 billion of treasury securities in exchange for mortgage-backed securities Congress passed the Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP), providing funds to banks in ex…

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