monetary policy monetary policy: the actions the federal reserve takes to manage the money supply...

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Monetary Policy

Monetary policy: The actions the Federal Reserve takes to manage the money supply and interest rates to pursue its economic objectives.

Price Stability

High Employment The goal of high employment extends beyond the Fed to other branches of the federal government.

Economic Growth Policymakers aim to encourage stable economic growth because stable growth allows households and firms to plan accurately and encourages the long-run investment that is needed to sustain growth.

The Goals of Monetary Policy

Implementation of the monetary policy

1. Set Target Federal Funds rate2. Sell/buy treasury bills through open market

operations3. Watch the Actual (effective) Federal Funds

rate

Federal funds rate The interest rate banks charge each other for overnight loans.

The Demand for Money

The Demand for Money

Shifts in the Money Demand Curve

Shifting Real Demand for Money

Changes in Real Aggregate SpendingIf you plan to buy more stuff, you need more money to facilitate those transactions

Changes in TechnologyATMs and Credit Cards reduce the need to hold cash or even checkable deposits.

Changes in Institutions

The Impact on the Interest Rate When the Fed Increases the Money Supply

How the Fed Manages the Money Supply: A Quick Review Equilibrium in the Money Market

The Impact on the Interest Rate When the Fed Increases the Money Supply

Equilibrium in the Money Market

The Fed Moves Interest Rates

Monetary Policy and Economic Activity

• Consumption

• Investment

• Net exports

How Interest Rates Affect Aggregate DemandChanges in interest rates will not affect government purchases, but they will affect the other three components of aggregate demand in the following ways:

Monetary Policy and Aggregate Demand

Expansionary monetary policy is monetary policy that increases aggregate demand.

Contractionary monetary policy is monetary policy that reduces aggregate demand.

Expansionary Monetary Policy to Fight a Recessionary Gap

Contractionary Monetary Policy to Fight an Inflationary Gap

Expansionary monetary policy The Federal Reserve’s increasing the money supply and decreasing interest rates to increase real GDP.

Contractionary monetary policy The Federal Reserve’s adjusting the money supply to increase interest rates to reduce inflation.

A Summary of How Monetary Policy Works

Expansionary and Contractionary Monetary Policies

Federal Reserve Policy and the Business Cycle

The Short-Run and Long-Run Effects of an Increase in the Money Supply

Monetary Neutrality

In the long run, changes in the money supply affect the aggregate price level but not real GDP or the interest rate.

In fact, there is monetary neutrality: changes in the money supply have no real effect on the economy. So monetary policy is ineffectual in the long run.

The Effects of Monetary Policy on Real GDP and the Price Level: A More Complete Account

An Expansionary Monetary Policy

Solved ProblemThe Effects of Monetary Policy

Some economists have argued that rather than use an interest rate as its monetary policy target, the Fed should use the money supply.

Many of the economists who make this argument belong to a school of thought known as monetarism.

The leader of the monetarist school was Nobel Laureate Milton Friedman.

Friedman and his followers favored replacing monetary policy with a monetary growth rule.

Should the Fed Target the Money Supply?

A Closer Look at the Fed’s Settingof Monetary Policy Targets

Should the Fed Target Inflation?

Inflation targeting: Conducting monetary policy so as to commit the central bank to achieving a publicly announced level of inflation.

Using Monetary Policy to Fight Inflation

A Contractionary Monetary Policy in 2000

•How Does the Fed Measure Inflation?Making

theConnection

1 The PCE is a so-called chain-type price index, as opposed to the market-basket approach used in constructing the CPI. As we saw in Chapter 20, because consumers shift the mix of products they buy each year, the market-basket approach makes the CPI overstate actual inflation. A chain-type price index allows the mix of products to change each year.

2 The PCE includes the prices of more goods and services than the CPI, so it is a broader measure of inflation.

3 Past values of the PCE can be recalculated as better ways of computing price indexes are developed and as new data become available. This allows the Fed to better track historical trends in the inflation rate.

In 2000, the Fed announced that it would rely more on the PCE than on the CPI in tracking inflation. The Fed noted three advantages that the PCE has over the CPI:

Is the Independence of theFederal Reserve a Good Idea?

In democracies, elected representatives usually decide important policy matters. In the United States, however, monetary policy is not decided by elected officials. Instead, it is decided by the unelected FOMC.

Because those deciding monetary policy do not have to run for election, they are not accountable for their actions to the ultimate authorities in a democracy: the voters.

The Case against Fed Independence

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