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		| Shawn A Osell | 
	
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		| ''Comparative Monetary Tools: Open Market Operations and Interest on Reserves'' | 
	
		| ( 2018, Vol. 38 No.1 ) | 
	
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		| In 2008, the Federal Reserve implemented several new monetary policy tools.  One of these tools included that it began to pay interest on a commercial bank's reserves, which created a channel system.  A channel system describes a scenario where the central bank can establish an upper and a lower bound around an announced benchmark interest rate such as the federal funds rate.  The penalty rate establishes the upper bound since a bank will not borrow from another commercial commercial bank above this rate.  A benefit of paying interest on reserves is that IORs place a lower bound on the federal funds rate.
In order to analyze this new policy, this paper utilizes a DSGE model with a banking sector.  The banking sector includes excess reserves in its balance sheet that receive interest that can be adjusted by the monetary authority. Exogenous shocks are applied to a deterministic model, where agents anticipate future shocks, and a stochastic model, where agents react to an unexpected shock, in order to analyze the impact on macroeconomic variables.  I find that an expansionary IOR policy results in a lower price level compared to applying an expansionary OMO policy. | 
	
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		| Keywords: Monetary Policy,  Interest on Reserve,  Open Market Operations,  Federal Resserve | 
	
		| JEL: E5 - Monetary Policy, Central Banking, and the Supply of Money and Credit: General E1 - General Aggregative Models: General
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		| | Manuscript Received : Aug 09 2017 |  | Manuscript Accepted : Feb 27 2018 | 
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