Dolan, Economics Combined Version 4e, Ch. 23
MacroeconomicsIntroduction toEdwin G. Dolan
Best Value Textbooks4th edition
Chapter 23Strategies and Rulesfor Monetary Policy
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The Federal Reserve System
The Federal Reserve System (“the Fed”) serves as the central bank for the United States.
A central bank typically has the following functions: It is the banks’ bank: it accepts deposits from and makes loans
to commercial banks. It acts as banker for the federal government. It controls the money supply.Performs certain regulatory functions for the financial industry.
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Structure of the Federal Reserve System
The primary elements in the Federal Reserve System are:
1. The Board of Governors
2. The Regional Federal Reserve District Banks (FRBs)
3. The Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC)
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The Federal Reserve Banks
12 District banks Nine directors The directors appoint the district president who is
approved by the Board of Governors
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The Federal Reserve System
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The Board of Governors
Seven members Appointed by the President Confirmed by the Senate Serve 14-year term Terms are staggered so that one comes vacant every two
years President appoints a member as Chairman to serve a
four-year term
Ben Bernanke, FED Chairman
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Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC)
Meets approximately every six weeks to review the economy
Made up of the following voting members:7 members of the Board of Governors5 of the FRB presidents (they rotate yearly)= 12 FOMC members
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Functions of the Fed (1)
Banking Services and Supervision It supplies currency to banks through its 12 district banks. It holds the reserves of banks in the district bank of each bank. It processes and routes checks to banks through its district banks and
processing centers. It makes loans to banks—it is the “lender of last resort”, the “banker’s
bank”. It supervises and regulate banks, ensuring that they operate in a sound and
prudent manner. It is the banker for the U.S. government. It sells government securities for
the U.S. Treasury.
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Functions of the Fed (2)
Controlling the Money SupplyThe money supply is varied through the course of the
year to meet seasonal fluctuations in the demand for money. This helps keep interest rates less volatile.Example: 4th quarter holiday season creates an increased
demand for money to buy gifts.
The Fed also changes the money supply to achieve policy goals set by the FOMC.
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Policy Goals of the Fed
Ultimate Goal:Economic growth with stable prices. This means greater output (GDP) and a low, steady rate of inflation.
Intermediate Targets:The Fed does not control output or the prices directly. It does
control the money supply.The Fed establishes target growth rates for the money supply,
which it believes are consistent with its ultimate goals. The money supply growth rate becomes an intermediate target,
an objective used to achieve some ultimate policy goal.
Vocabulary
Contractionary Policy: A government policy intending to slow the economy to prevent inflation.
Monetary Policy Examples: Reduce money supply, increase interest rate, increase foreign exchange rate
Policy Instrument (Tool): Sell Bonds, Increase the Discount Rate, Increase required reserve ratio, sell foreign currency/buy dollars in foreign exchange markets
Vocabulary
Expansionary Policy: A government policy intending to speed or expand the economy to bring an end to recession, increase employment, or prevent deflation.Monetary Policy Examples: Expand money supply,
decrease interest rate, decrease foreign exchange rate
Policy Instrument (Tool): Buy Bonds, Decrease the discount rate, Decrease required reserve ration, buy foreign currency/sell dollars in foreign exchange markets
Dolan, Economics Combined Version 4e, Ch. 23
Lags
Inside lags are delays between the time a problem develops and the time a decision is taken to do something about it
Examples: Delays in data collection Time needed to conduct
meetings, prepare reports, and reach decisions
Outside lags are delays between the time a decision is made and the time actions affect the economy
Examples: Delays in implementing a
decision Delays in movements along and
shifts in aggregate supply and demand curves
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Inside lag: Example(AKA: Recognition Lag)
The U.S. had a mild recession in Jan-Nov 2001
May 2001 vintage data (the data available in the middle of the recession) did not show start of recession, even when it was half over
Fully revised data shows the start of the recession clearly
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Outside Lag: Example(AKA: Impact Lag)
After an increase in interest rates shifts the AD curve, real output first falls, and then returns to the natural level after the AS curve shifts
These estimates show that the process involves a total lag of 1 to 3 years, or longer
Different studies, based on different periods and methods, do not agree on how long the lag is
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Forecasting Errors
To overcome the problem of lags, policymakers must try to act in advance, based on forecasts
However, forecasts are not accurate. On average, forecasts of GDP growth have an error of about1 percent for 1 year forecasts in developed countries2 percent for 2 year forecasts in developed countries3 percent for 2 year forecasts in developing countries
Forecasts are least accurate at turning points in the business cycle, just when they are needed most
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Time-Inconsistency
Time-inconsistency means the tendency to make decisions that have good consequences in the short run, but bad consequences in the long run
Example from everyday life: You stop taking your antibiotic medication because of bad side effects before you are completely cured
Example from macroeconomics: Before an election, policymakers use excessive expansionary policy or avoid needed contractionary policy
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Fine-Tuning in the U.S. Economy
U.S. policymakers attempted to fine-tune the economy in the 1960s and 1970s
Because of lags, forecasting errors, and time-inconsistency, the result was a series of business cycles with increasing inflation and unemployment
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Fine-tuning vs. Policy Rules
Fine-tuning uses frequent discretionary policy to make small adjustments to aggregate demand
Preset policy rules aim to provide a transparent and credible framework for business and household decisions
“The notion that central banks can provide a low-cost, over-the-counter “aspirin” that will alleviate almost any ill that a society can face is no longer credible”
— Robert Poole
President, Federal Reserve
Bank of St. Louis
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Instruments, Targets, and Goals
A policy instrument is a variable that is directly under control of policymakers.
