Regulation Q

Regulation Q was a government regulation that put a limit on the interest rates that banks could pay, including a rate of zero on demand deposits. The government-imposed interest rate of zero on demand deposits encouraged the emergence of money market funds and the growth of substitutes for and alternatives to banks. Regulation Q ceilings were for the most part phased out in the early 1980s by the Monetary Control Act of 1980.

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Articles

*March/April 1999 - The Business Community's Suicidal Impulse

 

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