Module 24-27
Time Value of Money
\( FV = PV\times(1+i)^n\)
\(PV = \frac{FV}{(1+i)^n}\)
Where:
- FV = Future Value
- PV = Present Value
- i = interest/discount rate
- n = number of periods (based on the time units of the interest rate).
Structure of Fed
Chair - Appointed by the President. Serve 4-year terms.
Board of Governors - 7 members; also appointed by the President. Serve 14-year terms.
- Conduct monetary policy based on economic conditions.
District Banks - 12 members; numbered 1-12 from east to west coast.
- Provides liquidity for regional banks.
- Has Presidents
Commercial Banks - Owners of the Fed (own stock in the Fed).
Federal Open Market Comity
5 Presidents of the 12 district banks + the 7 members of the Board of Governors.
- Meet at the NY Fed; 4 times a year
- Should we raise, lower, or keep interest rates the same?
Test Question:
What did the Fed do during the Great Depression?
- Does not Handel the stock market, therefore "not their fault."
- But did intervene with the FDIC
- Shut down banks to prevent bank runs.
- But did intervene with the FDIC
Insured up to $250,000.
Fed Actions
- Would increase the money supply if there is a recessionary trend.
- Helps increase aggregate demand.
- Helps increase aggregate demand.
Tools of Monetary Policy
- Reserve Requirement
- Percentage of a deposit banks must keep.
- Discount Rate - Second most commonly used
- The interest rate the Fed charges banks to borrow from the Fed.
- Open Market Operations - Most commonly used
- The buying and selling of government securities to and from commercial banks
- All comes down to excess reserves.
- You add excess reserves
- Buying bonds = increase excess reserves
- You add excess reserves
- The buying and selling of government securities to and from commercial banks
Monetary is the preferred method!
- Because they are felt very quickly.
Money Demand and Interest
Holding Money Opp. Cost
- Hold money because they need money on a day-to-day basis.
- Opportunity Cost
- What you give up.
- Interest!
- Short term interest rates
- Interest rates that are 6 months or less.
Money Demand/Money Market Curve:
Real interest rates on the y-axis
Quantity of Demand on the x-axis.
Downward sloping (label MD)
y-pts are notated \(IR_n\)
x-pts are notated \(Q_n\)
Shifters
- Rightwards shift
- Interest rate is the same, but the demand for money has increased.
- Changes in the aggregate price level
- If goes up
- Shift towards right
- Changes in GDP
- Positive
- Shift right
- Changes in technology
- Easier to get money
- Shift left
- ATMs!
- Lefwards shift
- Less demand but same interest rates.
Money Supply Curve
- Determined by the Fed Rserve
- Intersection is called the equilibrium, and is where the interest rate is set.