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Wikipedia

Federal Reserve

The Federal Reserve System (often shortened to the Federal Reserve, or simply the Fed) is the central banking system of the United States. It was created on December 23, 1913, with the enactment of the Federal Reserve Act, after a series of financial panics (particularly the panic of 1907) led to the desire for central control of the monetary system in order to alleviate financial crises.[list 1] Over the years, events such as the Great Depression in the 1930s and the Great Recession during the 2000s have led to the expansion of the roles and responsibilities of the Federal Reserve System.[6][11]

Federal Reserve System
Seal of the Federal Reserve System
Flag of the Federal Reserve System
The Eccles Building in Washington, D.C., which serves as the Federal Reserve System's headquarters
HeadquartersEccles Building, Washington, D.C., U.S.
EstablishedDecember 23, 1913 (110 years ago) (1913-12-23)
Governing bodyBoard of Governors
Key people
Central bank ofUnited States
CurrencyUnited States dollar
USD (ISO 4217)
Reserve requirementsNone[1]
Bank rate5.5%[2]
Interest rate target5.25–5.50%[3]
Interest on reserves5.40%[4]
Interest paid on excess reserves?Yes
Websitewww.federalreserve.gov
Federal Reserve
Agency overview
JurisdictionFederal government of the United States
Child agency
Key document

Congress established three key objectives for monetary policy in the Federal Reserve Act: maximizing employment, stabilizing prices, and moderating long-term interest rates.[12] The first two objectives are sometimes referred to as the Federal Reserve's dual mandate.[13] Its duties have expanded over the years, and currently also include supervising and regulating banks, maintaining the stability of the financial system, and providing financial services to depository institutions, the U.S. government, and foreign official institutions.[14] The Fed also conducts research into the economy and provides numerous publications, such as the Beige Book and the FRED database.

The Federal Reserve System is composed of several layers. It is governed by the presidentially-appointed board of governors or Federal Reserve Board (FRB). Twelve regional Federal Reserve Banks, located in cities throughout the nation, regulate and oversee privately-owned commercial banks.[15] Nationally chartered commercial banks are required to hold stock in, and can elect some board members of, the Federal Reserve Bank of their region.

The Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) sets monetary policy by adjusting the target for the federal funds rate, which influences market interest rates generally and via the monetary transmission mechanism in turn US economic activity. The FOMC consists of all seven members of the board of governors and the twelve regional Federal Reserve Bank presidents, though only five bank presidents vote at a time—the president of the New York Fed and four others who rotate through one-year voting terms. There are also various advisory councils.[list 2] It has a structure unique among central banks, and is also unusual in that the United States Department of the Treasury, an entity outside of the central bank, prints the currency used.[21]

The federal government sets the salaries of the board's seven governors, and it receives all the system's annual profits, after dividends on member banks' capital investments are paid, and an account surplus is maintained. In 2015, the Federal Reserve earned a net income of $100.2 billion and transferred $97.7 billion to the U.S. Treasury,[22] and 2020 earnings were approximately $88.6 billion with remittances to the U.S. Treasury of $86.9 billion.[23] Although an instrument of the U.S. government, the Federal Reserve System considers itself "an independent central bank because its monetary policy decisions do not have to be approved by the president or by anyone else in the executive or legislative branches of government, it does not receive funding appropriated by Congress, and the terms of the members of the board of governors span multiple presidential and congressional terms."[24]

Purpose edit

The primary declared motivation for creating the Federal Reserve System was to address banking panics.[6] Other purposes are stated in the Federal Reserve Act, such as "to furnish an elastic currency, to afford means of rediscounting commercial paper, to establish a more effective supervision of banking in the United States, and for other purposes".[25] Before the founding of the Federal Reserve System, the United States underwent several financial crises. A particularly severe crisis in 1907 led Congress to enact the Federal Reserve Act in 1913. Today the Federal Reserve System has responsibilities in addition to stabilizing the financial system.[26]

Current functions of the Federal Reserve System include:[14][26]

  • To address the problem of banking panics
  • To serve as the central bank for the United States
  • To strike a balance between private interests of banks and the centralized responsibility of government
    • To supervise and regulate banking institutions
    • To protect the credit rights of consumers
  • To conduct monetary policy by influencing market interest rates to achieve the sometimes-conflicting goals of
    • maximum employment
    • stable prices, interpreted as an inflation rate of 2 percent per year on average[27]
    • moderate long-term interest rates
  • To maintain the stability of the financial system and contain systemic risk in financial markets
  • To provide financial services to depository institutions, the U.S. government, and foreign official institutions, including playing a major role in operating the nation's payments system
    • To facilitate the exchange of payments among regions
    • To respond to local liquidity needs
  • To strengthen U.S. standing in the world economy
 
Unemployment vs Inflation vs Inverted yield curve
  Unemployment rate
  Inflation CPI
  10 year bond minus 2 year bond Inverted yield curve

Addressing the problem of bank panics edit

Banking institutions in the United States are required to hold reserves‍—‌amounts of currency and deposits in other banks‍—‌equal to only a fraction of the amount of the bank's deposit liabilities owed to customers. This practice is called fractional-reserve banking. As a result, banks usually invest the majority of the funds received from depositors. On rare occasions, too many of the bank's customers will withdraw their savings and the bank will need help from another institution to continue operating; this is called a bank run. Bank runs can lead to a multitude of social and economic problems. The Federal Reserve System was designed as an attempt to prevent or minimize the occurrence of bank runs, and possibly act as a lender of last resort when a bank run does occur. Many economists, following Nobel laureate Milton Friedman, believe that the Federal Reserve inappropriately refused to lend money to small banks during the bank runs of 1929; Friedman argued that this contributed to the Great Depression.[28]

Check clearing system edit

Because some banks refused to clear checks from certain other banks during times of economic uncertainty, a check-clearing system was created in the Federal Reserve System. It is briefly described in The Federal Reserve System‍—‌Purposes and Functions as follows:[29]

By creating the Federal Reserve System, Congress intended to eliminate the severe financial crises that had periodically swept the nation, especially the sort of financial panic that occurred in 1907. During that episode, payments were disrupted throughout the country because many banks and clearinghouses refused to clear checks drawn on certain other banks, a practice that contributed to the failure of otherwise solvent banks. To address these problems, Congress gave the Federal Reserve System the authority to establish a nationwide check-clearing system. The System, then, was to provide not only an elastic currency‍—‌that is, a currency that would expand or shrink in amount as economic conditions warranted‍—‌but also an efficient and equitable check-collection system.

Lender of last resort edit

In the United States, the Federal Reserve serves as the lender of last resort to those institutions that cannot obtain credit elsewhere and the collapse of which would have serious implications for the economy. It took over this role from the private sector "clearing houses" which operated during the Free Banking Era; whether public or private, the availability of liquidity was intended to prevent bank runs.[30]

Fluctuations edit

Through its discount window and credit operations, Reserve Banks provide liquidity to banks to meet short-term needs stemming from seasonal fluctuations in deposits or unexpected withdrawals. Longer-term liquidity may also be provided in exceptional circumstances. The rate the Fed charges banks for these loans is called the discount rate (officially the primary credit rate).

By making these loans, the Fed serves as a buffer against unexpected day-to-day fluctuations in reserve demand and supply. This contributes to the effective functioning of the banking system, alleviates pressure in the reserves market and reduces the extent of unexpected movements in the interest rates.[31] For example, on September 16, 2008, the Federal Reserve Board authorized an $85 billion loan to stave off the bankruptcy of international insurance giant American International Group (AIG).[32]

Central bank edit

 
Obverse of a Federal Reserve $1 note issued in 2009

In its role as the central bank of the United States, the Fed serves as a banker's bank and as the government's bank. As the banker's bank, it helps to assure the safety and efficiency of the payments system. As the government's bank or fiscal agent, the Fed processes a variety of financial transactions involving trillions of dollars. Just as an individual might keep an account at a bank, the U.S. Treasury keeps a checking account with the Federal Reserve, through which incoming federal tax deposits and outgoing government payments are handled. As part of this service relationship, the Fed sells and redeems U.S. government securities such as savings bonds and Treasury bills, notes and bonds. It also issues the nation's coin and paper currency. The U.S. Treasury, through its Bureau of the Mint and Bureau of Engraving and Printing, actually produces the nation's cash supply and, in effect, sells the paper currency to the Federal Reserve Banks at manufacturing cost, and the coins at face value. The Federal Reserve Banks then distribute it to other financial institutions in various ways.[33] During the Fiscal Year 2020, the Bureau of Engraving and Printing delivered 57.95 billion notes at an average cost of 7.4 cents per note.[34][35]

Federal funds edit

Federal funds are the reserve balances (also called Federal Reserve Deposits) that private banks keep at their local Federal Reserve Bank.[36] These balances are the namesake reserves of the Federal Reserve System. The purpose of keeping funds at a Federal Reserve Bank is to have a mechanism for private banks to lend funds to one another. This market for funds plays an important role in the Federal Reserve System as it is what inspired the name of the system and it is what is used as the basis for monetary policy. Monetary policy is put into effect partly by influencing how much interest the private banks charge each other for the lending of these funds.

Federal reserve accounts contain federal reserve credit, which can be converted into federal reserve notes. Private banks maintain their bank reserves in federal reserve accounts.

Bank regulation edit

The Federal Reserve regulates private banks. The system was designed out of a compromise between the competing philosophies of privatization and government regulation. In 2006 Donald L. Kohn, vice chairman of the board of governors, summarized the history of this compromise:[37]

Agrarian and progressive interests, led by William Jennings Bryan, favored a central bank under public, rather than banker, control. But the vast majority of the nation's bankers, concerned about government intervention in the banking business, opposed a central bank structure directed by political appointees. The legislation that Congress ultimately adopted in 1913 reflected a hard-fought battle to balance these two competing views and created the hybrid public-private, centralized-decentralized structure that we have today.

The balance between private interests and government can also be seen in the structure of the system. Private banks elect members of the board of directors at their regional Federal Reserve Bank while the members of the board of governors are selected by the president of the United States and confirmed by the Senate.

Government regulation and supervision edit

 
Ben Bernanke (lower right), former chairman of the Federal Reserve Board of Governors, at a House Financial Services Committee hearing on February 10, 2009. Members of the board frequently testify before congressional committees such as this one. The Senate equivalent of the House Financial Services Committee is the Senate Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs.

