ECO 301 Lecture Notes - Lecture 12: Federal Funds Rate, Open Market Operation, Excess Reserves

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Interest on reserves (ior) the interest paid by the fed on reserves that a commercial bank keeps at the fed. If a bank has excess reserves, it can (among other options) either keep them at the fed and earn ior or lend them to another bank and earn iff. Discount rate (id) the interest rate the fed charges commercial banks when they borrow funds directly from the fed: banks can also borrow from the other banks at the iff. Banks want (demand) to hold reserves rd that could be split into 2 parts: rd = rr + er: required reserves, excess reserves chosen to be held voluntarily. The cost of holding these reserves is the interest rate that could have been earned minus the interest rate that could have been earned minus the interest rate paid on them by the fed. Hence as the funds rate increases, quantity demanded decreases, meaning that the demand curve generally slopes down.

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