Lesson 29 Monetary Policy Continued.
Lesson 29 Monetary Policy Continued.
Lesson 29 Monetary Policy Continued.
To keep the overnight interbank repo rate near the Policy (target) Rate
OMO as repo transactions
The eligible financial institutions can use SBP reverse repo facility
Rupee funds can be obtained for one day against approved securities
SBP does not remunerate deposits that banks keep with it for
meeting the cash reserve requirement.
Reserve Requirements
Increase in CRR ratio reduces the funds available with the banks for
lending to both the public and the private sector
Banks have to hold additional cash in the form of reserves with the
SBP for the same amount of their liabilities.
Assuming all else equal, the increase in CRR reduces the money
multiplier and money supply in the economy, and tends to increase
the interest rates
Statutory liquidity requirement
Balances with SBP, balances with NBP, balances left in the vault of
banks, banks’ investment in capital of Micro-Finance Banks (MFBs)
and foreign banks’ deposits with SBP under section 13(3) of the
Banking Companies Ordinance 1962.
Statutory liquidity requirement
Applicable Time and demand liabilities at the end of the Friday (i.e.
the first day of the maintaining period) are taken into account for the
determination of SLR to be maintained during the maintaining period
(if Friday is a holiday then time and demand liabilities as of close of
the preceding working day is taken into account for calculating the
SLR.)
Statutory liquidity requirement
Increase in SLR ratio implies that banks are required to hold a larger
share of their funds into liquid assets approved/notified by the Federal
Government for this purpose.
Both CRR and SLR are the least frequently used monetary policy tools
by SBP
Summary SLR
Type of SLR Definition Applicable Maintenance
Deposit liabilities period
No administrative delays