The Federal Banking Agency Audit Act, enacted in 1978 as Public Law 95-320 and 31 U.S.C. section 714 establish that the board of governors of the Federal Reserve System and the Federal Reserve banks may be audited by the Government Accountability Office (GAO).[38]

The GAO has authority to audit check-processing, currency storage and shipments, and some regulatory and bank examination functions, however, there are restrictions to what the GAO may audit. Under the Federal Banking Agency Audit Act, 31 U.S.C. section 714(b), audits of the Federal Reserve Board and Federal Reserve banks do not include (1) transactions for or with a foreign central bank or government or non-private international financing organization; (2) deliberations, decisions, or actions on monetary policy matters; (3) transactions made under the direction of the Federal Open Market Committee; or (4) a part of a discussion or communication among or between members of the board of governors and officers and employees of the Federal Reserve System related to items (1), (2), or (3). See Federal Reserve System Audits: Restrictions on GAO's Access (GAO/T-GGD-94-44), statement of Charles A. Bowsher.[39]

The board of governors in the Federal Reserve System has a number of supervisory and regulatory responsibilities in the U.S. banking system, but not complete responsibility. A general description of the types of regulation and supervision involved in the U.S. banking system is given by the Federal Reserve:[40]

The Board also plays a major role in the supervision and regulation of the U.S. banking system. It has supervisory responsibilities for state-chartered banks[41] that are members of the Federal Reserve System, bank holding companies (companies that control banks), the foreign activities of member banks, the U.S. activities of foreign banks, and Edge Act and "agreement corporations" (limited-purpose institutions that engage in a foreign banking business). The Board and, under delegated authority, the Federal Reserve Banks, supervise approximately 900 state member banks and 5,000 bank holding companies. Other federal agencies also serve as the primary federal supervisors of commercial banks; the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency supervises national banks, and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation supervises state banks that are not members of the Federal Reserve System.

Some regulations issued by the Board apply to the entire banking industry, whereas others apply only to member banks, that is, state banks that have chosen to join the Federal Reserve System and national banks, which by law must be members of the System. The Board also issues regulations to carry out major federal laws governing consumer credit protection, such as the Truth in Lending, Equal Credit Opportunity, and Home Mortgage Disclosure Acts. Many of these consumer protection regulations apply to various lenders outside the banking industry as well as to banks.

Members of the Board of Governors are in continual contact with other policy makers in government. They frequently testify before congressional committees on the economy, monetary policy, banking supervision and regulation, consumer credit protection, financial markets, and other matters.

The Board has regular contact with members of the President's Council of Economic Advisers and other key economic officials. The Chair also meets from time to time with the President of the United States and has regular meetings with the Secretary of the Treasury. The Chair has formal responsibilities in the international arena as well.

Regulatory and oversight responsibilities edit

The board of directors of each Federal Reserve Bank District also has regulatory and supervisory responsibilities. If the board of directors of a district bank has judged that a member bank is performing or behaving poorly, it will report this to the board of governors. This policy is described in law:

Each Federal reserve bank shall keep itself informed of the general character and amount of the loans and investments of its member banks with a view to ascertaining whether undue use is being made of bank credit for the speculative carrying of or trading in securities, real estate, or commodities, or for any other purpose inconsistent with the maintenance of sound credit conditions; and, in determining whether to grant or refuse advances, rediscounts, or other credit accommodations, the Federal reserve bank shall give consideration to such information. The chairman of the Federal reserve bank shall report to the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System any such undue use of bank credit by any member bank, together with his recommendation. Whenever, in the judgment of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, any member bank is making such undue use of bank credit, the Board may, in its discretion, after reasonable notice and an opportunity for a hearing, suspend such bank from the use of the credit facilities of the Federal Reserve System and may terminate such suspension or may renew it from time to time.[42]

National payments system edit

The Federal Reserve plays a role in the U.S. payments system. The twelve Federal Reserve Banks provide banking services to depository institutions and to the federal government. For depository institutions, they maintain accounts and provide various payment services, including collecting checks, electronically transferring funds, and distributing and receiving currency and coin. For the federal government, the Reserve Banks act as fiscal agents, paying Treasury checks; processing electronic payments; and issuing, transferring, and redeeming U.S. government securities.[43]

In the Depository Institutions Deregulation and Monetary Control Act of 1980, Congress reaffirmed that the Federal Reserve should promote an efficient nationwide payments system. The act subjects all depository institutions, not just member commercial banks, to reserve requirements and grants them equal access to Reserve Bank payment services. The Federal Reserve plays a role in the nation's retail and wholesale payments systems by providing financial services to depository institutions. Retail payments are generally for relatively small-dollar amounts and often involve a depository institution's retail clients‍—‌individuals and smaller businesses. The Reserve Banks' retail services include distributing currency and coin, collecting checks, electronically transferring funds through FedACH (the Federal Reserve's automated clearing house system), and beginning in 2023, facilitating instant payments using the FedNow service. By contrast, wholesale payments are generally for large-dollar amounts and often involve a depository institution's large corporate customers or counterparties, including other financial institutions. The Reserve Banks' wholesale services include electronically transferring funds through the Fedwire Funds Service and transferring securities issued by the U.S. government, its agencies, and certain other entities through the Fedwire Securities Service.

Structure edit

 
Organization of the Federal Reserve System

The Federal Reserve System has a "unique structure that is both public and private"[44] and is described as "independent within the government" rather than "independent of government".[24] The System does not require public funding, and derives its authority and purpose from the Federal Reserve Act, which was passed by Congress in 1913 and is subject to Congressional modification or repeal.[45] The four main components of the Federal Reserve System are (1) the board of governors, (2) the Federal Open Market Committee, (3) the twelve regional Federal Reserve Banks, and (4) the member banks throughout the country.

District # Letter Federal Reserve Bank Branches Website Current president
1 A Boston   https://www.bostonfed.org Susan M. Collins
2 B New York City   http://www.newyorkfed.org John C. Williams
3 C Philadelphia   http://www.philadelphiafed.org Patrick T. Harker
4 D Cleveland Cincinnati, Ohio
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
http://www.clevelandfed.org Loretta J. Mester
5 E Richmond Baltimore, Maryland
Charlotte, North Carolina
http://www.richmondfed.org Thomas Barkin
6 F Atlanta Birmingham, Alabama
Jacksonville, Florida
Miami, Florida
Nashville, Tennessee
New Orleans, Louisiana
http://www.frbatlanta.org Raphael Bostic
7 G Chicago Detroit, Michigan http://www.chicagofed.org Austan Goolsbee
8 H St. Louis Little Rock, Arkansas
Louisville, Kentucky
Memphis, Tennessee
http://www.stlouisfed.org James B. Bullard
9 I Minneapolis Helena, Montana https://www.minneapolisfed.org Neel Kashkari
10 J Kansas City Denver, Colorado
Oklahoma City, Oklahoma
Omaha, Nebraska
http://www.kansascityfed.org Jeffrey Schmid
11 K Dallas El Paso, Texas
Houston, Texas
San Antonio, Texas
http://www.dallasfed.org Lorie K. Logan
12 L San Francisco Los Angeles, California
Portland, Oregon
Salt Lake City, Utah
Seattle, Washington
http://www.frbsf.org Mary C. Daly

Board of governors edit

The seven-member board of governors is a large federal agency that functions in business oversight by examining national banks.[46]: 12, 15  It is charged with the overseeing of the 12 District Reserve Banks and setting national monetary policy. It also supervises and regulates the U.S. banking system in general.[47] Governors are appointed by the president of the United States and confirmed by the Senate for staggered 14-year terms.[31][48] One term begins every two years, on February 1 of even-numbered years, and members serving a full term cannot be renominated for a second term.[49] "[U]pon the expiration of their terms of office, members of the Board shall continue to serve until their successors are appointed and have qualified." The law provides for the removal of a member of the board by the president "for cause".[50] The board is required to make an annual report of operations to the Speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives.

The chair and vice chair of the board of governors are appointed by the president from among the sitting governors. They both serve a four-year term and they can be renominated as many times as the president chooses, until their terms on the board of governors expire.[51]

List of members of the board of governors edit

 
Board of governors in April 2019, when two of the seven seats were vacant

The current members of the board of governors are:[49]

Portrait Current governor Party Term start Term expires
  Jay Powell
(Chair)
Republican February 5, 2018 (as Chair)
May 23, 2022 (reappointment)
May 15, 2026 (as Chair)
May 25, 2012 (as Governor)
June 16, 2014 (reappointment)
January 31, 2028 (as Governor)
  Philip Jefferson
(Vice Chair)
Democratic September 13, 2023 (as Vice Chair) September 7, 2027 (as Vice Chair)
May 23, 2022 (as Governor) January 31, 2036 (as Governor)
  Michael Barr
(Vice Chair for Supervision)
Democratic July 19, 2022 (as Vice Chair for Supervision) July 13, 2026 (as Vice Chair for Supervision)
July 19, 2022 (as Governor) January 31, 2032 (as Governor)
  Miki Bowman Republican November 26, 2018
February 1, 2020 (reappointment)
January 31, 2034
  Chris Waller Republican December 18, 2020 January 31, 2030
  Lisa Cook Democratic May 23, 2022
February 1, 2024 (reappointment)
January 31, 2038
  Adriana Kugler Democratic September 13, 2023 January 31, 2026

Nominations, confirmations and resignations edit

In late December 2011, President Barack Obama nominated Jeremy C. Stein, a Harvard University finance professor and a Democrat, and Jerome Powell, formerly of Dillon Read, Bankers Trust[52] and The Carlyle Group[53] and a Republican. Both candidates also have Treasury Department experience in the Obama and George H. W. Bush administrations respectively.[52]

"Obama administration officials [had] regrouped to identify Fed candidates after Peter Diamond, a Nobel Prize-winning economist, withdrew his nomination to the board in June [2011] in the face of Republican opposition. Richard Clarida, a potential nominee who was a Treasury official under George W. Bush, pulled out of consideration in August [2011]", one account of the December nominations noted.[54] The two other Obama nominees in 2011, Janet Yellen and Sarah Bloom Raskin,[55] were confirmed in September.[56] One of the vacancies was created in 2011 with the resignation of Kevin Warsh, who took office in 2006 to fill the unexpired term ending January 31, 2018, and resigned his position effective March 31, 2011.[57][58] In March 2012, U.S. Senator David Vitter (R, LA) said he would oppose Obama's Stein and Powell nominations, dampening near-term hopes for approval.[59] However, Senate leaders reached a deal, paving the way for affirmative votes on the two nominees in May 2012 and bringing the board to full strength for the first time since 2006[60] with Duke's service after term end. Later, on January 6, 2014, the United States Senate confirmed Yellen's nomination to be chair of the Federal Reserve Board of Governors; she was the first woman to hold the position.[61] Subsequently, President Obama nominated Stanley Fischer to replace Yellen as the vice-chair.[62]

In April 2014, Stein announced he was leaving to return to Harvard May 28 with four years remaining on his term. At the time of the announcement, the FOMC "already is down three members as it awaits the Senate confirmation of ... Fischer and Lael Brainard, and as [President] Obama has yet to name a replacement for ... Duke. ... Powell is still serving as he awaits his confirmation for a second term."[63]

Allan R. Landon, former president and CEO of the Bank of Hawaii, was nominated in early 2015 by President Obama to the board.[64]

In July 2015, President Obama nominated University of Michigan economist Kathryn M. Dominguez to fill the second vacancy on the board. The Senate had not yet acted on Landon's confirmation by the time of the second nomination.[65]

Daniel Tarullo submitted his resignation from the board on February 10, 2017, effective on or around April 5, 2017.[66]

Federal Open Market Committee edit

The Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) consists of 12 members, seven from the board of governors and 5 of the regional Federal Reserve Bank presidents. The FOMC oversees and sets policy on open market operations, the principal tool of national monetary policy. These operations affect the amount of Federal Reserve balances available to depository institutions, thereby influencing overall monetary and credit conditions. The FOMC also directs operations undertaken by the Federal Reserve in foreign exchange markets. The FOMC must reach consensus on all decisions. The president of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York is a permanent member of the FOMC; the presidents of the other banks rotate membership at two- and three-year intervals. All Regional Reserve Bank presidents contribute to the committee's assessment of the economy and of policy options, but only the five presidents who are then members of the FOMC vote on policy decisions. The FOMC determines its own internal organization and, by tradition, elects the chair of the board of governors as its chair and the president of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York as its vice chair. Formal meetings typically are held eight times each year in Washington, D.C. Nonvoting Reserve Bank presidents also participate in Committee deliberations and discussion. The FOMC generally meets eight times a year in telephone consultations and other meetings are held when needed.[67]

There is very strong consensus among economists against politicising the FOMC.[68]

Federal Advisory Council edit

The Federal Advisory Council, composed of twelve representatives of the banking industry, advises the board on all matters within its jurisdiction.