An operating target is a variable that responds immediately, or almost immediately, to the use of a policy instrument.
An intermediate target is a variable that responds to the use of a policy instrument or a change in operating target with a significant lag.
A policy goal is a long-run objective of economic policy that is important for economic welfare.
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Monetarism
Monetarists like Milton Friedman advocated the use of a steady rate of money growth, approximately equal to the long-run rate of growth of real output, as an intermediate target
If velocity was reasonably stable, a money growth rule would avoid excessive inflation or deflation
Equation of Exchange
MV = PQ
Where M is the money stock V is velocity P is the price level Q is the rate of GDP growth
If V is constant and growth of M equals growth of Q, P will be constant
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Inflation targeting
The rate of inflation averaged over one or two years is the main intermediate target
Interest rates are used as the operating target Open market operations are used as the main policy
instrument
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The interest rate operating target The Fed sets the discount rate charged on loans to banks and the
deposit rate paid on reserves to form a corridor The federal funds target rate is set in the middle of the corridor Open market operations are used to adjust the supply of reserves
to keep the federal funds rate close to its target
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Adjusting the Interest Rate Target Inflation targeting policy sets an upper and lower limit for growth
of the price level to form a cone around the intended inflation target
If the actual inflation rate threatens to move outside the cone, the interest rate target is raised to slow growth of aggregate demand
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A Taylor Rule:An example of a potential “rule”
A Taylor Rule uses both the inflation rate and the output gap as intermediate targets
The interest rate operating target is raised if either the inflation rate or output gap increases
The interest rate is lowered if inflation or the output gap decreases
To avoid lags in measuring the output gap, a variation of the Taylor rule uses employment data
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The Foreign Exchange Market
The exchange rate of the peso to the dollar depends on supply and demand
Dollars are supplied by U.S. residents who want to buy Mexican goods or services, or to make investments in Mexico
Dollars are demanded by Mexican residents who want to buy U.S. goods and services, or make investments in the United States
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A Change in Supply
In 2009, an outbreak of swine flu in Mexico reduced tourist travel, shifting the supply curve of dollars to the left
The result was a depreciation of the peso (appreciation of the dollar), that is, an equilibrium exchange rate with more pesos per dollar
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A change in demand
Suppose an increase in U.S. interest rates makes U.S. securities more attractive to Mexican investors
The result is an increased demand for dollars
The peso depreciates (the dollar appreciates)
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An exchange rate operating target
Some central banks use the exchange rate as an operating target
If the demand for dollars increases, the peso would depreciate if nothing was done
To prevent depreciation, the Mexican central bank increases the supply of dollars by selling dollars from its foreign currency reserves
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Reasons for an Exchange Rate Target
Two principal reasons to maintain an exchange rate target
To reduce the risks and costs of international trade in goods and services
To anchor the domestic currency to a stable foreign currency in order to fight inflation
When in works An exchange rate target works
best for small countries with flexible economies, strong trading links to the currency partner, and low exposure to external shocks
Countries that do not want to use an exchange rate in the long run can use an exchange rate target temporarily to stop inflation, but then they should have an exit strategy
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Appendix to Chapter 23
Demand and Supply for Money
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The Demand for Money
The demand for real money balances means the real quantity of money people want to hold, other tings being equal
A decrease in the interest rate decreases the opportunity cost of holding money, and causes a movement along the demand curve (A to B)
An increase in real income causes the money demand curve to shift to the right (A to C)
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A Change in the Interest Rate
The supply of money is controlled by the central bank using open market operations or other instruments
The following could cause an increase in the interest rate: An increase in real GDP,
shifting the demand curve An increase in the price level,
shifting the supply curve by reducing the real quantity of money with nominal money constant
An open market purchase, reducing the nominal supply of money with prices and real GDP constant