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Economics, 15/e
Campbell R. McConnell, University of Nebraska, Emeritus
Stanley L. Brue, Pacific Lutheran University
Chapter 15 Monetary Policy
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 Origin of the Idea
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Origin of the Idea
15.1 Tools of Monetary Policy
15.1 Tools of Monetary Policy
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The familiar Federal Reserve tools of monetary policy (open market operations,
changing reserve requirements, and changing the discount rate) were first advocated
by Ralph George Hawtrey (1879-1975). A British treasury official and prolific
author in the area of monetary economics, Hawtrey saw central bank policies
as crucial to maintaining credit stability and reducing business cycle fluctuations.
In severe downturns, however, Hawtrey recognized that even the easiest monetary
policy had limited power to stimulate recovery. As an observer of the Great
Depression, Hawtrey argued that the best way to deal with severe economic stagnation
was to act during the boom periods, using a tight money policy to restrain spending
and the over extension of credit. In Hawtreys words:
Possible
though it is to stop this [depression] by taking prompt measures to
relax credit in time, far better would it be to regulate credit at all
times in such a way that neither of the two vicious circles ever gets
a serious hold. In quiet conditions credit responds easily to moderate
upward and downward movements of the bank [interest] rate. If these
movements were always initiated in time, the conditions need never be
other than quiet in a monetary sense.
Some might argue that current Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan has taken
Hawtreys advice, especially in light of monetary policy in 1999 and 2000.
| Photograph courtesy of: (c)Reuters New Media/Corbis;
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