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Mishkin Eakins - Financial Markets and Institutions, 7e (2012)

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Part 4 Central Banking and the Conduct of Monetary Policy

the Fed has been ready to stand behind the banks to provide whatever reserves are

needed to prevent bank panics. Second, the large volume of large-denomination

deposits in the banking system are not guaranteed by the FDIC because they exceed

the $250,000 limit. A loss of confidence in the banking system could still lead to

runs on banks from the large-denomination depositors, and bank panics could still

occur despite the existence of the FDIC. The importance of the Federal Reserve’s

role as lender of last resort is, if anything, more important today because of the high

number of bank failures experienced in the 1980s, early 1990s, and during the finan-

cial crisis of 2007–2009. Not only can the Fed be a lender of last resort to banks,

but it can also play the same role for the financial system as a whole. The existence

of the Fed’s discount window can help prevent and cope with financial panics that

are not triggered by bank failures, as was the case during the 2007–2009 financial cri-

sis (see the following Inside the Fed box).

Although the Fed’s role as the lender of last resort has the benefit of preventing

bank and financial panics, it does have a cost. If a bank expects that the Fed will

provide it with discount loans when it gets into trouble, it will be willing to take on

more risk knowing that the Fed will come to the rescue. The Fed’s lender-of-last-resort

role has thus created a moral hazard problem similar to the one created by deposit

insurance (discussed in Chapter 20): Banks take on more risk, thus exposing the

deposit insurance agency, and hence taxpayers, to greater losses. The moral hazard

problem is most severe for large banks, which may believe that the Fed and the FDIC

view them as “too big to fail”; that is, they will always receive Fed loans when they

are in trouble because their failure would be likely to precipitate a bank panic.

Similarly, Federal Reserve actions to prevent financial panic may encourage

financial institutions other than banks to take on greater risk. They, too, expect the

Fed to ensure that they could get loans if a financial panic seems imminent. When

the Fed considers using the discount weapon to prevent panics, it therefore needs to

consider the trade-off between the moral hazard cost of its role as lender of last resort

and the benefit of preventing financial panics. This trade-off explains why the Fed

must be careful not to perform its role as lender of last resort too frequently.

Reserve Requirements

Changes in reserve requirements affect the demand for reserves: A rise in reserve

requirements means that banks must hold more reserves, and a reduction means that

they are required to hold less. The Depository Institutions Deregulation and Monetary

Control Act of 1980 provided a simpler scheme for setting reserve requirements.

All depository institutions, including commercial banks, savings and loan associations,

mutual savings banks, and credit unions, are subject to the same reserve require-

ments: Required reserves on all checkable deposits—including non-interest-

bearing checking accounts, NOW accounts, super-NOW accounts, and ATS (auto-

matic transfer savings) accounts—are equal to 0% of a bank’s first $10.7 million of

checkable deposits, 3% of a bank’s checkable deposits from $10.7 million to $55.2 mil-

lion, and 10% of checkable deposits over $55.2 million,

6

and the percentage set ini-



tially at 10% can be varied between 8% and 14%, at the Fed’s discretion. In

extraordinary circumstances, the percentage can be raised as high as 18%.

6

The $55.2 million figure is as of the beginning of 2010. Each year, the figure is adjusted upward (or



downward) by 80% of the previous year’s percentage increase (or decrease) in checkable deposits in

the United States. 

www.federalreserve.gov/pubs/supplement/2007/02/200702statsup.pdf

.



Chapter 10 Conduct of Monetary Policy: Tools, Goals, Strategy, and Tactics


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