Federal Reserve Banks edit

 
Map of the 12 Federal Reserve Districts, with the 12 Federal Reserve Banks marked as black squares, and all Branches within each district (24 total) marked as red circles. The Washington, DC, headquarters is marked with a star. (Also, a 25th branch in Buffalo, NY, was closed in 2008.)
 
The 12 Reserve Banks buildings in 1936

There are 12 Federal Reserve Banks, each of which is responsible for member banks located in its district. They are located in Boston, New York, Philadelphia, Cleveland, Richmond, Atlanta, Chicago, St. Louis, Minneapolis, Kansas City, Dallas, and San Francisco. The size of each district was set based upon the population distribution of the United States when the Federal Reserve Act was passed.

The charter and organization of each Federal Reserve Bank is established by law and cannot be altered by the member banks. Member banks do, however, elect six of the nine members of the Federal Reserve Banks' boards of directors.[31][69]

Each regional Bank has a president, who is the chief executive officer of their Bank. Each regional Reserve Bank's president is nominated by their Bank's board of directors, but the nomination is contingent upon approval by the board of governors. Presidents serve five-year terms and may be reappointed.[70]

Each regional Bank's board consists of nine members. Members are broken down into three classes: A, B, and C. There are three board members in each class. Class A members are chosen by the regional Bank's shareholders, and are intended to represent member banks' interests. Member banks are divided into three categories: large, medium, and small. Each category elects one of the three class A board members. Class B board members are also nominated by the region's member banks, but class B board members are supposed to represent the interests of the public. Lastly, class C board members are appointed by the board of governors, and are also intended to represent the interests of the public.[71]

Legal status of regional Federal Reserve Banks edit

The Federal Reserve Banks have an intermediate legal status, with some features of private corporations and some features of public federal agencies. The United States has an interest in the Federal Reserve Banks as tax-exempt federally created instrumentalities whose profits belong to the federal government, but this interest is not proprietary.[72] In Lewis v. United States,[73] the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit stated that: "The Reserve Banks are not federal instrumentalities for purposes of the FTCA [the Federal Tort Claims Act], but are independent, privately owned and locally controlled corporations." The opinion went on to say, however, that: "The Reserve Banks have properly been held to be federal instrumentalities for some purposes." Another relevant decision is Scott v. Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City,[72] in which the distinction is made between Federal Reserve Banks, which are federally created instrumentalities, and the board of governors, which is a federal agency.

Regarding the structural relationship between the twelve Federal Reserve banks and the various commercial (member) banks, political science professor Michael D. Reagan has written:[74]

... the "ownership" of the Reserve Banks by the commercial banks is symbolic; they do not exercise the proprietary control associated with the concept of ownership nor share, beyond the statutory dividend, in Reserve Bank "profits." ... Bank ownership and election at the base are therefore devoid of substantive significance, despite the superficial appearance of private bank control that the formal arrangement creates.

 
Plaque marking a bank as a member

Member banks edit

A member bank is a private institution and owns stock in its regional Federal Reserve Bank. All nationally chartered banks hold stock in one of the Federal Reserve Banks. State chartered banks may choose to be members (and hold stock in their regional Federal Reserve bank) upon meeting certain standards.

The amount of stock a member bank must own is equal to 3% of its combined capital and surplus.[75] However, holding stock in a Federal Reserve bank is not like owning stock in a publicly traded company. These stocks cannot be sold or traded, and member banks do not control the Federal Reserve Bank as a result of owning this stock. From their Regional Bank, member banks with $10 billion or less in assets receive a dividend of 6%, while member banks with more than $10 billion in assets receive the lesser of 6% or the current 10-year Treasury auction rate.[76] The remainder of the regional Federal Reserve Banks' profits is given over to the United States Treasury Department. In 2015, the Federal Reserve Banks made a profit of $100.2 billion and distributed $2.5 billion in dividends to member banks as well as returning $97.7 billion to the U.S. Treasury.[22]

About 38% of U.S. banks are members of their regional Federal Reserve Bank.[24][77]

Accountability edit

An external auditor selected by the audit committee of the Federal Reserve System regularly audits the Board of Governors and the Federal Reserve Banks. The GAO will audit some activities of the Board of Governors. These audits do not cover "most of the Fed's monetary policy actions or decisions, including discount window lending (direct loans to financial institutions), open-market operations and any other transactions made under the direction of the Federal Open Market Committee" ...[nor may the GAO audit] "dealings with foreign governments and other central banks."[78]

The annual and quarterly financial statements prepared by the Federal Reserve System conform to a basis of accounting that is set by the Federal Reserve Board and does not conform to Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (GAAP) or government Cost Accounting Standards (CAS). The financial reporting standards are defined in the Financial Accounting Manual for the Federal Reserve Banks.[79] The cost accounting standards are defined in the Planning and Control System Manual.[79] As of 27 August 2012, the Federal Reserve Board has been publishing unaudited financial reports for the Federal Reserve banks every quarter.[80]

On November 7, 2008, Bloomberg L.P. brought a lawsuit against the board of governors of the Federal Reserve System to force the board to reveal the identities of firms for which it provided guarantees during the financial crisis of 2007–2008.[81] Bloomberg, L.P. won at the trial court[82] and the Fed's appeals were rejected at both the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit and the U.S. Supreme Court. The data was released on March 31, 2011.[83]

Monetary policy edit

The term "monetary policy" refers to the actions undertaken by a central bank, such as the Federal Reserve, to influence economic activity (the overall demand for goods and services) to help promote national economic goals. The Federal Reserve Act of 1913 gave the Federal Reserve authority to set monetary policy in the United States. The Fed's mandate for monetary policy is commonly known as the dual mandate of promoting maximum employment and stable prices, the latter being interpreted as a stable inflation rate of 2 percent per year on average. The Fed's monetary policy influences economic activity by influencing the general level of interest rates in the economy, which again via the monetary transmission mechanism affects households' and firms' demand for goods and services and in turn employment and inflation.[27]

Interbank lending edit

The Federal Reserve sets monetary policy by influencing the federal funds rate, which is the rate of interbank lending of reserve balances. The rate that banks charge each other for these loans is determined in the interbank market, and the Federal Reserve influences this rate through the "tools" of monetary policy described in the Tools section below. The federal funds rate is a short-term interest rate that the FOMC focuses on, which affects the longer-term interest rates throughout the economy. The Federal Reserve explained the implementation of its monetary policy in 2021:

The FOMC has the ability to influence the federal funds rate–and thus the cost of short-term interbank credit–by changing the rate of interest the Fed pays on reserve balances that banks hold at the Fed. A bank is unlikely to lend to another bank (or to any of its customers) at an interest rate lower than the rate that the bank can earn on reserve balances held at the Fed. And because overall reserve balances are currently abundant, if a bank wants to borrow reserve balances, it likely will be able to do so without having to pay a rate much above the rate of interest paid by the Fed.[27]

Changes in the target for the federal funds rate affect overall financial conditions through various channels, including subsequent changes in the market interest rates that commercial banks and other lenders charge on short-term and longer-term loans, and changes in asset prices and in currency exchange rates, which again affects private consumption, investment and net export. By easening or tightening the stance of monetary policy, i.e. lowering or raising its target for the federal funds rate, the Fed can either spur or restrain growth in the overall US demand for goods and services.[27]

Tools edit

There are four main tools of monetary policy that the Federal Reserve uses to implement its monetary policy:[84][85]


Tool Description
Interest on reserve balances (IORB) Interest paid on funds that banks hold in their reserve balance accounts at their Federal Reserve Bank.[86] IORB is the primary tool for moving the federal funds rate within the target range.[84]
Overnight reverse repurchase agreement (ON RRP) facility The Fed’s standing offer to many large nonbank financial institutions to deposit funds at the Fed and earn interest. Acts as a supplementary tool for moving the FFR within the target range.[84]
Open market operations Purchases and sales of U.S. Treasury and federal agency securities. Used to maintain an ample supply of reserves.[84]
Discount window The Fed's lending to banks at the discount rate.[87] Helps put a ceiling on the FFR.[84]

Federal funds rate edit

 

The Federal Reserve System implements monetary policy largely by targeting the federal funds rate. This is the interest rate that banks charge each other for overnight loans of federal funds, which are the reserves held by banks at the Fed. This rate is actually determined by the market and is not explicitly mandated by the Fed. The Fed therefore tries to align the effective federal funds rate with the targeted rate, mainly by adjusting its IORB rate.[88] The Federal Reserve System usually adjusts the federal funds rate target by 0.25% or 0.50% at a time.

Interest on reserve balances edit

The interest on reserve balances (IORB) is the interest that the Fed pays on funds held by commercial banks in their reserve balance accounts at the individual Federal Reserve System banks. It is an administrated interest rate (i.e. set directly by the Fed as opposed to a market interest rate which is determined by the forces of supply and demand).[88] As banks are unlikely to lend their reserves in the FFR market for less than they get paid by the Fed, the IORB guides the effective FFR and is used as the primary tool of the Fed's monetary policy.[89][88]

Open market operations edit

Open market operations are done through the sale and purchase of United States Treasury security, sometimes called "Treasury bills" or more informally "T-bills" or "Treasuries". The Federal Reserve buys Treasury bills from its primary dealers, which have accounts at depository institutions.[90]

The Federal Reserve's objective for open market operations has varied over the years. During the 1980s, the focus gradually shifted toward attaining a specified level of the federal funds rate (the rate that banks charge each other for overnight loans of federal funds, which are the reserves held by banks at the Fed), a process that was largely complete by the end of the decade.[91]

Until the 2007–2008 financial crisis, the Fed used open market operations as its primary tool to adjust the supply of reserve balances in order to keep the federal funds rate around the Fed's target.[92] This regime is also known as a limited reserves regime.[89] After the financial crisis, the Federal Reserve has adopted a so-called ample reserves regime where open market operations leading to modest changes in the supply of reserves are no longer effective in influencing the FFR. Instead the Fed uses its administered rates, in particular the IORB rate, to influence the FFR.[89][88] However, open market operations are still an important maintenance tool in the overall framework of the conduct of monetary policy as they are used for ensuring that reserves remain ample.[89]

Repurchase agreements edit

To smooth temporary or cyclical changes in the money supply, the desk engages in repurchase agreements (repos) with its primary dealers. Repos are essentially secured, short-term lending by the Fed. On the day of the transaction, the Fed deposits money in a primary dealer's reserve account, and receives the promised securities as collateral. When the transaction matures, the process unwinds: the Fed returns the collateral and charges the primary dealer's reserve account for the principal and accrued interest. The term of the repo (the time between settlement and maturity) can vary from 1 day (called an overnight repo) to 65 days.[93]

Discount window and discount rate edit

The Federal Reserve System also directly sets the discount rate, which is the interest rate for "discount window lending", overnight loans that member banks borrow directly from the Fed. This rate is generally set at a rate close to 100 basis points above the target federal funds rate. The idea is to encourage banks to seek alternative funding before using the "discount rate" option.[94] The equivalent operation by the European Central Bank is referred to as the "marginal lending facility".[95]

Both the discount rate and the federal funds rate influence the prime rate, which is usually about 3 percentage points higher than the federal funds rate.

