In: Accounting
In class we noted that interest rate volatility resulted in the creation of financial instruments on the demand side.. What were those instruments and how did they combat the volatility of interest rates?
The Fed can use four tools to achieve its monetary policy goals:
the discount rate, reserve requirements, open market operations,
and interest on reserves. All four affect the amount of funds in
the banking system.
• The discount rate is the interest rate Reserve
Banks charge commercial banks for short-term loans. Federal Reserve
lending at the discount rate complements open market operations in
achieving the target federal funds rate and serves as a backup
source of liquidity for commercial banks. Lowering the discount
rate is expansionary because the discount rate influences other
interest rates. Lower rates encourage lending and spending by
consumers and businesses. Likewise, raising the discount rate is
contractionary because the discount rate influences other interest
rates. Higher rates discourage lending and spending by consumers
and businesses. Discount rate changes are made by Reserve Banks and
the Board of Governors.
• Reserve requirements are the portions of
deposits that banks must hold in cash, either in their vaults or on
deposit at a Reserve Bank. A decrease in reserve requirements is
expansionary because it increases the funds available in the
banking system to lend to consumers and businesses. An increase in
reserve requirements is contractionary because it reduces the funds
available in the banking system to lend to consumers and
businesses. The Board of Governors has sole authority over changes
to reserve requirements. The Fed rarely changes reserve
requirements.
• Open market operations, the buying and selling
of U.S. government securities, has been a reliable tool. As we
learned earlier, this tool is directed by the FOMC and carried out
by the Federal Reserve Bank of New York.
• Interest on Reserves is the newest and most
frequently used tool given to the Fed by Congress after the
Financial Crisis of 2007-2009. Interest on reserves is paid on
excess reserves held at Reserve Banks. Remember that the Fed
requires banks to hold a percentage of their deposits on reserve.
In addition to these reserves banks often hold extra funds on
reserve. The current policy of paying interest on reserves allows
the Fed to use interest as a monetary policy tool to influence bank
lending. For example, if the FOMC wanted to create a greater
incentive for banks to lend their excess reserves, it could lower
the interest rate it pays on excess reserves. Banks are more likely
to lend money rather than hold it in reserve (so they can make more
money) creating expansionary policy. In turn, if the FOMC wanted to
create an incentive for banks to hold more excess reserves and
decrease lending, the FOMC could increase the interest rate paid on
reserves, which is contractionary policy.