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Learn all about the Federal Reserve System's establishment, functions, banking regulations, money creation process, & impact on the economy for effective financial comprehension.
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The Federal Reserve System The Federal Reserve was established in 1913 to regulate the banking system • There is a Board of Governors (the head) of 7 members, appointed by the president for 14 year, staggered terms • The Chairman has a 4 year term and can be reappointed multiple times • The Federal Open Market Committee (the brain) includes the 7 governors, and 5 of the regional Federal Reserve Bank presidents (New York region always included) and they set monetary policy if they need to • Federal Advisory Council includes 12 important commercial bankers from each FED district who advise the Board
Federal Reserve System • There are 12 district Federal Reserve Banks (the body) and 25 regional banks • Work with the central bank or FED • Each region is quasi-public: owned by member banks, but controlled by Federal Reserve Board and profits go to Treasury • They accept reserve deposits and make loans to banks and other financial institutions • 3 Functions • Monetary policy: actions that influence money supple to control inflation or recession • Supervisory role: regulate commercial banks • Financial services: “bankers’ bank”—hold bank deposits in vaults and lend money to banks
Functions of the FED • It issues paper currency • Sets reserve requirements and holds reserves of banks • It lends money to banks and charges them interest • They are a check clearing service for banks • It acts as personal bank for the government • Supervises member banks • Controls the money supply in the economy
How Banks Create Money • How do banks create money? • By lending out deposits that are used multiple times • Where do the loans come from? • From depositors who take cash and place it in their banks • How are the amounts of potential loans calculated? • Using their bank balance sheet, or T-accounts that consist of assets and liabilities for banks
Bank Liabilities • Right side of the T-Account Sheet • #1=Demand Deposits (DD) or checkable deposits • Cash deposits from the public • They are liabilities because they belong to depositors • #2=Owners Equity (stock shares) • There are values of stocks held by the public ownership of bank shares • Key concept for AP concerning Liabilities: • If demand deposit come from someone’s cash holdings, then the DD is already part of money supply • If the demand deposit comes in from the purchase of bonds (by the FED) then this creates new cash and therefore creates new Money Supply (M-1)
Bank Assets • Left side of the T-Account Sheet • #1=Required Reserves (RR) • These are the percentages of demand deposits that must be held in the vault so that some depositors have access to their money. This amount can vary, but AP usually uses 5%, 10%, or 20% for easy calculations • #2=Excess Reserves (ER) • These are the source of new loans. These amount are applied to the Monetary Multiplier/Reserve Multiplier (DD=RR plus ER) • #3=Bank Property Holdings (buildings and fixtures) • #4=Securities (Federal Bonds) • These are bonds purchased by the bank, or new bonds sold to the bank by the Federal Reserve. These bonds can be purchased from the bank, turned into cash that immediately becomes available as “excess reserves” • #5=Customer Loans • This can be amounts held by banks from previous transactions, owed to the bank by prior customers
Creating Money (using excess reserves) • Banks want to create profit. They generate profit by lending the excess reserves and collecting interest. Since each loan will go out into customer’s and business’ accounts, more loans are created in decreasing amounts (because of reserve requirement). A rough estimate of the number of loan amounts created by any first loan is the “money multiplier”. • The Money Multiplier, a.k.a.: Checkable Deposits Multiplier, Reserve Multiplier, Loan Multiplier • The formula: 1 divided by the reserve requirement (ratio) • RR=10%=1/.1=Monetary Multiplier of 10 • Excess Reserves are multiplied by the Multiplier to create new loans for the entire banking system and this creates new Money Supply
Summary • Bank Balance Sheet • Assets and Liabilities in a T Account • Liabilities • DD and Owner’s Equity (Stock Shares) • Assets • RR, ER, Bank Property, Securities, Loans • Assets must equal Liabilities • DD=RR+ER • Money is Created through Monetary Multiplier • ER x 1/RR (Multiplier)=New Loans throughout the banking system • The Money Supply is affected • Cash from citizens becomes a DD, but does NOT change the Money Supply; the ER from this cash becomes an “immediate” loan amount • ER x Multiplier becomes New Loans and DOES change the Money Supply • The Fed Buying bonds creates new loans and changes the Money Supply • If the Fed buys bonds on the open market, this also becomes a new DD amount; if the Fed buys bonds from accounts already held by a particular bank, then the amount only becomes new Excess Reserves • Finally, bond “prices” move opposite to the changes in interest rates • Higher interest rates will push bond prices downward (less money supply) • Lower interest rates will push bond prices upward more money supply)
The Three Types of Multiple Deposit Expansion Question • Oops!!!! Type 4: Calculate the change in demand deposits
The Three Types of Multiple Deposit Expansion Question • Type 1: Calculate the initial change in excess reserves • a.k.a. the amount a single bank can loan from the initial deposit • Type 2: Calculate the change in loans in the banking system • Type 3: Calculate the change in the money supply • Sometimes type 2 and type 3 will have the same result (i.e. no Fed involvement)
Example 1 • Given a required reserve ratio of 20%, assume the Federal Reserve purchases $100 million worth of US Treasury Securities on the open market from a primary security dealer. Determine the amount that a single bank can lend from this Federal Reserve purchase of bonds. The amount of new demand deposits – required reserve = The initial change in excess reserves $100 million – (20% * $100 million) $100 million – $20 million = $80 million in ER
Example 2 • Given a required reserve ratio of 20%, assume the Federal Reserve purchases $100 million worth of US Treasury Securities on the open market from a primary security dealer. Determine the maximum change in loans in the banking system from this Federal Reserve purchase of bonds. The initial change in excess reserves * The money multiplier = max change in loans $80 million * (1/20%) $80 million * (5) = $400 million max in new loans
Example 3 • Given a required reserve ratio of 20%, assume the Federal Reserve purchases $100 million worth of US Treasury Securities on the open market from a primary security dealer. Determine the maximum change in the money supply from this Federal Reserve purchase of bonds. The maximum change in loans + $ amount of Federal Reserve action $400 million + $100 million = $500 million max change in the money supply
Example 4 • Given a required reserve ratio of 20%, assume the Federal Reserve purchases $100 million worth of US Treasury Securities on the open market from a primary security dealer. Determine the maximum change in demand deposits from this Federal Reserve purchase of bonds. The maximum change in loans + $ amount of initial deposit $400 million + $100 million = $500 million max change in demand deposits
Review • Required Reserve = Amount of deposit X required reserve ratio • Excess Reserves = Total Reserves – Required Reserves • Maximum amount a single bank can loan = the change in excess reserves caused by a deposit • The money multiplier = 1/required reserve ratio • Total Change in Loans = amount single bank can lend X money multiplier • Total Change in the money supply = Total Change in Loans + $ amount of Fed action • Total Change in demand deposits = Total Change in Loans + any cash deposited