Term Deposit facility edit

The Term Deposit facility is a program through which the Federal Reserve Banks offer interest-bearing term deposits to eligible institutions.[96] It is intended to facilitate the implementation of monetary policy by providing a tool by which the Federal Reserve can manage the aggregate quantity of reserve balances held by depository institutions. Funds placed in term deposits are removed from the accounts of participating institutions for the life of the term deposit and thus drain reserve balances from the banking system. The program was announced December 9, 2009, and approved April 30, 2010, with an effective date of June 4, 2010.[97] Fed Chair Ben S. Bernanke, testifying before the House Committee on Financial Services, stated that the Term Deposit Facility would be used to reverse the expansion of credit during the Great Recession, by drawing funds out of the money markets into the Federal Reserve Banks.[98] It would therefore result in increased market interest rates, acting as a brake on economic activity and inflation.[99] The Federal Reserve authorized up to five "small-value offerings" in 2010 as a pilot program.[100] After three of the offering auctions were successfully completed, it was announced that small-value auctions would continue on an ongoing basis.[101]

Quantitative Easing (QE) policy edit

A little-used tool of the Federal Reserve is the quantitative easing policy.[102] Under that policy, the Federal Reserve buys back corporate bonds and mortgage backed securities held by banks or other financial institutions. This in effect puts money back into the financial institutions and allows them to make loans and conduct normal business. The bursting of the United States housing bubble prompted the Fed to buy mortgage-backed securities for the first time in November 2008. Over six weeks, a total of $1.25 trillion were purchased in order to stabilize the housing market, about one-fifth of all U.S. government-backed mortgages.[103]

Expired policy tools edit

Reserve requirements edit

An instrument of monetary policy adjustment historically employed by the Federal Reserve System was the fractional reserve requirement, also known as the required reserve ratio.[104] The required reserve ratio set the balance that the Federal Reserve System required a depository institution to hold in the Federal Reserve Banks.[105] The required reserve ratio was set by the board of governors of the Federal Reserve System.[106] The reserve requirements have changed over time and some history of these changes is published by the Federal Reserve.[107]

As a response to the financial crisis of 2008, the Federal Reserve started making interest payments on depository institutions' required and excess reserve balances. The payment of interest on excess reserves gave the central bank greater opportunity to address credit market conditions while maintaining the federal funds rate close to the target rate set by the FOMC.[108] The reserve requirement did not play a significant role in the post-2008 interest-on-excess-reserves regime,[109] and in March 2020, the reserve ratio was set to zero for all banks, which meant that no bank was required to hold any reserves, and hence the reserve requirement effectively ceased to exist.[1]

Temporary policy tools during the financial crisis edit

In order to address problems related to the subprime mortgage crisis and United States housing bubble, several new tools were created. The first new tool, called the Term auction facility, was added on December 12, 2007. It was announced as a temporary tool,[110] but remained in place for a prolonged period of time.[111] Creation of the second new tool, called the Term Securities Lending Facility, was announced on March 11, 2008.[112] The main difference between these two facilities was that the Term auction Facility was used to inject cash into the banking system whereas the Term securities Lending Facility was used to inject treasury securities into the banking system.[113] Creation of the third tool, called the Primary Dealer Credit Facility (PDCF), was announced on March 16, 2008.[114] The PDCF was a fundamental change in Federal Reserve policy because it enabled the Fed to lend directly to primary dealers, which was previously against Fed policy.[115] The differences between these three facilities was described by the Federal Reserve:[116]

The Term auction Facility program offers term funding to depository institutions via a bi-weekly auction, for fixed amounts of credit. The Term securities Lending Facility will be an auction for a fixed amount of lending of Treasury general collateral in exchange for OMO-eligible and AAA/Aaa rated private-label residential mortgage-backed securities. The Primary Dealer Credit Facility now allows eligible primary dealers to borrow at the existing Discount Rate for up to 120 days.

Some measures taken by the Federal Reserve to address the financial crisis had not been used since the Great Depression.[117]

Term auction facility edit

The Term auction Facility was a program in which the Federal Reserve auctioned term funds to depository institutions.[110] The creation of this facility was announced by the Federal Reserve on December 12, 2007, and was done in conjunction with the Bank of Canada, the Bank of England, the European Central Bank, and the Swiss National Bank to address elevated pressures in short-term funding markets.[118] The reason it was created was that banks were not lending funds to one another and banks in need of funds were refusing to go to the discount window. Banks were not lending money to each other because there was a fear that the loans would not be paid back. Banks refused to go to the discount window because it was usually associated with the stigma of bank failure.[119][120][121][122] Under the Term auction Facility, the identity of the banks in need of funds was protected in order to avoid the stigma of bank failure.[123] Foreign exchange swap lines with the European Central Bank and Swiss National Bank were opened so the banks in Europe could have access to U.S. dollars.[123] The final Term Auction Facility auction was carried out on March 8, 2010.[124]

Term securities lending facility edit

The Term securities Lending Facility was a 28-day facility that offered Treasury general collateral to the Federal Reserve Bank of New York's primary dealers in exchange for other program-eligible collateral. It was intended to promote liquidity in the financing markets for Treasury and other collateral and thus to foster the functioning of financial markets more generally.[125] Like the Term auction Facility, the TSLF was done in conjunction with the Bank of Canada, the Bank of England, the European Central Bank, and the Swiss National Bank. The resource allowed dealers to switch debt that was less liquid for U.S. government securities that were easily tradable. The currency swap lines with the European Central Bank and Swiss National Bank were increased. The TSLF was closed on February 1, 2010.[126]

Primary dealer credit facility edit

The Primary Dealer Credit Facility (PDCF) was an overnight loan facility that provided funding to primary dealers in exchange for a specified range of eligible collateral and was intended to foster the functioning of financial markets more generally.[116] It ceased extending credit on March 31, 2021.[127]

Asset Backed Commercial Paper Money Market Mutual Fund Liquidity Facility edit

The Asset Backed Commercial Paper Money Market Mutual Fund Liquidity Facility (ABCPMMMFLF) was also called the AMLF. The Facility began operations on September 22, 2008, and was closed on February 1, 2010.[128]

All U.S. depository institutions, bank holding companies (parent companies or U.S. broker-dealer affiliates), or U.S. branches and agencies of foreign banks were eligible to borrow under this facility pursuant to the discretion of the FRBB.

Collateral eligible for pledge under the Facility was required to meet the following criteria:

  • was purchased by Borrower on or after September 19, 2008 from a registered investment company that held itself out as a money market mutual fund;
  • was purchased by Borrower at the Fund's acquisition cost as adjusted for amortization of premium or accretion of discount on the ABCP through the date of its purchase by Borrower;
  • was rated at the time pledged to FRBB, not lower than A1, F1, or P1 by at least two major rating agencies or, if rated by only one major rating agency, the ABCP must have been rated within the top rating category by that agency;
  • was issued by an entity organized under the laws of the United States or a political subdivision thereof under a program that was in existence on September 18, 2008; and
  • had stated maturity that did not exceed 120 days if the Borrower was a bank or 270 days for non-bank Borrowers.
Commercial Paper Funding Facility edit

On October 7, 2008, the Federal Reserve further expanded the collateral it would loan against to include commercial paper using the Commercial Paper Funding Facility (CPFF). The action made the Fed a crucial source of credit for non-financial businesses in addition to commercial banks and investment firms. Fed officials said they would buy as much of the debt as necessary to get the market functioning again. They refused to say how much that might be, but they noted that around $1.3 trillion worth of commercial paper would qualify. There was $1.61 trillion in outstanding commercial paper, seasonally adjusted, on the market as of 1 October 2008, according to the most recent data from the Fed. That was down from $1.70 trillion in the previous week. Since the summer of 2007, the market had shrunk from more than $2.2 trillion.[129][130] This program lent out a total $738 billion before it was closed. Forty-five out of 81 of the companies participating in this program were foreign firms. Research shows that Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP) recipients were twice as likely to participate in the program than other commercial paper issuers who did not take advantage of the TARP bailout. The Fed incurred no losses from the CPFF.[131]

History edit

Timeline of central banking in the United States
Dates System
1782–1791 Bank of North America (de facto, under the Confederation Congress)
1791–1811 First Bank of the United States
1811–1816 No central bank
1816–1836 Second Bank of the United States
1837–1862 Free Banking Era
1846–1921 Independent Treasury System
1863–1913 National Banks
1913–present Federal Reserve System
Sources:[132]

Central banking in the United States, 1791–1913 edit

The first attempt at a national currency was during the American Revolutionary War. In 1775, the Continental Congress, as well as the states, began issuing paper currency, calling the bills "Continentals".[133] The Continentals were backed only by future tax revenue, and were used to help finance the Revolutionary War. Overprinting, as well as British counterfeiting, caused the value of the Continental to diminish quickly. This experience with paper money led the United States to strip the power to issue Bills of Credit (paper money) from a draft of the new Constitution on August 16, 1787,[134] as well as banning such issuance by the various states, and limiting the states' ability to make anything but gold or silver coin legal tender on August 28.[135]

In 1791, the government granted the First Bank of the United States a charter to operate as the U.S. central bank until 1811.[136] The First Bank of the United States came to an end under President Madison when Congress refused to renew its charter. The Second Bank of the United States was established in 1816, and lost its authority to be the central bank of the U.S. twenty years later under President Jackson when its charter expired. Both banks were based upon the Bank of England.[137] Ultimately, a third national bank, known as the Federal Reserve, was established in 1913 and still exists to this day.

