zero interest rate policy in us

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WELCOME TO OUR PRESENTATION GROUP 10

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Page 1: zero interest rate policy in US

WELCOME TO OUR PRESENTATION

GROUP 10

Page 2: zero interest rate policy in US

TOPIC: INTEREST RATE POLICY IN US

Page 3: zero interest rate policy in US

CONTENT

I

II

III

The federal funds rate

The discount rate

The zero interest rate policy

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I. The federal funds rate (FFR)

1. Definition

2. The features of FFR

3. How FFR works

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I. The federal funds rate•The interest rate at which banks and other

depository institutions lend money to each other,

usually on an overnight basis. The law requires

banks to keep a certain percentage of their

customer's money on reserve, where the banks

earn no interest on it. Consequently, banks try to

stay as close to the reserve limit as possible

without going under it, lending money back and

forth to maintain the proper level.1.

Defintion

Page 6: zero interest rate policy in US

I. The federal funds rate

2. The features of FFR

FFR is determined by market. FFR is an important benchmark in financial

markets. The higher the FFR,the more expensive it

is to borrow money.

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I. The federal funds rate3. How FFR works

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II. The discount rate

1. Definition

2. The features of discount rate

4. How discount rate affects 3. How discount

rate works

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II. The discount rate

1. DefinitionThe discount rate is the interest rate charged to

commercial banks and other depository institutions on loans they receive from their regional Federal Reserve Bank's lending facility--the discount window.

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2. The features of discount rate

The primary credit rate is the basic interest rate charged to most banks. It's higher than the Fed funds rate.

The secondary credit rate is a higher rate that's charged to banks that don't meet the requirements needed to achieve the primary rate.

The seasonal rate is for small community banks that need a temporary boost in funds to meet local borrowing needs

Primary

credit

Secondary

credit

Seasonal cr

edit

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2. The features of discount rate

3. How discount rate works

When Central Bank wants to control the high inflation rate in the economy.

When Central Bank wants to increase growth rate in the economy.

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II. The discount rate4. How discount rate affects

It affects credit card and adjustable-rate mortgage rates.

It affects all other interest rates. 

It affects savings account and money market interest rates.

Fixed rate mortgages and loans are only indirectly influenced by the discount rate.

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III. Zero interest rate policy (zirp)

1. Definition

2. Reality of ZIRP

3. Regular interest rate adjustments

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III. Zero interest rate policy

• Zero Interest Rate Policy is the lowest percentage of owed principal that a central bank can set. In monetary policy, the use of a zero percent nominal interest rate means that the bank can no longer reduce the interest rate to encourage economic growth. As the interest rate approaches zero, the effectiveness of monetary policy is reduced as a macroeconomic tool.

1. Defintio

n

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III. Zero interest rate policy2. Reality of ZIRPThe Federal Reserve sets short-term interest rates. Since

2009, the Federal Reserve has followed a zero interest rate policy (ZIRP) by keeping rates at almost exactly zero

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III. Zero interest rate policy2. Reality of ZIRPThe chart shows the unemployment and inflation rate of US

from 2007 to 2014

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III. Zero interest rate policy

the U.S. reached its lowest economic point following the financial crisis with inflation of -2.1 percent, unemployment at 10.2 percent and GDP growth plummet to -2.8 percent. Interest rates dropped to near zero during this period

Quantitative easing, inflation, unemployment and GDP growth reached 1.8 percent, 6.6 percent and 3.2 percent, respectively.

The federal funds rate would not fall within its current 0.00%-0.25% target range. unemployment running at 5.5%, the US labor market booming and an economy that is growing at around 3%

2009

2014

2015

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III. Zero interest rate policy3. Regular interest rate adjustments

Short-term rates are raised to keep the economy from building too fast and risking inflation when the economy is growing.

Lower short-term rates when the economy is contracting or slowing.

cut short-term rates which is cutting the rate that banks charge each other to borrow money.

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