Target Rate: What It Is and How It Works

People shaking hands in a business meeting in a conference room

What Is a Target Rate?

A target rate is a key interest rate in an economy that the central bank uses to guide and gauge the effectiveness of its monetary policy. The target rate, which is also known as an operating target, is an intermediate target that the bank can directly influence by its monetary policy and which it understands to be related to downstream economic performance. 

Key Takeaways

  • A target rate is a key interest rate that a central bank uses to guide monetary policy toward the desired economic outcomes.
  • A central bank can choose its target based on official discretion or specific policy rules with the intent of influencing economic variables, such as employment or inflation. 
  • The Federal Open Market Committee generally uses the overnight fed funds rate as its target rate.

Understanding Target Rates

Target rates are used to guide monetary policy, especially open market operations, to gauge how much money and credit to add or withdraw from the financial system to achieve the desired economic outcome. They are observable market phenomena that respond directly to central bank actions and are also tied to overall economic activity. 

The central bank adjusts its monetary policy to achieve the desired target rate, with the intent that this will be instrumental in achieving the rates of inflation, national income growth, and employment that are the bank's mandated goals.

Central banks set the target rate using a wide variety of tools. Target rates might be set solely on the insight and discretion of bank officials or by fixed rules, such as the Taylor Rule. A change in a target rate, such as the federal funds rate, can affect other short-term interest rates, longer-term interest rates, foreign exchange rates, stock prices, the amount of money and credit in the economy, employment, and the prices of goods and services.

Special Considerations

Target rates can be publicly announced or kept secret depending on the policy and intentions of the central bank. In the past, central banks like the Federal Reserve did not always publicize, and sometimes deliberately obfuscated, their policy target rates in order to prevent market participants from anticipating their moves.

This was based on theories from macroeconomics that only unanticipated changes in central bank policy would have much impact on gross domestic product (GDP) and employment.

In more recent times, central banks usually publish both their target rates and their forecasts and intentions for possible future adjustments to target rates, as part of a monetary policy tool known as forwarding guidance. Under forwarding guidance, rather than seeking to surprise market participants, a central bank attempts to shape market expectations in order to support overall monetary policy.

Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) Target Rate

The Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) uses the fed funds rate as its target rate. The fed funds rate is defined as the interest rate charged by one bank for an overnight loan of money stored at the Federal Reserve to another bank. A target range is sometimes designated by the FOMC along with the target rate during times of economic uncertainty. The target rate is often related to the risk-free rate in an economy.

At the FOMC’s meeting in July 2023, the Fed announced it would increase the target range of the federal funds rate by 25 basis points to a target range of 5.25% to 5.5%. The group cited ongoing inflationary pressure as the reason for the increase. The FOMC kept the target range at the same level at its June 12, 2024, meeting, even though inflation has tapered.

The FOMC controls the target rate through open market operations (OMO), which involves the purchases and sales of securities, such as U.S. Treasuries, mortgage-backed securities, or other debt instruments in the open market. It is considered a target interest rate because the actual value of the rate will depend on the supply and demand for overnight lending in the open market.

However, because a bank demanding overnight reserves could borrow from the Fed itself at the discount window, the target rate tends to stay enforced.

The 12 members of the FOMC meet for eight regularly scheduled meetings per year. During these meetings, the FOMC reviews economic and financial conditions and determines the federal fund's target rate. The FOMC can lower its target if it wants to stimulate inflation or the flow of credit, or it can raise its target if it wants to fight inflation or slow credit markets down.

The FOMC may schedule additional meetings as necessary to implement changes in the target federal funds rate. At any of the FOMC's meetings, the federal fund's target rate may increase, decrease, or remain unchanged depending on the economic conditions in the United States. A target is typically tied to a particular inflation level that the central bank thinks is benign for an economy.

What Happens When the Fed Funds Rate Increases?

When the federal funds rate increases, it increases the borrowing costs that banks pay to borrow from each other in order to meet their overnight reserve requirements if they have a shortfall in reserves. This increase in borrowing costs is passed onto the banks' customers through higher interest rates, which makes borrowing costs for consumers higher. In general, increasing the fed funds rates makes borrowing money more expensive with the goal of slowing down the economy.

What Is the Current Fed Funds Rate?

The current fed funds rate as of the last FOMC meeting on Jan. 31, 2024, is a target range between 5.25% and 5.5%. It was set in July 2023 and was an increase of 25 basis points from the last increase in May 2023. The rate remained in effect as of the June 2024 FOMC meeting.

What Is the Prime Rate?

The prime rate is the interest rate that banks give their best customers, those with the highest creditworthiness. The prime rate is influenced by the fed funds rate, which the Federal Reserve sets. The prime rate then influences all other interest rates, such as mortgage rates and auto rates.

The Bottom Line

A target rate is an interest rate used by a central bank to influence monetary policy. A nation's central bank sets a target rate to influence other interest rates in an economy in an effort to contract or expand the economy depending on current market conditions.

Article Sources
Investopedia requires writers to use primary sources to support their work. These include white papers, government data, original reporting, and interviews with industry experts. We also reference original research from other reputable publishers where appropriate. You can learn more about the standards we follow in producing accurate, unbiased content in our editorial policy.
  1. Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System. "About the FOMC."

  2. Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System. "Monetary Policy Principles and Practice."

  3. Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System. "Open Market Operations."

  4. U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. "Consumer Price Index Historical Tables for U.S. City Average."

  5. Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System. "Federal Reserve Issues FOMC Statement."

  6. Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System. "Federal Reserve issues FOMC statement."

  7. Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System. "Meeting calendars, statements, and minutes (2019-2024)."

  8. Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System. "Federal Reserve Issues FOMC Statement."

  9. Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System. "What is the prime rate, and does the Federal Reserve set the prime rate?"

Open a New Bank Account
×
The offers that appear in this table are from partnerships from which Investopedia receives compensation. This compensation may impact how and where listings appear. Investopedia does not include all offers available in the marketplace.