First Central Bank, 1791 and Second Central Bank, 1816 edit

The first U.S. institution with central banking responsibilities was the First Bank of the United States, chartered by Congress and signed into law by President George Washington on February 25, 1791, at the urging of Alexander Hamilton. This was done despite strong opposition from Thomas Jefferson and James Madison, among numerous others. The charter was for twenty years and expired in 1811 under President Madison, when Congress refused to renew it.[138]

In 1816, however, Madison revived it in the form of the Second Bank of the United States. Years later, early renewal of the bank's charter became the primary issue in the reelection of President Andrew Jackson. After Jackson, who was opposed to the central bank, was reelected, he pulled the government's funds out of the bank. Jackson was the only President to completely pay off the national debt[139] but his efforts to close the bank contributed to the Panic of 1837. The bank's charter was not renewed in 1836, and it would fully dissolve after several years as a private corporation. From 1837 to 1862, in the Free Banking Era there was no formal central bank. From 1846 to 1921, an Independent Treasury System ruled. From 1863 to 1913, a system of national banks was instituted by the 1863 National Banking Act during which series of bank panics, in 1873, 1893, and 1907 occurred.[8][9][10]

Creation of Third Central Bank, 1907–1913 edit

The main motivation for the third central banking system came from the Panic of 1907, which caused a renewed desire among legislators, economists, and bankers for an overhaul of the monetary system.[8][9][10][140] During the last quarter of the 19th century and the beginning of the 20th century, the United States economy went through a series of financial panics.[141] According to many economists, the previous national banking system had two main weaknesses: an inelastic currency and a lack of liquidity.[141] In 1908, Congress enacted the Aldrich–Vreeland Act, which provided for an emergency currency and established the National Monetary Commission to study banking and currency reform.[142] The National Monetary Commission returned with recommendations which were repeatedly rejected by Congress. A revision crafted during a secret meeting on Jekyll Island by Senator Aldrich and representatives of the nation's top finance and industrial groups later became the basis of the Federal Reserve Act.[143] The House voted on December 22, 1913, with 298 voting yes to 60 voting no. The Senate voted 43–25 on December 23, 1913.[144] President Woodrow Wilson signed the bill later that day.[145]

Federal Reserve Act, 1913 edit
 
Newspaper clipping, December 24, 1913

The head of the bipartisan National Monetary Commission was financial expert and Senate Republican leader Nelson Aldrich. Aldrich set up two commissions – one to study the American monetary system in depth and the other, headed by Aldrich himself, to study the European central banking systems and report on them.[142]

In early November 1910, Aldrich met with five well known members of the New York banking community to devise a central banking bill. Paul Warburg, an attendee of the meeting and longtime advocate of central banking in the U.S., later wrote that Aldrich was "bewildered at all that he had absorbed abroad and he was faced with the difficult task of writing a highly technical bill while being harassed by the daily grind of his parliamentary duties".[146] After ten days of deliberation, the bill, which would later be referred to as the "Aldrich Plan", was agreed upon. It had several key components, including a central bank with a Washington-based headquarters and fifteen branches located throughout the U.S. in geographically strategic locations, and a uniform elastic currency based on gold and commercial paper. Aldrich believed a central banking system with no political involvement was best, but was convinced by Warburg that a plan with no public control was not politically feasible.[146] The compromise involved representation of the public sector on the board of directors.[147]

Aldrich's bill met much opposition from politicians. Critics charged Aldrich of being biased due to his close ties to wealthy bankers such as J. P. Morgan and John D. Rockefeller Jr., Aldrich's son-in-law. Most Republicans favored the Aldrich Plan,[147] but it lacked enough support in Congress to pass because rural and western states viewed it as favoring the "eastern establishment".[5][148] In contrast, progressive Democrats favored a reserve system owned and operated by the government; they believed that public ownership of the central bank would end Wall Street's control of the American currency supply.[147] Conservative Democrats fought for a privately owned, yet decentralized, reserve system, which would still be free of Wall Street's control.[147]

The original Aldrich Plan was dealt a fatal blow in 1912, when Democrats won the White House and Congress.[146] Nonetheless, President Woodrow Wilson believed that the Aldrich plan would suffice with a few modifications. The plan became the basis for the Federal Reserve Act, which was proposed by Senator Robert Owen in May 1913. The primary difference between the two bills was the transfer of control of the board of directors (called the Federal Open Market Committee in the Federal Reserve Act) to the government.[5][138] The bill passed Congress on December 23, 1913,[149] on a mostly partisan basis, with most Democrats voting "yea" and most Republicans voting "nay".[138]

Federal Reserve era, 1913–present edit

Key laws affecting the Federal Reserve have been:[150]

Measurement of economic variables edit

The Federal Reserve records and publishes large amounts of data. A few websites where data is published are at the board of governors' Economic Data and Research page,[151] the board of governors' statistical releases and historical data page,[152] and at the St. Louis Fed's FRED (Federal Reserve Economic Data) page.[153] The Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) examines many economic indicators prior to determining monetary policy.[154]

Some criticism involves economic data compiled by the Fed. The Fed sponsors much of the monetary economics research in the U.S., and Lawrence H. White objects that this makes it less likely for researchers to publish findings challenging the status quo.[155]

Net worth of households and nonprofit organizations edit

 
Total Net Worth‍—‌Balance Sheet of Households and Nonprofit Organizations 1949–2012

The net worth of households and nonprofit organizations in the United States is published by the Federal Reserve in a report titled Flow of Funds.[156] At the end of the third quarter of fiscal year 2012, this value was $64.8 trillion. At the end of the first quarter of fiscal year 2014, this value was $95.5 trillion.[157]

Money supply edit

The most common measures are named M0 (narrowest), M1, M2, and M3. In the United States they are defined by the Federal Reserve as follows:

Measure Definition
M0 The total of all physical currency, plus accounts at the central bank that can be exchanged for physical currency.
M1 M0 + those portions of M0 held as reserves or vault cash + the amount in demand accounts ("checking" or "current" accounts).
M2 M1 + most savings accounts, money market accounts, and small denomination time deposits (certificates of deposit of under $100,000).
M3 M2 + all other CDs, deposits of eurodollars and repurchase agreements.
 

The Federal Reserve stopped publishing M3 statistics in March 2006, saying that the data cost a lot to collect but did not provide significantly useful information.[158] The other three money supply measures continue to be provided in detail.

 
  M2 money supply increases Year/Year

Personal consumption expenditures price index edit

The Personal consumption expenditures price index, also referred to as simply the PCE price index, is used as one measure of the value of money. It is a United States-wide indicator of the average increase in prices for all domestic personal consumption. Using a variety of data including United States Consumer Price Index and U.S. Producer Price Index prices, it is derived from the largest component of the gross domestic product in the BEA's National Income and Product Accounts, personal consumption expenditures.

One of the Fed's main roles is to maintain price stability, which means that the Fed's ability to keep a low inflation rate is a long-term measure of their success.[159] Although the Fed is not required to maintain inflation within a specific range, their long run target for the growth of the PCE price index is between 1.5 and 2 percent.[160] There has been debate among policy makers as to whether the Federal Reserve should have a specific inflation targeting policy.[161]

Inflation and the economy edit

Most mainstream economists favor a low, steady rate of inflation.[162] Chief economist, and advisor to the Federal Reserve, the Congressional Budget Office and the Council of Economic Advisers,[163][164] Diane C. Swonk observed, in 2022, that "From the Fed's perspective, you have to remember inflation is kind of like cancer. If you don't deal with it now with something that may be painful, you could have something that metastasized and becomes much more chronic later on."[165]

Low (as opposed to zero or negative) inflation may reduce the severity of economic recessions by enabling the labor market to adjust more quickly in a downturn, and reduce the risk that a liquidity trap prevents monetary policy from stabilizing the economy.[166] The task of keeping the rate of inflation low and stable is usually given to monetary authorities.

Unemployment rate edit

 
United States unemployment rates 1975–2010 showing variance between the fifty states

One of the stated goals of monetary policy is maximum employment. The unemployment rate statistics are collected by the Bureau of Labor Statistics, and like the PCE price index are used as a barometer of the nation's economic health.

Budget edit

The Federal Reserve is self-funded. Over 90 percent of Fed revenues come from open market operations, specifically the interest on the portfolio of Treasury securities as well as "capital gains/losses" that may arise from the buying/selling of the securities and their derivatives as part of Open Market Operations. The balance of revenues come from sales of financial services (check and electronic payment processing) and discount window loans.[167] The board of governors (Federal Reserve Board) creates a budget report once per year for Congress. There are two reports with budget information. The one that lists the complete balance statements with income and expenses, as well as the net profit or loss, is the large report simply titled, "Annual Report". It also includes data about employment throughout the system. The other report, which explains in more detail the expenses of the different aspects of the whole system, is called "Annual Report: Budget Review". These detailed comprehensive reports can be found at the board of governors' website under the section "Reports to Congress"[168]

Remittance payments to the Treasury edit

 
Federal Reserve remittances to the U.S. Treasury (annually)
 
Federal Reserve Remittances to the Treasury (weekly)

The Federal Reserve has been remitting interest that it has been receiving back to the United States Treasury. Most of the assets the Fed holds are U.S. Treasury bonds and mortgage-backed securities that it has been purchasing as part of quantitative easing since the 2007–2008 financial crisis. In 2022 the Fed started quantitative tightening (QT) and selling these assets and taking a loss on them in the secondary bond market. As a result, the nearly $100 billion that it was remitting annually to the Treasury, is expected to be discontinued during QT.[169][170]

Balance sheet edit

 
Federal reserve assets held
  Other assets
 
Total combined assets for all 12 Federal Reserve Banks, 2007–2009
 
Total combined liabilities for all 12 Federal Reserve Banks, 2007–2009

One of the keys to understanding the Federal Reserve is the Federal Reserve balance sheet (or balance statement). In accordance with Section 11 of the Federal Reserve Act, the board of governors of the Federal Reserve System publishes once each week the "Consolidated Statement of Condition of All Federal Reserve Banks" showing the condition of each Federal Reserve bank and a consolidated statement for all Federal Reserve banks. The board of governors requires that excess earnings of the Reserve Banks be transferred to the Treasury as interest on Federal Reserve notes.[171]

The Federal Reserve releases its balance sheet every Thursday.[172] Below is the balance sheet as of 8 April 2021 (in billions of dollars):

ASSETS:
Gold Stock   11.04
Special Drawing Rights Certificate Acct.   5.20
Treasury Currency Outstanding (Coin)   1.46
Securities, unamortized premiums and discounts, repurchase agreements, and loans   7550.43
   Securities Held Outright   7146.06
      U.S. Treasury Securities   4959.03
         Bills   326.04
         Notes and Bonds, nominal   4251.66
         Notes and Bonds, inflation-indexed   334.76
         Inflation Compensation   46.57
      Federal Agency Debt Securities   2.35
      Mortgage-Backed Securities   2184.68
Unamortized premiums on securities held outright   351.11
Unamortized discounts on securities held outright   -9.56
Repurchase Agreements   0
Loans   62.81
Net portfolio holdings of Commercial Paper Funding Facility II LLC   8.56
Net portfolio holdings of Corporate Credit Facilities LLC   25.94
Net portfolio holdings of MS Facilities LLC (Main Street Lending Program)   30.96
Net portfolio holdings of Municipal Liquidity Facility LLC   11.41
Net portfolio holdings of TALF II LLC   5.28
Items in process of collection   0.04
Bank premises   1.91
Central bank liquidity swaps   0.87
Foreign currency denominated assets   21.37
Other Assets   34.42
Total Assets   7708.88
LIABILITIES:
Federal Reserve notes, net of F.R. Bank holdings   2101.19
Reverse repurchase agreements   272.07
Deposits   5234.02
   Term deposits held by depository institutions   0
   Other deposits held by depository institutions   3944.06
   U.S. Treasury, general account   954.97
   Foreign official   32.25
   Other Deposits   302.74
Deferred availability cash items   0.15
Treasury contributions to credit facilities   51.78
Other liabilities and accrued dividends   10.40
Total liabilities   7669.62
CAPITAL (AKA Net Equity)
Capital Paid In   32.48
Surplus   6.79
Other Capital   0
Total Capital   39.27
MEMO (off-balance-sheet items)
Marketable securities held in custody for foreign official and international accounts   3548.94
Marketable   U.S. Treasury Securities   3114.90
Federal agency debt and mortgage-backed securities   346.41
Other securities   87.62
Securities lent to dealers   40.45
   Overnight   40.45
U.S. Treasury securities   40.45
Federal agency debt securities   0

In addition, the balance sheet also indicates which assets are held as collateral against Federal Reserve Notes.

