A central bank, reserve bank, or monetary authority is the entity responsible for the
monetary policy of a country or of a group of member states. It is a bank that can lend
to other banks in times of need. Its primary responsibility is to maintain the stability
of the national currency and money supply, but more active duties include controlling
subsidized-loan interest rates, and acting as a lender of last resort to the banking
sector during times of financial crisis (private banks often being integral to the
national financial system). It may also have supervisory powers, to ensure that banks
and other financial institutions do not behave recklessly or fraudulently.
Most richer countries today have an "independent" central bank, that is, one which
operates under rules designed to prevent political interference. For example, the
Reserve Bank of India is publicly owned and directly governed by the Indian
government. Another example is the United States Federal Reserve, which is a quasi-
public corporation. The major difference is that government owned central banks do
not charge the taxpayers interest on the national currency, whereas privately owned
central banks do charge interest.
Central bank is a general name given to a nation's chief monetary authority. Central
banks are responsible for a wide range of economic decisions. These may vary from
ensuring currency stability, maintaining a low inflationary rate to assisting in full and
gainful employment. A number of central banks also issue currency for their specific
countries. The commercial entity function as the government's bank, supervise
commercial banks, handle exchange reserves and modulate the credit system. Central
banks also perform the crucial role as lender of last resort. Prominent examples of
central banks include Reserve Bank of India (RBI) and the United States Federal
Reserve System.
Open economy
The act of selling goods or services to a foreign country is called exporting. The act of
buying goods or services from a foreign country is called importing. Together
exporting and importing are collectively called international trade.
There are a number of advantages for citizens of a country with an open economy.
One primary advantage is that the citizen consumers have a much larger variety of
goods and services from which to choose from. As well consumers have an
opportunity to invest their savings outside of the country.
In an open economy, a country's spending in any given year need not to equal its
output of goods and services. A country can spend more money than it produces by
borrowing from abroad, or it can spend less than it produces and lend the difference to
foreigners.
In an open economy people are allowed to trade their goods and services with other
economies. This is held in contrast to closed economies in which international trade is
not allowed. Openness of a country’s economy is adjudicated through a fraction of
gross domestic product that measures its imports and exports, which are the
determinants of international trade.
An open economy offers, inter alia the consumers a choice from a larger variety of
goods and services from foreign countries along with their domestic products. Along
with this, economy also offers consumers the opportunity to invest outside domestic
economy. The basic model used to determine GDP in a closed economy is also used
to determine that in an open economy although two new aspects of imports and
exports are added to it.
It is the activity of buying and selling of government securities in the open market.
Open market operations are done in order to contract or expand the quantum of
money in the banking system. The purchase of securities put in money into the
banking system. Selling of securities withdraws the money. Open market operations
form one of the major anchors of monetary policy.
Through open market operations, a central bank influences the money supply in an
economy directly. Each time it buys securities, exchanging money for the security, it
raises the money supply. Conversely, selling of securities lowers the money supply.
Buying of securities thus amounts to printing new money while lowering supply of
the specific security.
All of these interventions can also influence the foreign exchange market and thus the
exchange rate. For example the People's Bank of China and the Bank of Japan have
on occasion bought several hundred billions of U.S. Treasuries, presumably in order
to stop the decline of the U.S. dollar versus the renminbi and the yen.
Market economy
A market economy is a social system based on the division of labor in which the
prices of goods and services are determined in a free price system set by supply and
demand. This is often contrasted with a planned economy, in which a central
government determines the price of goods and services using a fixed price system.
Market economies are contrasted with mixed economy where the price system is not
entirely free but under some government control that is not extensive enough to
constitute a planned economy. In the real world, market economies do not exist in
pure form, as societies and governments regulate them to varying degrees rather than
allow self-regulation by market forces. The term free-market economy is sometimes
used synonymously with market economy, but, as Ludwig Erhard once pointed out,
this does not preclude an economy from having socialist attributes opposed to a
laissez-faire system. Economist Ludwig von Mises also pointed out that a market
economy is still a market economy even if the government intervenes in pricing.
Based on the principles and mechanisms of a market economy several models were
developed to understand and analyse the economic system. There is no intervention of
any superior power, including the government, in the activities of any economic
market. A market economy is judged by certain criteria. Any economic structure can
be regarded as a market economy by judging certain features like convertibility of
domestic currencies to foreign currencies, wages in foreign country terms, enablement
of joint ventures and investment, and government control and ownerships. [1]
Features
Market economies have distinctive features. They are decentralized, supple, realistic,
and unpredictable in nature. They are not managed by a central actor such as a
government ministry. The economist Adam Smith described market forces as the
“invisible hand” that guides a market economy. According to Smith this “invisible
hand” is responsible for the production of goods and services, and their pricing, in a
market economy.
Consumer freedom
Laissez-faire