- Open Market TRANSACTIONS:
Open market operations involve the intervention of a central bank as a seller or buyer of securities with the aim of controlling the money supply. For example, when a central bank intervenes as a seller, it sells securities to remove money from the market, thus pursuing a contractionary policy. If he intervenes as a buyer, he pursues an expansionary policy where he increases the money supply.
- Mandatory Reserves Policy:
This relates to determining a proportion of the cash reserve that commercial banks must maintain with the central bank out of the volume of deposits. In periods of inflation, the central bank raises the statutory reserve ratio, which reduces banks' liquidity and reduces their lending capacity, while it reduces it in recessions to stimulate lending.
These tools are used to adjust liquidity in the economy, thus influencing the level of economic activity, inflation and employment.
Second: Credit policy
Credit policy is known as an integral part of monetary policy, and it is linked to the reality of economic growth, as the demand for bank credit increases with increasing economic growth. It deals with it by establishing the foundations for granting credit, identifying the targeted economic sectors, and providing an assessment of the creditworthiness of customers and acceptable guarantees. It is concerned with determining the purposes of dealing with economic sectors, clarifies the creditworthiness of customers and the guarantees that can be accepted by the bank, and can also determine the value of loans. The success of banking supervision in most countries depends on the principle of balancing the liquidity of the banking system with the size of its needs. Indirect bank credit can be controlled by regulating reserve growth. As there is fluctuation in the money multiplier, the role of credit policy in monitoring commercial banks increases, especially in developed countries. Credit policy becomes an essential part of monetary policy in these countries, as commercial banks create money, and in countries still in financial development stages, monetary policy deals mainly with issuance policy. The characteristics of credit policy are manifested in:
- DocumentationEvery bank must explain its credit policy in writing.
- trust: This requires establishing trustworthy relationships between management and bank employees, while maintaining flexibility and speed in customer service.
- Regulatory indicators: It depends on the amount of money available for lending and the staff structures who have the right to make lending decisions.
- Suitability: Related to the compatibility of credit policy with external economic and financial conditions in the country and the world.
Credit policy is an essential part of the supervision of commercial banks, and plays a major role in controlling banking activity and ensuring the sustainability of the financial system.