MONETARY POLICY: Control over the money supply and interest rates by a central bank or monetary authority to stabilize business cycles, reduce unemployment and inflation, and promote economic growth. In the United States monetary policy is undertaken by the Federal Reserve System (the Fed). In principle, Federal Reserve policy makers can use three different tools--open market operations, the discount rate, and reserve requirements--to manipulate the money supply. In practice, however, the primary tool employed is open market operations. An alternative to monetary policy is fiscal policy.Monetary policy is controlling of the quantity of money in circulation for the expressed purpose of stabilizing the business cycle and reducing the problems of unemployment and inflation. In days gone by, monetary policy was undertaken by printing more or less paper currency. In modern economies, monetary policy is undertaken by controlling the money creation process performed through fractional-reserve banking. The Federal Reserve System (or the Fed) is U.S. monetary authority responsible for monetary policy. In theory, it can control the fractional-banking money creation process and the money supply through open market operations, the discount rate, and reserve requirements. In practice, the Fed primarily uses open market operations, the buying and selling of U.S. Treasury securities, for this control. An important side effect of money supply control is control of interest rates. As the quantity of money changes, banks are willing to make loans at higher or lower interest rates. Monetary policy comes in two basic varieties--expansionary and contractionary:
Three GoalsThe general goal of monetary policy is to keep the economy healthy and prosperous. More specifically, monetary policy seeks to achieve the macroeconomic goals of full employment, stability, and economic growth. That is, monetary policy is used to stabilize the business cycle and in so doing reduce unemployment and inflation, and the while promoting an environment that is conducive to an expanding economy.A word about these three macroeconomic goals and associated problems is in order.
Three ToolsThe Federal Reserve System has three tools that, in principle, can be used to control the money supply and interest rates.
The Tool of Choice: Open Market OperationsWhile all three tools affect the money creation process undertaken by banks and thus, in theory, can be used to change the quantity of money in circulation, open market operations is the tool of choice.Open market markets are very precise and can be easily implemented. The Fed can buy or sell just the right amount of Treasury securities to achieve the amount of bank reserves that will generate the desired quantity of money and interest rate. Any buying or selling can be implemented within hours. The discount rate works only if commercial banks actually borrow reserves from the Fed. Such borrowing is often dependent on factors other than the discount rate, such as the health of the banking system. A low discount rate does not guarantee banks will borrow more and a high discount rate does not guarantee banks will borrow less. Reserve requirements are a fundamental part of the structure of the commercial banking system. They determine the division of bank assets between reserves and loans. Because the reallocation of assets between reserves and loans is not easily achieved, frequent changes in reserves requirements that would be needed to control the money supply will likely be ignored by banks as they opt for the highest likely reserve requirements. ChannelsIn general, monetary policy induces changes in aggregate expenditures, especially investment but also consumption, which then results in changes in aggregate production (gross domestic product), the price level, and employment. However, the actual transmission mechanism runs through a variety of routes, termed the channels of monetary policy.
TargetsWhile the general goal of monetary policy is to promote a stable, healthy, prosperous economy, the effectiveness of monetary policy is evaluated based on one or more specific targets--measurable aspects of the macroeconomy.The common targets are:
Some modern nations, especially smaller countries, target exchanges rates. That is, they implement monetary policy that ensures the exchange rate between their domestic currency and that of another country, usually a larger country like United States, is essentially fixed. This provides a direct link between the two countries, meaning any monetary policy by the larger country also affects the smaller one. The Monetary AuthorityMonetary policy is undertaken by the monetary authority of a country, usually the central bank. In the United States, the Federal Reserve System is the monetary authority charged with controlling the money supply and implementing monetary policy.The Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System is generally in charge of monetary policy, but specific control rests with different parts of the Fed. The Board of Governors has complete control only over the reserve requirements. The Federal Open Market Committee (which includes the Board of Governors plus the Presidents of 5 Federal Reserve District Banks) is responsible for open market operations and thus has the primary control of monetary policy. The discount rate is under the direct authority of the 12 Federal Reserve District Banks, subject to approval by the Board of Governors. Fiscal PolicyMonetary policy is one of two types of stabilization policies that seek to limit business-cycle fluctuations, reduce unemployment and inflation, and promote economic growth. The other is fiscal policy.Fiscal policy makes use of the federal government's powers of spending and taxation to stabilize the business cycle. This policy is under the control of legislative and executive branches of the federal government charged with collecting taxes and spending available revenues. If the economy is mired in a recession, then the appropriate fiscal policy is to increase spending or reduce taxes--termed expansionary fiscal policy. During periods of high inflation, the opposite actions are needed, to decrease spending or raise taxes--that is, contractionary fiscal policy. Although some policy makers and economists prefer fiscal policy over monetary, or monetary policy over fiscal, both tend to be used in modern economies. However, the two policies are not necessarily coordinated. The monetary authority (the Fed) might pursue a contractionary monetary policy, while the fiscal authority (Congress and the President) pursues an expansionary fiscal policy. Discretionary Control, or Not?Most monetary policy undertaken by the Fed is termed discretionary policy. That is, the Fed sees or anticipates a problem with the macroeconomy, then takes explicit corrective actions. That is, the Fed makes a point to buy more Treasury securities or to raise the discount rate to achieve a particular goal.The alternative to discretionary policy is nondiscretionary policy, that is, monetary policy that occurs automatically, usually according to a set of rules, that does not involve any explicit decisions or actions by the Fed. The most noted nondiscretionary monetary policy is money supply rule. Such a rule would fix the growth of the money supply from year to year at a specific rate based on the long run growth of aggregate production. This provides a just enough extra money to purchase any additional production. In theory, this avoids the problems of inflation (too much money for available production) or unemployment (too little money for available production). This might be an effective policy if money is the only factor creating an inflation and unemployment. Critics of a constant money supply growth rule contend that the demand for production can exceed or fall short of available production for reasons other than the money supply. If this occurs, then the monetary authority needs the ability to make compensating adjustments through discretionary monetary policy. Politics: Two ViewsPolitics are never far from economics, especially when policies are involved. Such is the case for monetary policy of the Federal Reserve System. In some cases the Fed leans philosophically toward expansionary monetary policy (easy money) and in other cases toward contractionary monetary policy (tight money). The inclination for tight or easy money often results from political philosophy--conservative and liberal.
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