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  • Jacob: Welcome to Crash Course: Economics, I'm Jacob Clifford.

  • Adriene: I'm Adriene Hill and today were talking about monetary policy.

  • Jacob: So each year, TIME magazine comes out with a list of the worlds 100 most influential people.

  • Adriene: It includes heads of state, religious leaders, entrepreneurs, artists and activists,

  • singers and actors of the most famous and infamous.

  • There's one person on that list -- someone who is arguably the most influential person on earth -- that

  • most people don't know. Their decisions, good or bad, likely impact billions of people: Janet Yellen.

  • Jacob: She steers the largest economy in the world. Janet Yellen is a big deal. And she's

  • a big deal because of monetary policy.

  • [Theme Music]

  • Adriene: The Federal Reserve is the central bank of the United States, and it's commonly

  • called "The Fed." Europe has the European Central Bank or ECB, and other countries have

  • institutions that play similar roles.

  • Most central banks have two important jobs. First, they regulate and oversee the nation's

  • commercial banks by making sure that banks have enough money in their reserve to avoid bank runs.

  • Their second job, and the job we're gonna focus on today, is to conduct monetary policy

  • which is increasing or decreasing the money supply to speed up or slow down the overall

  • economy. Monetary policy is what makes The Fed and The Fed Chair so influential.

  • Jacob: Let's start with interest rates. An interest rate is the price of borrowing money.

  • When banks lend money, they expect to be repaid the amount they lent, which is called the

  • principle, and a percentage of the principle to cover inflation and to make some profit.

  • That percentage is called the interest rate.

  • The number of car loans, student loans, home loans, and business loans that get made depends on interest rates.

  • When interest rates are low, borrowers will find it easier to pay back loans so they will

  • borrow more and spend more. When interest rates are high, borrowers borrow less and therefore spend less.

  • In the U.S., The Fed doesn't have the power to tell banks what interest rate to charge

  • customers. So instead, The Fed manipulates interest rates by changing the money supply.

  • If The Fed increases the money supply, there'll be plenty of money for banks to loan out.

  • Borrowers will shop around for the best deal on a loan, and banks will be forced to lower

  • interest rates because they're gonna have to compete or else no one's gonna borrow from them.

  • A decrease in money supply has the opposite effect. Less money supply means the banks

  • have less money to loan out, so they're gonna try and get the highest interest rate possible.

  • So less money -- higher interest rates.

  • If the central bank wants to speed up the economy, they can increase the money supply,

  • which will decrease interest rates, and lead to more borrowing and spending.

  • That's called Expansionary Monetary Policy.

  • If the central bank wants to slow down the economy, they decrease the money supply -- less money

  • available will increase interest rates and decrease spending. That's called Contractionary Monetary Policy.

  • Adriene: Here's some real life examples.

  • After the Dot Com bust and then 9-11, the U.S. economy was in a slump or a recessionary

  • gap. Output was low, and unemployment was high.

  • To speed up the economy, The Fed boosted the money supply, which lowered interest rates.

  • This made borrowing easier, which increased spending, and as a result, the economy began

  • growing again, albeit slowly.

  • Here's another example. In the late 1970s, prices were rising up to 13% per year. Inflation

  • is usually more like two to four percent. The Fed Chairman, Paul Volker, decreased the

  • money supply, causing interest rates to shoot up.

  • People bought fewer homes and cars, and businesses invested less. Contractionary Monetary Policy

  • drove down inflation, but with the downside of increasing unemployment.

  • There are just no easy answers here... sorry.

  • During The Great Depression though, The Fed blew it! 73 years later, Fed Chairman, Ben

  • Bernanke admitted, "We did it. We're very sorry. We won't do it again."

  • So what did The Fed do wrong?

  • Well there are two things that keep the banking system healthy - confidence and liquidity.

  • When customers deposit money in a bank, they need to feel confident they're gonna get their money back.

  • In the early years of The Great Depression, The Fed allowed several large bank to fail,

  • which caused widespread panic and bank runs in other banks. The result was a third of all banks collapsed.

  • The banks failed because they didn't have Liquid Assets, which is a fancypants way of

  • saying the banks had stock, bonds, mortgages, but not cash money. So when depositors rushed

  • to take money out, the banks couldn't pay.

  • The Fed gets blamed for prolonging The Depression because it didn't give banks emergency loans,

  • which would've increased the liquidity in banks and the money supply in general.

  • But how does a central bank change the money supply? In the U.S., there are three main

  • ways. Let's go to the Thought Bubble...

  • Jacob: When you deposit money in a bank, the bank holds a portion of deposits and loans

  • the rest out. This is called Fractional Reserve Banking. The fraction deposits the banks

  • are required to hold in reserves is conveniently called the Reserve Requirement. The first way

  • The Fed can change the money supply is by changing that requirement. Decreasing the Reserve Requirement

  • will increase the money supply, and increasing the Reserve Requirement decreases the money supply.

  • The Fed is the banker's bank, so if a commercial bank needs money, they can borrow from The Fed.

