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Question about open market operations

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First, after evaluating the state of the economy, the Fed determines whether the money supply needs to increase or decrease and by how much.

Second, if the Fed wants to increase the money supply it buys U.S. Treasury securities through open market operations and if it wants to decrease the money supply it sells securities.

Third, the act of buying or selling Treasury securities causes a change in bank reserves. If the Fed buys, then bank reserves increase. If the Fed sells, then bank reserves decrease.

Fourth, the change in reserves induces banks to change its lending activity. With more reserves, banks are willing to make more loans. With fewer reserves, banks are willing to make fewer loans.

Fifth, the change in bank lending affects the creation of checkable deposits, which are an important component of the money supply. More loans mean more deposits and an increase in the money supply. Fewer loans mean fewer deposits and a decrease in the money supply.

Sixth, the change in bank lending also affects interest rates. If banks are willing to lend more, then interest rates fall. If banks are willing to lend less, then interest rates rise.

Can someone explain this? I mean, couldn't banks just always keep their interest rates at a certain level? Why does it have to change with how much money they have?
 
Aren't interest rates all about enticement coupled with the supply/demand of money? Why wouldn't they change?
 
I hope you don't mind if I ask a few quickies meeself.

The fed or gubment does not really "decrease" the supply of money, but takes a chunk of it out of the private sector, and just does not let it get spent right?

How can someone or something decrease the money supply, by selling a security? I can see you decrease the supply, by taxing. But unless that security is bought at a way overvalued price, and the buyer loses money, hence they cant it back, and the private sector has lost some currency.

I think they increase their rates, and lower their rates either to attract borrowers or to discourage borrowers.
 
http://www.amosweb.com/cgi-bin/awb_nav.pl?s=wpd&c=dsp&k=open+market+operations


Can someone explain this? I mean, couldn't banks just always keep their interest rates at a certain level? Why does it have to change with how much money they have?

Think about it as the amount of reserves the bank has being supply, the amount of people wanting to take out loans being demand, and interest rate being the price (ie. high interest rate being high price, and low interest rate being low price).

Banks are willing to lend more when reserves are high because supply (ie. the amount of reserves they have) is high. In the presence of constant demand, the interest rate (ie. the price) should fall as supply goes up.
 
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