Federal Reserve Notes and Collateral
Federal Reserve Notes Outstanding   2255.55
   Less: Notes held by F.R. Banks   154.35
   Federal Reserve notes to be collateralized   2101.19
Collateral held against Federal Reserve notes   2101.19
   Gold certificate account   11.04
   Special drawing rights certificate account   5.20
   U.S. Treasury, agency debt, and mortgage-backed securities pledged   2084.96
   Other assets pledged   0

Criticism edit

 
   10 Year Treasury Bond
   2 Year Treasury Bond
   3 month Treasury Bond
   Effective Federal Funds Rate
   CPI inflation year/year
  Recessions

The Federal Reserve System has faced various criticisms since its inception in 1913. Criticisms include lack of transparency and claims that it is ineffective.[173]

 
Money supply decreased significantly between Black Tuesday and the Bank Holiday in March 1933 when there were massive bank runs across the United States

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b "Reserve Requirements". Federal Reserve System. Retrieved May 10, 2020.
  2. ^ "The Federal Reserve Bank Discount Window & Payment System Risk Website". Federal Reserve System. Retrieved July 26, 2023.
  3. ^ "Open Market Operations Archive". Federal Reserve System. Retrieved July 26, 2023.
  4. ^ "Interest on Required Reserve Balances and Excess Balances". Federal Reserve System. Retrieved July 26, 2023.
  5. ^ a b c . The Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. August 1988. Archived from the original on May 16, 2008.
  6. ^ a b c BoG 2006, pp. 1 "Just before the founding of the Federal Reserve, the nation was plagued with financial crises. At times, these crises led to 'panics,' in which people raced to their banks to withdraw their deposits. A particularly severe panic in 1907 resulted in bank runs that wreaked havoc on the fragile banking system and ultimately led Congress in 1913 to write the Federal Reserve Act. Initially created to address these banking panics, the Federal Reserve is now charged with a number of broader responsibilities, including fostering a sound banking system and a healthy economy."
  7. ^ BoG 2005, pp. 1–2
  8. ^ a b c "Panic of 1907: J.P. Morgan Saves the Day". US-history.com. Retrieved December 6, 2014.
  9. ^ a b c "Born of a Panic: Forming the Fed System". The Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Retrieved December 6, 2014.
  10. ^ a b c Abigail Tucker (October 29, 2008). "The Financial Panic of 1907: Running from History". Smithsonian Magazine. Retrieved December 6, 2014.
  11. ^ BoG 2005, pp. 1 "It was founded by Congress in 1913 to provide the nation with a safer, more flexible, and more stable monetary and financial system. Over the years, its role in banking and the economy has expanded."; Patrick, Sue C. (1993). Reform of the Federal Reserve System in the Early 1930s: The Politics of Money and Banking. Garland. ISBN 978-0-8153-0970-3.
  12. ^ 12 U.S.C. § 225a
  13. ^ . Federalreserve.gov. January 25, 2012. Archived from the original on January 26, 2012. Retrieved April 30, 2012. The Congress established two key objectives for monetary policy—maximum employment and stable prices—in the Federal Reserve Act. These objectives are sometimes referred to as the Federal Reserve's dual mandate.
  14. ^ a b "FRB: Mission". Federalreserve.gov. November 6, 2009. Retrieved October 29, 2011.
  15. ^ BoG 2005, pp. v (See structure); "Federal Reserve Districts". Federal Reserve Online. n.d. Retrieved August 29, 2011.; . Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System. Archived from the original on April 13, 2015.
  16. ^ "FAQ – Who owns the Federal Reserve?". Federal Reserve website. Retrieved December 1, 2015.
  17. ^ Lapidos, Juliet (September 19, 2008). "Is the Fed Private or Public?". Slate. Retrieved August 29, 2011.
  18. ^ Toma, Mark (February 1, 2010). . EH. Net Encyclopedia. Economic History Association. Archived from the original on May 13, 2011. Retrieved February 27, 2011.
  19. ^ "Federal Reserve System". eh.net.
  20. ^ "Who owns the Federal Reserve Bank?". FactCheck. March 31, 2008. Retrieved February 26, 2014.
  21. ^ . US Dept of Treasury website. August 24, 2011. Archived from the original on December 3, 2010. Retrieved August 29, 2011.
  22. ^ a b "Press Release – Federal Reserve Board announces Reserve Bank income and expense data and transfers to the Treasury for 2015". Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System. January 11, 2016. Retrieved March 12, 2016.
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Bundled references edit

Bibliography edit

Recent edit

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Historical edit

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  • Marrs, Jim (2000). "Secrets of Money and the Federal Reserve System". Rule by Secrecy: 64–78.
  • Mayhew, Anne. "Ideology and the Great Depression: Monetary History Rewritten". Journal of Economic Issues 17 (June 1983): 353–360.
  • Meltzer, Allan H. (2004). A History of the Federal Reserve, Volume 1: 1913–1951. ISBN 978-0-226-51999-9. (cloth) and ISBN 978-0-226-52000-1 (paper).
  • Mullins, Eustace C. The Secrets of the Federal Reserve, 1952. John McLaughlin. ISBN 0-9656492-1-0.
  • Roberts, Priscilla. 'Quis Custodiet Ipsos Custodes?' The Federal Reserve System's Founding Fathers and Allied Finances in the First World War", Business History Review (1998) 72: 585–603.
  • Rothbard, Murray (2007). The Case Against the Fed. Ludwig von Mises Institute. ISBN 978-1467934893.
  • Shull, Bernard. "The Fourth Branch: The Federal Reserve's Unlikely Rise to Power and Influence" (2005) ISBN 1-56720-624-7.
  • Steindl, Frank G. Monetary Interpretations of the Great Depression. (1995).
  • Temin, Peter (1976). Did Monetary Forces Cause the Great Depression?. W. W. Norton & Company. ISBN 978-0393092097.
  • Wells, Donald R. The Federal Reserve System: A History (2004)
  • West, Robert Craig. Banking Reform and the Federal Reserve, 1863–1923 (1977).
  • Wicker, Elmus. "A Reconsideration of Federal Reserve Policy during the 1920–1921 Depression", Journal of Economic History (1966) 26: 223–238.
    • Wicker, Elmus. Federal Reserve Monetary Policy, 1917–33. (1966).
    • Wicker, Elmus. The Great Debate on Banking Reform: Nelson Aldrich and the Origins of the Fed Ohio State University Press, 2005.
  • Wood, John H. A History of Central Banking in Great Britain and the United States (2005)
  • Wueschner, Silvano A. Charting Twentieth-Century Monetary Policy: Herbert Hoover and Benjamin Strong, 1917–1927. Greenwood Press (1999).

Further reading edit

  • Smialek, Jeanna (2023). Limitless: The Federal Reserve Takes on a New Age of Crisis. New York: Alfred A. Knopf. ISBN 9780593320235. OCLC 1322058230.

External links edit

  • Official website  
  • Federal Reserve System in the Federal Register
  • Records of the Federal Reserve System in the National Archives (Record Group 82)

