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12.1: How Monetary Policy Has Changed

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    287993
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    In recent years, the way the Federal Reserve (the central bank of the United States) conducts monetary policy has changed significantly. Before 2010, most economics textbooks taught that the Federal Reserve influenced the economy by managing the amount of money in the banking system. In this older view, banks needed to hold a portion of deposits in reserve and could lend out the rest. This process, known as fractional reserve banking, was summarized by the concept of the "money multiplier," a formula used to estimate how much money the banking system could create from an initial deposit. 

    Today, that explanation no longer tells the full story. Since the financial crisis of 2008, the Federal Reserve has adopted a new way of operating called the ample reserves regime. Under this system, the Federal Reserve keeps a large quantity of reserves in the banking system at all times. Instead of focusing on the quantity of money, the Fed now influences the economy primarily through an interest rate it sets called Interest on Reserve Balances (IORB). This interest rate plays a key role in determining how much banks charge for loans and pay on deposits, which in turn affects overall borrowing, spending, and investment in the economy. 

    While we will examine the specifics of this new monetary policy system - including terms like IORB and the ample reserves regime - in Module 14, it is important to understand in this chapter that private banks continue to play a crucial role in money creation. In fact, about 90% of the money in circulation is created not by the federal government, but by private banks when they issue loans and create deposits. Even though the traditional money multiplier no longer guides Federal Reserve policy, understanding how banks create money remains essential to grasping the broader economy. 

    In this chapter, you will learn what money is, how it functions within the economy, and how private banks contribute to money creation. This foundational knowledge will prepare you to understand the more modern tools of monetary policy introduced later in the course. 


    This page titled 12.1: How Monetary Policy Has Changed is shared under a CC BY-NC-SA 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Martin Medeiros.

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