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Federal Funds Rate

We like to think that when we deposit a dollar at the bank, it goes into a big vault and we can pull out that same dollar at any time. But that¿s not how the U.S. banking system works. Banks take that money and invest it to make money themselves, so cash gets spread around. This, naturally, leads to a big risk: What happens if those investments go sour? Well, you¿d be out of luck. You can¿t get your dollar back.

The Federal Reserve doesn¿t like that scenario, so it prohibits banks from putting all the cash it has on deposit on the line. In fact, the Fed forces banks to keep a portion of their assets at the Federal Reserve itself, to make sure that some of your assets won¿t get squandered if the bank¿s bets go south. These are called ¿reserves,¿ (hence, Federal Reserve. Got it? Good), and usually amount to 10% of the total cash kept in checking accounts.

These reserves are never exactly 10%, and banks like to keep a little extra in reserve ¿ not, as you might think, to make you more comfortable that they¿re in good financial shape, but rather so they can take that excess and lend it to other banks and make money off it. (They¿re banks, they can¿t help themselves.) The rate at which they make these loans is called the Federal Funds rate, which is set by the Federal Reserve¿s Federal Open Market Committee.

When you hear people chattering about how the Fed cut or hiked interest rates, this is what they¿re talking about: the interest rate banks can charge for lending money from their reserves. This begs the question: If these are essentially loans between banks, why is the Fed Funds rate so important for the rest of the economy?

Well, simply put, because loans make the financial world go round. Bank A lends Bank B $10,000 at a Fed Funds rate of 5%. Bank B then lends out $10,000 to a small business at 7%. The small business then takes that money and expands the business and hires new workers. Now someone is employed, Bank B has made interest off the loan, and Bank A is the richer for making it all happen. It¿s perhaps overly simplistic, but you get the idea. When you want the economy to thrive, you make lending cheaper.

Of course, sometimes you don¿t want the economy to thrive. In fact, you might want it to cool down, mostly to avoid money flooding the system and causing inflation. In that case, the Fed raises interest rates, making it difficult to lend or borrow.

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Amnesty International USA Hosts Former Female Child Soldiers from Liberia for Discussions and Public Screening of New Documentary Film

 
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NEW YORK, July 18, 2008 /PRNewswire-USNewswire via COMTEX/ ----Amnesty International USA will host public screenings of a new documentary film, Women of Liberia: Fighting for Peace, by Academy Award-nominated filmmaker Jonathan Stack, on July 22-29 in New York and Washington, DC with discussion afterward by three visiting former female child soldiers who are featured in the film. The women will discuss the social stigma they have faced as former female fighters and their struggle to build better lives for themselves and their children after Liberia's devastating wars.

Upwards of 30,000 women and girls were associated -- through force or desperation -- with the fighting forces in Liberia's war that ended in 2003. They were constant targets for rape and sexual violence by male fighters, and now they are trying to piece together new lives -- burdened by poverty, their missed school years and the social stigma they face as former fighters and ongoing victims of rampant sexual violence.

The former female fighters, Jackie Redd, 30, Mickey Kesseley and Florence Ballah, both 27, will speak at screenings at 7 p.m. Thursday, July 24 at the Tribeca (200 Hudson St.) location of the 92nd St. Y, and at 7 p.m. Tuesday, July 29, at the E Street Cinema in Washington (555 11th St. N.W.)

The screenings are free and open to the public. For more information, please visit: www.amnestyusa.org/womenofliberia

Amnesty International is hosting the woman under its priority campaign for passage of the International Violence Against Women Act, a bipartisan bill now before Congress. The bill is a comprehensive approach to U.S. policy to prevent violence against women and girls, which affects an estimated one of three women worldwide and is a leading contributor to poverty in the developing world. The bill specifically addresses post-war situations and would help ensure that former female child soldiers receive the education, skills training and care they need to help sustain better lives for themselves and the next generation.

Women of Liberia: Fighting for Peace was directed by Jonathan Stack, a two-time Academy Award nominee whose award-winning work includes The Farm, about Louisiana's prison in Angola, and two other films about Liberia: Liberia: An Uncivil War and Iron Ladies of Liberia, which aired on PBS.

Journalists who wish to attend the public screenings or interview the three women are asked to contact: Suzanne Trimel, Media Relations Director, at 212-633-4150.

SOURCE Amnesty International

http://www.amnestyusa.org 
Copyright (C) 2008 PR Newswire. All rights reserved
 
 

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