federal, reserve, redirects, here, welsh, trade, union, south, wales, miners, federation, other, uses, disambiguation, system, often, shortened, simply, central, banking, system, united, states, created, december, 1913, with, enactment, after, series, financia. The Fed redirects here For the Welsh trade union see South Wales Miners Federation For other uses see The Fed disambiguation The Federal Reserve System often shortened to the Federal Reserve or simply the Fed is the central banking system of the United States It was created on December 23 1913 with the enactment of the Federal Reserve Act after a series of financial panics particularly the panic of 1907 led to the desire for central control of the monetary system in order to alleviate financial crises list 1 Over the years events such as the Great Depression in the 1930s and the Great Recession during the 2000s have led to the expansion of the roles and responsibilities of the Federal Reserve System 6 11 Federal Reserve SystemSeal of the Federal Reserve SystemFlag of the Federal Reserve SystemThe Eccles Building in Washington D C which serves as the Federal Reserve System s headquartersHeadquartersEccles Building Washington D C U S EstablishedDecember 23 1913 110 years ago 1913 12 23 Governing bodyBoard of GovernorsKey peopleJerome Powell Chair Philip Jefferson Vice Chair Michael Barr Vice Chair for Supervision Central bank ofUnited StatesCurrencyUnited States dollarUSD ISO 4217 Reserve requirementsNone 1 Bank rate5 5 2 Interest rate target5 25 5 50 3 Interest on reserves5 40 4 Interest paid on excess reserves YesWebsitewww wbr federalreserve wbr govFederal ReserveAgency overviewJurisdictionFederal government of the United StatesChild agencyFederal Open Market CommitteeKey documentFederal Reserve ActCongress established three key objectives for monetary policy in the Federal Reserve Act maximizing employment stabilizing prices and moderating long term interest rates 12 The first two objectives are sometimes referred to as the Federal Reserve s dual mandate 13 Its duties have expanded over the years and currently also include supervising and regulating banks maintaining the stability of the financial system and providing financial services to depository institutions the U S government and foreign official institutions 14 The Fed also conducts research into the economy and provides numerous publications such as the Beige Book and the FRED database The Federal Reserve System is composed of several layers It is governed by the presidentially appointed board of governors or Federal Reserve Board FRB Twelve regional Federal Reserve Banks located in cities throughout the nation regulate and oversee privately owned commercial banks 15 Nationally chartered commercial banks are required to hold stock in and can elect some board members of the Federal Reserve Bank of their region The Federal Open Market Committee FOMC sets monetary policy by adjusting the target for the federal funds rate which influences market interest rates generally and via the monetary transmission mechanism in turn US economic activity The FOMC consists of all seven members of the board of governors and the twelve regional Federal Reserve Bank presidents though only five bank presidents vote at a time the president of the New York Fed and four others who rotate through one year voting terms There are also various advisory councils list 2 It has a structure unique among central banks and is also unusual in that the United States Department of the Treasury an entity outside of the central bank prints the currency used 21 The federal government sets the salaries of the board s seven governors and it receives all the system s annual profits after dividends on member banks capital investments are paid and an account surplus is maintained In 2015 the Federal Reserve earned a net income of 100 2 billion and transferred 97 7 billion to the U S Treasury 22 and 2020 earnings were approximately 88 6 billion with remittances to the U S Treasury of 86 9 billion 23 Although an instrument of the U S government the Federal Reserve System considers itself an independent central bank because its monetary policy decisions do not have to be approved by the president or by anyone else in the executive or legislative branches of government it does not receive funding appropriated by Congress and the terms of the members of the board of governors span multiple presidential and congressional terms 24 Contents 1 Purpose 1 1 Addressing the problem of bank panics 1 1 1 Check clearing system 1 1 2 Lender of last resort 1 1 3 Fluctuations 1 2 Central bank 1 2 1 Federal funds 1 3 Bank regulation 1 3 1 Government regulation and supervision 1 3 1 1 Regulatory and oversight responsibilities 1 4 National payments system 2 Structure 2 1 Board of governors 2 1 1 List of members of the board of governors 2 1 2 Nominations confirmations and resignations 2 2 Federal Open Market Committee 2 3 Federal Advisory Council 2 4 Federal Reserve Banks 2 4 1 Legal status of regional Federal Reserve Banks 2 5 Member banks 2 6 Accountability 3 Monetary policy 3 1 Interbank lending 3 2 Tools 3 2 1 Federal funds rate 3 2 2 Interest on reserve balances 3 2 3 Open market operations 3 2 3 1 Repurchase agreements 3 2 4 Discount window and discount rate 3 2 5 Term Deposit facility 3 2 6 Quantitative Easing QE policy 3 2 7 Expired policy tools 3 2 7 1 Reserve requirements 3 2 7 2 Temporary policy tools during the financial crisis 3 2 7 3 Term auction facility 3 2 7 4 Term securities lending facility 3 2 7 5 Primary dealer credit facility 3 2 7 6 Asset Backed Commercial Paper Money Market Mutual Fund Liquidity Facility 3 2 7 7 Commercial Paper Funding Facility 4 History 4 1 Central banking in the United States 1791 1913 4 1 1 First Central Bank 1791 and Second Central Bank 1816 4 1 2 Creation of Third Central Bank 1907 1913 4 1 2 1 Federal Reserve Act 1913 4 2 Federal Reserve era 1913 present 5 Measurement of economic variables 5 1 Net worth of households and nonprofit organizations 5 2 Money supply 5 3 Personal consumption expenditures price index 5 3 1 Inflation and the economy 5 4 Unemployment rate 6 Budget 6 1 Remittance payments to the Treasury 7 Balance sheet 8 Criticism 9 See also 10 References 10 1 Bundled references 11 Bibliography 11 1 Recent 11 2 Historical 12 Further reading 13 External linksPurpose editThe primary declared motivation for creating the Federal Reserve System was to address banking panics 6 Other purposes are stated in the Federal Reserve Act such as to furnish an elastic currency to afford means of rediscounting commercial paper to establish a more effective supervision of banking in the United States and for other purposes 25 Before the founding of the Federal Reserve System the United States underwent several financial crises A particularly severe crisis in 1907 led Congress to enact the Federal Reserve Act in 1913 Today the Federal Reserve System has responsibilities in addition to stabilizing the financial system 26 Current functions of the Federal Reserve System include 14 26 To address the problem of banking panics To serve as the central bank for the United States To strike a balance between private interests of banks and the centralized responsibility of government To supervise and regulate banking institutions To protect the credit rights of consumers To conduct monetary policy by influencing market interest rates to achieve the sometimes conflicting goals of maximum employment stable prices interpreted as an inflation rate of 2 percent per year on average 27 moderate long term interest rates To maintain the stability of the financial system and contain systemic risk in financial markets To provide financial services to depository institutions the U S government and foreign official institutions including playing a major role in operating the nation s payments system To facilitate the exchange of payments among regions To respond to local liquidity needs To strengthen U S standing in the world economy nbsp Unemployment vs Inflation vs Inverted yield curve Unemployment rate Inflation CPI 10 year bond minus 2 year bond Inverted yield curveAddressing the problem of bank panics edit Further information Bank run and Fractional reserve banking Banking institutions in the United States are required to hold reserves amounts of currency and deposits in other banks equal to only a fraction of the amount of the bank s deposit liabilities owed to customers This practice is called fractional reserve banking As a result banks usually invest the majority of the funds received from depositors On rare occasions too many of the bank s customers will withdraw their savings and the bank will need help from another institution to continue operating this is called a bank run Bank runs can lead to a multitude of social and economic problems The Federal Reserve System was designed as an attempt to prevent or minimize the occurrence of bank runs and possibly act as a lender of last resort when a bank run does occur Many economists following Nobel laureate Milton Friedman believe that the Federal Reserve inappropriately refused to lend money to small banks during the bank runs of 1929 Friedman argued that this contributed to the Great Depression 28 Check clearing system edit Because some banks refused to clear checks from certain other banks during times of economic uncertainty a check clearing system was created in the Federal Reserve System It is briefly described in The Federal Reserve System Purposes and Functions as follows 29 By creating the Federal Reserve System Congress intended to eliminate the severe financial crises that had periodically swept the nation especially the sort of financial panic that occurred in 1907 During that episode payments were disrupted throughout the country because many banks and clearinghouses refused to clear checks drawn on certain other banks a practice that contributed to the failure of otherwise solvent banks To address these problems Congress gave the Federal Reserve System the authority to establish a nationwide check clearing system The System then was to provide not only an elastic currency that is a currency that would expand or shrink in amount as economic conditions warranted but also an efficient and equitable check collection system Lender of last resort edit In the United States the Federal Reserve serves as the lender of last resort to those institutions that cannot obtain credit elsewhere and the collapse of which would have serious implications for the economy It took over this role from the private sector clearing houses which operated during the Free Banking Era whether public or private the availability of liquidity was intended to prevent bank runs 30 Fluctuations edit Through its discount window and credit operations Reserve Banks provide liquidity to banks to meet short term needs stemming from seasonal fluctuations in deposits or unexpected withdrawals Longer term liquidity may also be provided in exceptional circumstances The rate the Fed charges banks for these loans is called the discount rate officially the primary credit rate By making these loans the Fed serves as a buffer against unexpected day to day fluctuations in reserve demand and supply This contributes to the effective functioning of the banking system alleviates pressure in the reserves market and reduces the extent of unexpected movements in the interest rates 31 For example on September 16 2008 the Federal Reserve Board authorized an 85 billion loan to stave off the bankruptcy of international insurance giant American International Group AIG 32 Central bank edit Further information Central bank nbsp Obverse of a Federal Reserve 1 note issued in 2009In its role as the central bank of the United States the Fed serves as a banker s bank and as the government s bank As the banker s bank it helps to assure the safety and efficiency of the payments system As the government s bank or fiscal agent the Fed processes a variety of financial transactions involving trillions of dollars Just as an individual might keep an account at a bank the U S Treasury keeps a checking account with the Federal Reserve through which incoming federal tax deposits and outgoing government payments are handled As part of this service relationship the Fed sells and redeems U S government securities such as savings bonds and Treasury bills notes and bonds It also issues the nation s coin and paper currency The U S Treasury through its Bureau of the Mint and Bureau of Engraving and Printing actually produces the nation s cash supply and in effect sells the paper currency to the Federal Reserve Banks at manufacturing cost and the coins at face value The Federal Reserve Banks then distribute it to other financial institutions in various ways 33 During the Fiscal Year 2020 the Bureau of Engraving and Printing delivered 57 95 billion notes at an average cost of 7 4 cents per note 34 35 Federal funds edit Main article Federal funds Federal funds are the reserve balances also called Federal Reserve Deposits that private banks keep at their local Federal Reserve Bank 36 These balances are the namesake reserves of the Federal Reserve System The purpose of keeping funds at a Federal Reserve Bank is to have a mechanism for private banks to lend funds to one another This market for funds plays an important role in the Federal Reserve System as it is what inspired the name of the system and it is what is used as the basis for monetary policy Monetary policy is put into effect partly by influencing how much interest the private banks charge each other for the lending of these funds Federal reserve accounts contain federal reserve credit which can be converted into federal reserve notes Private banks maintain their bank reserves in federal reserve accounts Bank regulation edit The Federal Reserve regulates private banks The system was designed out of a compromise between the competing philosophies of privatization and government regulation In 2006 Donald L Kohn vice chairman of the board of governors summarized the history of this compromise 37 Agrarian and progressive interests led by William Jennings Bryan favored a central bank under public rather than banker control But the vast majority of the nation s bankers concerned about government intervention in the banking business opposed a central bank structure directed by political appointees The legislation that Congress ultimately adopted in 1913 reflected a hard fought battle to balance these two competing views and created the hybrid public private centralized decentralized structure that we have today The balance between private interests and government can also be seen in the structure of the system Private banks elect members of the board of directors at their regional Federal Reserve Bank while the members of the board of governors are selected by the president of the United States and confirmed by the Senate Government regulation and supervision edit nbsp Ben Bernanke lower right former chairman of the Federal Reserve Board of Governors at a House Financial Services Committee hearing on February 10 2009 Members of the board frequently testify before congressional committees such as this one The Senate equivalent of the House Financial Services Committee is the Senate Committee on Banking Housing and Urban Affairs The Federal Banking Agency Audit Act enacted in 1978 as Public Law 95 320 and 31 U S C section 714 establish that the board of governors of the Federal Reserve System and the Federal Reserve banks may be audited by the Government Accountability Office GAO 38 The GAO has authority to audit check processing currency storage and shipments and some regulatory and bank examination functions however there are restrictions to what the GAO may audit Under the Federal Banking Agency Audit Act 31 U S C section 714 b audits of the Federal Reserve Board and Federal Reserve banks do not include 1 transactions for or with a foreign central bank or government or non private international financing organization 2 deliberations decisions or actions on monetary policy matters 3 transactions made under the direction of the Federal Open Market Committee or 4 a part of a discussion or communication among or between members of the board of