Monetary Policy, Money, + the Fed

3 functions of money

  1. Unit of account: provides a means for comparing values of goods and services

    1. You know something is a good price relative to other stores and their prices

  2. Medium of exchange: anything that is used to determine value during the exchange of goods and services

    1. w/o, ppl would barter

  3. Store of value: money keeps its value when it is saved

    1. EXCEPT during inflation, money loses its value as the price for goods and services goes up

Currency: coins and paper bills used as money 


Key features of money

  1. Durability: money must withstand physical wear and tear

    1. If destroyed or worn out, cannot be trusted to serve as a store of value

  2. acceptability/uniformity: all units of money must be uniform (at least 2)

    1. Must be accurately counted and measured

  3. fungibility/divisibility: can be divided into many units of value

    1. Necessary for exchange

  4. Portability: can be transported and easily transferred

  5. Scarcity/limited amount: if it's not limited it is not useful

    1. Fed keeps supply in control

  6. Money is acceptable payment: everyone in the economy must be able to take the objects that serve as money and exchange them for goods and services


Sources of Money’s Value

Commodity money: objects that have inherent value and can be used as money

  • Ie: salt, cattle, stones

  • Usefulness gives them value

  • Not always portable, durable, or divisible

Representative money: makes use of objects that have value solely bcs the holder can exchange them for something of value

  • IOU of 20, promise that your chores for a moth will get done

Flat money: legal tender, has more value bcs a govt has decreed that it is an acceptable means to pay debts

  • Confidence that the money will be accepted, remains in limited supply (valuable)

  • If money supply grows too large, the currency can become worthless (bcs of inflation)


Key events

  • 1st national bank- mcculloch v maryland

    • Feds: centralized banking is key to promoting industry and trade

    • Anti: the wealthy would gain control of bank and use its resources to increase their power--- decentralized banking: states est and regulate all banks w/in their borders

    • Brought stability BUT opponents said that ordinary ppl who needed a loan (to expand or maintain their farms + small businesses) were being denied

      • Argued that this was unconstitutional

    • 2nd bank: 20yr charter, slowly managed to rebuild public's confidence in national banking system

      • Restored stability

  • 19th: free banking

    • # of state-chartered banks tripled

    • Bank runs: widespread panics in which people tried to redeem their paper money at the same time--- public confidence dwindled

    • Wildcat banks: banks located on the frontier-- remote and thus only populated by wildcats

    • Fraud was rampant--- issued bank notes, gold + silver money from those who bought notes and disappeared

    • Different currencies across states, cities, private banks, railroads, cstores, churches, individuals

  • 20th: moving away from the gold standard

    • Cross of gold speech: 1896

    • Move to federal reserve banks

    • Representative money: backed by something of value

    • Flat money: backed by govt

    • Moved off by FDR in the GD

    • Rise of alternative currencies

Federal reserve banks: 12 regional reserve banks

  • Member banks store SOME  their case reserves at the fed reserve bank in their district

  • Supervised by fed reserve board (appointed by POTUS)

  • Each regional bank is allowed member banks to borrow money to meet short-term demands

Glass-steagall act: separated commercial banking from investment banking

  • Est federal deposit insurance corp (insures customer deposits if bank fails)

  • FDR exec order ended gold standard


  • US dept of treasury is responsible for manufacturing money

  • Fed reserve is responsible for putting money into circulation

Money creation: carried out by the fed and by banks all around the country

  • Similar to multiplier effect in fiscal policy (every one dollar change in fiscal policy creates a greater than 1 dollar change in fiscal policy)


Banks: financial intermediaries that extend credit from depositors to borrowers

  • Interest rates: cost changed by banks to borrow money 

    • Smaller interest: paid to depositors (savings/checking)

    • Larger interest: charged to borrowers so banks make money

Required reserve ratio: the fraction of deposits that banks are required to keep in reserve

  • Est by fed

  • Ensures that banks will have enough funds to supply customers’ withdrawal

Fractional banking:

Money multiplier: determines the total amount of new money that can be created and added to money supply

  • Formula: 1/RRR x initial cash deposit

  • Est 2-3

  • Both based on the Fed’s Reserve requirement

  • Sometimes, banks hold excess reserves: bank reserves greater than the amount required by the fed


  • Fed chair: appointed by POTUS + confirmed by senate (after senate banking committee hearings)

    • 4 yr terms and can be reappointed

  • Monetary policy decisions are made through consensus

    • Fed chair has the most power and can override

  • 2x a year the fed chair appears in front on congressional committees that oversee the fed

  • Federal reserve board governors: staggered 14 yr terms w/ no reappointment

    • Members alternate when making monetary policy decisions

    • They're decision DO NOT require the approval of the executive and legislative branch

3 tools of the fed

Open market operations: central bank purchases and sales of securities in the open market as a way to implement monetary policy

  • Most commonly used tool to adjust the money supply

  • Helps the fed promote stable prices via maximum employment + changing supply of reserves in the banking system (influences interest rates + supply of credit)


Expansionary

  • FMOC wants to decrease interest rates

  • Purchases of govt securities

    • Injects reserves into banking system

    • Puts downward pressure on federal funds rate→ other interest rates encourages borrowing

Contractionary

  • FMOC wants to increase interest rates

  • Sell govt securities

    • Banks will have less reserves available to lend

    • Upward pressure on federal funds rate + other interest rates

    • Encourages saving

Discount rate: what the fed charges banks when they borrow from the fed

  • 2nd most commonly used tool 

  • Higher than federal funds rate 

Federal funds rate: the rate used when banks borrow from each other

Prime rate: rate banks charge on short-term loans to their best customers

  • Usually large companies w/good credit ratings

  • Other interest rates follow

  • Making adjustments to the reserve requirement


How monetary policy is made

  1. FOMC meets and uses one (or more) of the 3 monetary policy tools to adjust the nation’s money supply

  2. The supply of money goes up or down as a result

    1. Ex: Buying bonds increases the money supply; selling bonds decreases it)

  3. If money supply goes up, interest rates go down; if money supply goes down interest rates go up

    1. since money is more “scarce” (this reflects simple supply + demand concepts

  4. Lower interest rates spur increased borrowing, spending + investment; higher interest rates does the opposite


Easy money policy: increase money supply-- lower interest rates--- encourage more spending

  • Encourages overborrowing + overinvestment

  • Layoffs + cutbacks

Tight money policy: reduce money supply-- push interest rates up -- reduce money supply

  • Investment spending declines + brings real d=gdp down

  • Fiscal policymakers prefer a contractionary monetary policy when trying to manage inflation

    •  cool down the economy by raising interest rates and reducing the money supply, 

    • which can offset potential inflationary pressures caused by expansionary fiscal policies like increased government spending

  • ,monetary policy: fights inflation and measured by the fed

  • Fiscal policy: fights unemployment and measured by congress and the prez

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