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Ch. 13: The Federal Reserve System Del Mar College John Daly ©2003 South-Western Publishing, A Division of Thomson Learning
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Ch. 13: The Federal Reserve System Del Mar College John Daly ©2003 South-Western Publishing, A Division of Thomson Learning.

Dec 24, 2015

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Page 1: Ch. 13: The Federal Reserve System Del Mar College John Daly ©2003 South-Western Publishing, A Division of Thomson Learning.

Ch. 13: The Federal Reserve System

Del Mar College

John Daly©2003 South-Western Publishing, A Division of Thomson Learning

Page 2: Ch. 13: The Federal Reserve System Del Mar College John Daly ©2003 South-Western Publishing, A Division of Thomson Learning.

The Federal Reserve System• There are 12 Federal Reserve Districts; each

District has a Federal Reserve Bank with its own president.

Page 3: Ch. 13: The Federal Reserve System Del Mar College John Daly ©2003 South-Western Publishing, A Division of Thomson Learning.

The Fed’s Structure

• There is a seven-member board of governors that coordinates and controls the activities of the Federal Reserve System.

• Each governor serves a fourteen year term.• A governor is appointed every other year, so no

one president can “stack” the Fed.• The major policy making group within the Fed is

the Federal Open Market Committee.• Open Market Operations is the buying and selling

of government securities by the Fed.

Page 4: Ch. 13: The Federal Reserve System Del Mar College John Daly ©2003 South-Western Publishing, A Division of Thomson Learning.

Functions of the Federal Reserve System

• Control the Money Supply.

• Supply the economy with paper money.

• Provide check-clearing services.

• Hold depository institutions’ reserves.

Page 5: Ch. 13: The Federal Reserve System Del Mar College John Daly ©2003 South-Western Publishing, A Division of Thomson Learning.

Functions of The Federal Reserve System

• Supervise Member Banks

• Serve as the government’s banker

• Serve as the lender of last resort

• Serve as a fiscal agent for the Treasury.

Page 6: Ch. 13: The Federal Reserve System Del Mar College John Daly ©2003 South-Western Publishing, A Division of Thomson Learning.

The Check-Clearing Process

Page 7: Ch. 13: The Federal Reserve System Del Mar College John Daly ©2003 South-Western Publishing, A Division of Thomson Learning.

Q & A

• The president of which Federal Reserve District Bank holds a permanent seat on the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC)?

• What is the most important responsibility of the Fed?

• What does it mean to say the Fed acts as “lender of last resort”?

Page 8: Ch. 13: The Federal Reserve System Del Mar College John Daly ©2003 South-Western Publishing, A Division of Thomson Learning.

Fed Tools For Controlling the Money Supply: Open Market

Operations• The main “thing” the Fed

buys and sells is U.S. government securities, which are bonds the government originally sold to investors when it needed to borrow funds.

• The Fed buys and sells such securities in the financial market, it is said to be engaged in open market operations.

Page 9: Ch. 13: The Federal Reserve System Del Mar College John Daly ©2003 South-Western Publishing, A Division of Thomson Learning.

Open Market Purchases

• Consider an open market purchase of government securities by the Fed.

• The Fed receives the securities from a bank, and the bank’s reserves increase by the amount the purchase (remember Reserves = Bank deposits at the Fed + Vault Cash).

• When the banks have a reserve increase and no other bank has a similar decline, the money supply expands through a process of increased loans and checkable deposits.

Page 10: Ch. 13: The Federal Reserve System Del Mar College John Daly ©2003 South-Western Publishing, A Division of Thomson Learning.

Open Market Sales

• Open market sales refer to Fed sales of government securities to banks and others.

• In one of these sales, a bank buys securities from the Fed and the money is taken from the reserves of the bank.

• This decreases the money supply by having the bank reduce total loans outstanding, which reduces the total volume of checkable deposits and money in the economy.

Page 11: Ch. 13: The Federal Reserve System Del Mar College John Daly ©2003 South-Western Publishing, A Division of Thomson Learning.

Open Market Operations

Page 12: Ch. 13: The Federal Reserve System Del Mar College John Daly ©2003 South-Western Publishing, A Division of Thomson Learning.

The Required-Reserve Ratio

• The Fed can also influence the money supply by changing the required-reserve ratio.

• An increase in the required-reserve ratio leads to a decrease in the money supply, and a decrease in the required-reserve ratio leads to an increase in the money supply.

Page 13: Ch. 13: The Federal Reserve System Del Mar College John Daly ©2003 South-Western Publishing, A Division of Thomson Learning.

The Discount Rate• There are two major places a bank can go to

acquire a loan: the federal funds market or the Fed.

• The bank will pay an interest rate for this loan, and the rate it pays for the loan in the federal funds market is the federal funds rate.

• The rate it pays for the loan from the Fed is called the discount rate.

• When a bank borrows money from the Fed’s discount window, its reserves increase while the reserves of no other bank decrease; meaning, the money supply increases.

Page 14: Ch. 13: The Federal Reserve System Del Mar College John Daly ©2003 South-Western Publishing, A Division of Thomson Learning.

The Spread Between the Discount Rate and the Federal

Funds RateThe bank may borrow from the higher Federal Funds Rate. Here are some reasons why:

1. The bank may know that the Fed is hesitant to extend loans to banks that want to take advantage of profit-making opportunities.

2. The bank doesn’t want to deal with the Fed bureaucracy that regulates it, particularly if Fed officials interpret a request for a loan as mismanagement.

3. The bank realizes that acquiring a loan from the Fed is a privilege and not a right, and doesn’t want to abuse the privilege.

Page 15: Ch. 13: The Federal Reserve System Del Mar College John Daly ©2003 South-Western Publishing, A Division of Thomson Learning.

Discount Rate Vs. Federal Funds Rate

• If the discount rate is significantly lower than the federal funds rate, most banks will borrow from the Fed.

• An increase in the discount rate relative to the federal funds rate reduces bank borrowings from the Fed.

Page 16: Ch. 13: The Federal Reserve System Del Mar College John Daly ©2003 South-Western Publishing, A Division of Thomson Learning.

Which Tool Does the Fed Prefer to Use?

• The Fed can use open market operations, the required-reserve ratio, or the discount rate to influence the money supply.

• The Fed prefers to us Open Market Operations.• Open market operations are flexible• Open market operations can be reversed• Open market operations can be implemented

quickly

Page 17: Ch. 13: The Federal Reserve System Del Mar College John Daly ©2003 South-Western Publishing, A Division of Thomson Learning.

Fed Monetary Tools & their Effects on the Money Supply

Page 18: Ch. 13: The Federal Reserve System Del Mar College John Daly ©2003 South-Western Publishing, A Division of Thomson Learning.

Q & A

• What is the difference between the federal funds rate and the discount rate?

• If bank A borrows $10 million from bank B, what happens to the reserves in bank A? In the banking system?

• If bank A borrows $10 million from the Fed, what happens to the reserves in bank A? In the banking system?