
Ending liquidity programs is simple, though potentially painful; precise Fed control over the funds rates may be more difficult
Even with no further reserve tools, the Fed has powerful weapons to raise rates, in the unlikely event that this soon proves necessary. The basic idea behind using interest on reserves as an exit tool is to have the IOR rate serve as the Fed’s effective policy rate. In principle, banks would never lend out reserve balances at a rate below the IOR rate because they would be losing money on the trade relative to just leaving balances at the Fed and earning the IOR rate. The FOMC has stated an intention to keep rates low “for an extended period.” Now that the economy has moved from free-fall to controlled descent, the question of what an “extended period” means is becoming more interesting. Over the last 15 years, the dominant paradigm for understanding monetary policy has been interest rate rules and, in particular, the Taylor rule. In its simplest form, the Taylor rule says that the fed funds rate is set in response to deviations of inflation from a target inflation rate and of output from its full-employment, or potential, level.
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