Data
Federal-Reserve-Interest-Rates-1954-Present

Federal-Reserve-Interest-Rates-1954-Present

active ARFF CC0: Public Domain Visibility: public Uploaded 24-03-2022 by Dustin Carrion
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Context The Federal Reserve sets interest rates to promote conditions that achieve the mandate set by the Congress high employment, low and stable inflation, sustainable economic growth, and moderate long-term interest rates. Interest rates set by the Fed directly influence the cost of borrowing money. Lower interest rates encourage more people to obtain a mortgage for a new home or to borrow money for an automobile or for home improvement. Lower rates encourage businesses to borrow funds to invest in expansion such as purchasing new equipment, updating plants, or hiring more workers. Higher interest rates restrain such borrowing by consumers and businesses. Content This dataset includes data on the economic conditions in the United States on a monthly basis since 1954. The federal funds rate is the interest rate at which depository institutions trade federal funds (balances held at Federal Reserve Banks) with each other overnight. The rate that the borrowing institution pays to the lending institution is determined between the two banks; the weighted average rate for all of these types of negotiations is called the effective federal funds rate. The effective federal funds rate is determined by the market but is influenced by the Federal Reserve through open market operations to reach the federal funds rate target. The Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) meets eight times a year to determine the federal funds target rate; the target rate transitioned to a target range with an upper and lower limit in December 2008. The real gross domestic product is calculated as the seasonally adjusted quarterly rate of change in the gross domestic product based on chained 2009 dollars. The unemployment rate represents the number of unemployed as a seasonally adjusted percentage of the labor force. The inflation rate reflects the monthly change in the Consumer Price Index of products excluding food and energy. Acknowledgements The interest rate data was published by the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis' economic data portal. The gross domestic product data was provided by the US Bureau of Economic Analysis; the unemployment and consumer price index data was provided by the US Bureau of Labor Statistics. Inspiration How does economic growth, unemployment, and inflation impact the Federal Reserve's interest rates decisions? How has the interest rate policy changed over time? Can you predict the Federal Reserve's next decision? Will the target range set in March 2017 be increased, decreased, or remain the same?

10 features

Yearnumeric64 unique values
0 missing
Monthnumeric12 unique values
0 missing
Daynumeric29 unique values
0 missing
Federal_Funds_Target_Ratenumeric63 unique values
442 missing
Federal_Funds_Upper_Targetnumeric4 unique values
801 missing
Federal_Funds_Lower_Targetnumeric4 unique values
801 missing
Effective_Federal_Funds_Ratenumeric466 unique values
152 missing
Real_GDP_(Percent_Change)numeric113 unique values
654 missing
Unemployment_Ratenumeric71 unique values
152 missing
Inflation_Ratenumeric106 unique values
194 missing

19 properties

904
Number of instances (rows) of the dataset.
10
Number of attributes (columns) of the dataset.
Number of distinct values of the target attribute (if it is nominal).
3196
Number of missing values in the dataset.
904
Number of instances with at least one value missing.
10
Number of numeric attributes.
0
Number of nominal attributes.
0.01
Number of attributes divided by the number of instances.
100
Percentage of numeric attributes.
Percentage of instances belonging to the most frequent class.
0
Percentage of nominal attributes.
Number of instances belonging to the most frequent class.
Percentage of instances belonging to the least frequent class.
Number of instances belonging to the least frequent class.
0
Number of binary attributes.
0
Percentage of binary attributes.
100
Percentage of instances having missing values.
Average class difference between consecutive instances.
35.35
Percentage of missing values.

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