  • The second thing The Fed can do to change the money supply is to change the interest

  • rate that it charges banks. That interest rate is called the Discount Rate. Decreasing

  • the Discount Rate will make it easier for banks to borrow, and that'll increase the

  • money supply. Increasing that rate will decrease the money supply.

  • The third way to change the money supply is difficult because it requires Janet Yellen

  • to get approval from the Illuminati, the secret cabal that runs the world.

  • Nah, I'm just kidding.

  • The third method is called Open Market Operations. This is when The Federal Reserve buys or sells

  • short term government bonds.

  • Now a government bond, or something called a treasury bill, is an IOU issued by the government

  • that says, "I'll pay you back later." Banks hold those bonds because they earn interest

  • and are generally less risky than stocks.

  • If The Fed buys these previously issued government bonds from a bank, it increases that bank's

  • liquidity and increases the money supply. If The Fed issues more bonds, the banks will

  • have less liquidity and less money to loan out, and that'll decrease the money supply.

  • In the U.S., deciding how many bonds to buy and sell is done by the Federal Open Market Committee.

  • Adriene: Thanks Thought Bubble!

  • With these options at its disposal, The Fed can increase or decrease the money supply

  • pretty darn quick. The option they use most often is Open Market Operations.

  • During the 2008 financial crisis, when the economy was in severe recession, The Fed went

  • straight to work, buying massive of bonds. Boosting the money supply and dropping interest

  • rates to practically zero.

  • But it wasn't enough - the economy was still in bad shape, so The Fed did something very

  • uncommon in the history of central banks.

  • It increased its monetary stimulus through something called Quantitative Easing. We call

  • it Q.E. at work because Q.E. rolls off the tongue more easily than Quantitative Easing.

  • Plus, who knows how to spell quantitative?

  • Basically it's when central banks buy up longer term assets from banks. So not only was The

  • Fed buying regular treasury bills, it was also buying things like home loans aka Mortgage Backed Securities.

  • They did all this with made-up money. This Q.E. has raised worries about massive inflation.

  • When you add a lot of made-up money to the economy, prices can rise.

  • Milton Friedman observed, "Inflation is always and everywhere a monetary phenomenon."

  • So if The Fed has been increasing the money supply steadily since 2008, why has the actual

  • inflation rate stayed so low?

  • Of course, as always, the answer is complicated.

  • Many economists say it's because banks haven't loaned out the money. Remember, banks have

  • to hold about 10% of their deposits in reserve. The other 90% is called Excess Reserves - pretty

  • straightforward - which is basically the amount that banks are free to loan out.

  • Under normal conditions, banks would prefer not to hold a lot of excess reserves because

  • holding money doesn't make money. But since 2008, excess reserves skyrocketed. This means

  • that banks held the money, and it never really got into the system.

  • Why? Some say it's the stricter lending regulations. But also, borrowing a bunch of money for a

  • house seemed a lot scarier.

  • Others suggest that low inflation in the U.S. is the result of uncertainty in Europe, and

  • that's caused foreigners to hold dollars. Some argue that it's because the economy is still sputtering.

  • One thing's for sure, as the economy continues to pick up speed, we'll see The Fed clamping

  • down on the money supply to increase interest rates.

  • After all, it's The Fed's job to take away the punch bowl just as the party's getting started.

  • Jacob: So now we've talked about the two main ways economists speed up or slow down the

  • economy. Fiscal policy, which is changing government spending or taxes, and now monetary

  • policy, which is changing the money supply.

  • In an ideal world, the economy would always be perfect, and we wouldn't need these tools.

  • But the world isn't perfect, so sometimes, intervention is necessary. So which one is better?

  • Well, like any clear, unambiguous question in economics, the answer is... it depends.

  • It depends on the severity of the slump. Many economists argue that for your garden variety

  • fluctuations, monetary policy is more effective. It's usually enacted quickly by experts whose

  • only job is to focus on the state of the economy.

  • But in a very severe downturn, fiscal policy might become much more effective. In 2008,

  • the United States did both.

  • It also depends on whether your country's central bank is tangled up in politics. The

  • U.S. and many other developed nations have worked hard to isolate their central banks

  • from politicians who might be shortsighted.

  • The result is that monetary policy generally works and doesn't have a lot of side effects.

  • Adriene: So the next time you see Janet Yellen in a magazine, listed as one of the most influential

  • people, you can shout, "Hey! I know who that is, and I know what she does!"

  • The people in your dentist office might freak out, but maybe not.

  • Jacob: Maybe they watch Crash Course Economics.

  • Adriene: Thanks for watching - we'll see you next week.

  • Jacob: Thanks for watching Crash Course Economics. It was made with the help of all of these nice people.

  • Now, if you want to support Crash Course as open market operations, head on over to Patreon.

  • It's a voluntary subscription platform that allows you to pay whatever you want monthly

  • to help Crash Course be free for everyone... forever.

  • Thanks for watching! DFTBA

Jacob: Welcome to Crash Course: Economics, I'm Jacob Clifford.

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イエレンは何をしているのか?金融政策と連邦準備制度クラッシュコース経済学 #10 (What's all the Yellen About? Monetary Policy and the Federal Reserve: Crash Course Economics #10)

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    yu に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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