governors and officers and employees of the Federal Reserve System related to items 1 2 or 3 See Federal Reserve System Audits Restrictions on GAO s Access GAO T GGD 94 44 statement of Charles A Bowsher 39 The board of governors in the Federal Reserve System has a number of supervisory and regulatory responsibilities in the U S banking system but not complete responsibility A general description of the types of regulation and supervision involved in the U S banking system is given by the Federal Reserve 40 The Board also plays a major role in the supervision and regulation of the U S banking system It has supervisory responsibilities for state chartered banks 41 that are members of the Federal Reserve System bank holding companies companies that control banks the foreign activities of member banks the U S activities of foreign banks and Edge Act and agreement corporations limited purpose institutions that engage in a foreign banking business The Board and under delegated authority the Federal Reserve Banks supervise approximately 900 state member banks and 5 000 bank holding companies Other federal agencies also serve as the primary federal supervisors of commercial banks the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency supervises national banks and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation supervises state banks that are not members of the Federal Reserve System Some regulations issued by the Board apply to the entire banking industry whereas others apply only to member banks that is state banks that have chosen to join the Federal Reserve System and national banks which by law must be members of the System The Board also issues regulations to carry out major federal laws governing consumer credit protection such as the Truth in Lending Equal Credit Opportunity and Home Mortgage Disclosure Acts Many of these consumer protection regulations apply to various lenders outside the banking industry as well as to banks Members of the Board of Governors are in continual contact with other policy makers in government They frequently testify before congressional committees on the economy monetary policy banking supervision and regulation consumer credit protection financial markets and other matters The Board has regular contact with members of the President s Council of Economic Advisers and other key economic officials The Chair also meets from time to time with the President of the United States and has regular meetings with the Secretary of the Treasury The Chair has formal responsibilities in the international arena as well Regulatory and oversight responsibilities edit The board of directors of each Federal Reserve Bank District also has regulatory and supervisory responsibilities If the board of directors of a district bank has judged that a member bank is performing or behaving poorly it will report this to the board of governors This policy is described in law Each Federal reserve bank shall keep itself informed of the general character and amount of the loans and investments of its member banks with a view to ascertaining whether undue use is being made of bank credit for the speculative carrying of or trading in securities real estate or commodities or for any other purpose inconsistent with the maintenance of sound credit conditions and in determining whether to grant or refuse advances rediscounts or other credit accommodations the Federal reserve bank shall give consideration to such information The chairman of the Federal reserve bank shall report to the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System any such undue use of bank credit by any member bank together with his recommendation Whenever in the judgment of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System any member bank is making such undue use of bank credit the Board may in its discretion after reasonable notice and an opportunity for a hearing suspend such bank from the use of the credit facilities of the Federal Reserve System and may terminate such suspension or may renew it from time to time 42 National payments system edit The Federal Reserve plays a role in the U S payments system The twelve Federal Reserve Banks provide banking services to depository institutions and to the federal government For depository institutions they maintain accounts and provide various payment services including collecting checks electronically transferring funds and distributing and receiving currency and coin For the federal government the Reserve Banks act as fiscal agents paying Treasury checks processing electronic payments and issuing transferring and redeeming U S government securities 43 In the Depository Institutions Deregulation and Monetary Control Act of 1980 Congress reaffirmed that the Federal Reserve should promote an efficient nationwide payments system The act subjects all depository institutions not just member commercial banks to reserve requirements and grants them equal access to Reserve Bank payment services The Federal Reserve plays a role in the nation s retail and wholesale payments systems by providing financial services to depository institutions Retail payments are generally for relatively small dollar amounts and often involve a depository institution s retail clients individuals and smaller businesses The Reserve Banks retail services include distributing currency and coin collecting checks electronically transferring funds through FedACH the Federal Reserve s automated clearing house system and beginning in 2023 facilitating instant payments using the FedNow service By contrast wholesale payments are generally for large dollar amounts and often involve a depository institution s large corporate customers or counterparties including other financial institutions The Reserve Banks wholesale services include electronically transferring funds through the Fedwire Funds Service and transferring securities issued by the U S government its agencies and certain other entities through the Fedwire Securities Service Structure editMain article Structure of the Federal Reserve System nbsp Organization of the Federal Reserve SystemThe Federal Reserve System has a unique structure that is both public and private 44 and is described as independent within the government rather than independent of government 24 The System does not require public funding and derives its authority and purpose from the Federal Reserve Act which was passed by Congress in 1913 and is subject to Congressional modification or repeal 45 The four main components of the Federal Reserve System are 1 the board of governors 2 the Federal Open Market Committee 3 the twelve regional Federal Reserve Banks and 4 the member banks throughout the country District Letter Federal Reserve Bank Branches Website Current president1 A Boston https www bostonfed org Susan M Collins2 B New York City http www newyorkfed org John C Williams3 C Philadelphia http www philadelphiafed org Patrick T Harker4 D Cleveland Cincinnati OhioPittsburgh Pennsylvania http www clevelandfed org Loretta J Mester5 E Richmond Baltimore MarylandCharlotte North Carolina http www richmondfed org Thomas Barkin6 F Atlanta Birmingham AlabamaJacksonville FloridaMiami FloridaNashville TennesseeNew Orleans Louisiana http www frbatlanta org Raphael Bostic7 G Chicago Detroit Michigan http www chicagofed org Austan Goolsbee8 H St Louis Little Rock ArkansasLouisville KentuckyMemphis Tennessee http www stlouisfed org James B Bullard9 I Minneapolis Helena Montana https www minneapolisfed org Neel Kashkari10 J Kansas City Denver ColoradoOklahoma City OklahomaOmaha Nebraska http www kansascityfed org Jeffrey Schmid11 K Dallas El Paso TexasHouston TexasSan Antonio Texas http www dallasfed org Lorie K Logan12 L San Francisco Los Angeles CaliforniaPortland OregonSalt Lake City UtahSeattle Washington http www frbsf org Mary C DalyBoard of governors edit Main article Federal Reserve Board of Governors The seven member board of governors is a large federal agency that functions in business oversight by examining national banks 46 12 15 It is charged with the overseeing of the 12 District Reserve Banks and setting national monetary policy It also supervises and regulates the U S banking system in general 47 Governors are appointed by the president of the United States and confirmed by the Senate for staggered 14 year terms 31 48 One term begins every two years on February 1 of even numbered years and members serving a full term cannot be renominated for a second term 49 U pon the expiration of their terms of office members of the Board shall continue to serve until their successors are appointed and have qualified The law provides for the removal of a member of the board by the president for cause 50 The board is required to make an annual report of operations to the Speaker of the U S House of Representatives The chair and vice chair of the board of governors are appointed by the president from among the sitting governors They both serve a four year term and they can be renominated as many times as the president chooses until their terms on the board of governors expire 51 List of members of the board of governors edit nbsp Board of governors in April 2019 when two of the seven seats were vacantThe current members of the board of governors are 49 Portrait Current governor Party Term start Term expires nbsp Jay Powell Chair Republican February 5 2018 as Chair May 23 2022 reappointment May 15 2026 as Chair May 25 2012 as Governor June 16 2014 reappointment January 31 2028 as Governor nbsp Philip Jefferson Vice Chair Democratic September 13 2023 as Vice Chair September 7 2027 as Vice Chair May 23 2022 as Governor January 31 2036 as Governor nbsp Michael Barr Vice Chair for Supervision Democratic July 19 2022 as Vice Chair for Supervision July 13 2026 as Vice Chair for Supervision July 19 2022 as Governor January 31 2032 as Governor nbsp Miki Bowman Republican November 26 2018 February 1 2020 reappointment January 31 2034 nbsp Chris Waller Republican December 18 2020 January 31 2030 nbsp Lisa Cook Democratic May 23 2022 February 1 2024 reappointment January 31 2038 nbsp Adriana Kugler Democratic September 13 2023 January 31 2026 Nominations confirmations and resignations edit In late December 2011 President Barack Obama nominated Jeremy C Stein a Harvard University finance professor and a Democrat and Jerome Powell formerly of Dillon Read Bankers Trust 52 and The Carlyle Group 53 and a Republican Both candidates also have Treasury Department experience in the Obama and George H W Bush administrations respectively 52 Obama administration officials had regrouped to identify Fed candidates after Peter Diamond a Nobel Prize winning economist withdrew his nomination to the board in June 2011 in the face of Republican opposition Richard Clarida a potential nominee who was a Treasury official under George W Bush pulled out of consideration in August 2011 one account of the December nominations noted 54 The two other Obama nominees in 2011 Janet Yellen and Sarah Bloom Raskin 55 were confirmed in September 56 One of the vacancies was created in 2011 with the resignation of Kevin Warsh who took office in 2006 to fill the unexpired term ending January 31 2018 and resigned his position effective March 31 2011 57 58 In March 2012 U S Senator David Vitter R LA said he would oppose Obama s Stein and Powell nominations dampening near term hopes for approval 59 However Senate leaders reached a deal paving the way for affirmative votes on the two nominees in May 2012 and bringing the board to full strength for the first time since 2006 60 with Duke s service after term end Later on January 6 2014 the United States Senate confirmed Yellen s nomination to be chair of the Federal Reserve Board of Governors she was the first woman to hold the position 61 Subsequently President Obama nominated Stanley Fischer to replace Yellen as the vice chair 62 In April 2014 Stein announced he was leaving to return to Harvard May 28 with four years remaining on his term At the time of the announcement the FOMC already is down three members as it awaits the Senate confirmation of Fischer and Lael Brainard and as President Obama has yet to name a replacement for Duke Powell is still serving as he awaits his confirmation for a second term 63 Allan R Landon former president and CEO of the Bank of Hawaii was nominated in early 2015 by President Obama to the board 64 In July 2015 President Obama nominated University of Michigan economist Kathryn M Dominguez to fill the second vacancy on the board The Senate had not yet acted on Landon s confirmation by the time of the second nomination 65 Daniel Tarullo submitted his resignation from the board on February 10 2017 effective on or around April 5 2017 66 Federal Open Market Committee edit Main article Federal Open Market Committee The Federal Open Market Committee FOMC consists of 12 members seven from the board of governors and 5 of the regional Federal Reserve Bank presidents The FOMC oversees and sets policy on open market operations the principal tool of national monetary policy These operations affect the amount of Federal Reserve balances available to depository institutions thereby influencing overall monetary and credit conditions The FOMC also directs operations undertaken by the Federal Reserve in foreign exchange markets The FOMC must reach consensus on all decisions The president of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York is a permanent member of the FOMC the presidents of the other banks rotate membership at two and three year intervals All Regional Reserve Bank presidents contribute to the committee s assessment of the economy and of policy options but only the five presidents who are then members of the FOMC vote on policy decisions The FOMC determines its own internal organization and by tradition elects the chair of the board of governors as its chair and the president of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York as its vice chair Formal meetings typically are held eight times each year in Washington D C Nonvoting Reserve Bank presidents also participate in Committee deliberations and discussion The FOMC generally meets eight times a year in telephone consultations and other meetings are held when needed 67 There is very strong consensus among economists against politicising the FOMC 68 Federal Advisory Council edit Main article Federal Advisory Council The Federal Advisory Council composed of twelve representatives of the banking industry advises the board on all matters within its jurisdiction Federal Reserve Banks edit Main article Federal Reserve Bank nbsp Map of the 12 Federal Reserve Districts with the 12 Federal Reserve Banks marked as black squares and all Branches within each district 24 total marked as red circles The Washington DC headquarters is marked with a star Also a 25th branch in Buffalo NY was closed in 2008 nbsp The 12 Reserve Banks buildings in 1936There are 12 Federal Reserve Banks each of which is responsible for member banks located in its district They are located in Boston New York Philadelphia Cleveland Richmond Atlanta Chicago St Louis Minneapolis Kansas City Dallas and San Francisco The size of each district was set based upon the population distribution of the United States when the Federal Reserve Act was passed The charter and organization of each Federal Reserve Bank is established by law and cannot be altered by the member banks Member banks do however elect six of the nine members of the Federal Reserve Banks boards of directors 31 69 Each regional Bank has a president who is the chief executive officer of their Bank Each regional Reserve Bank s president is nominated by their Bank s board of directors but the nomination is contingent upon approval by the board of governors Presidents serve five year terms and may be reappointed 70 Each regional Bank s board consists of nine members Members are broken down into three classes A B and C There are three board members in each class Class A members are chosen by the regional Bank s shareholders and are intended to represent member banks interests Member banks are divided into three categories large medium and small Each category elects one of the three class A board members Class B board members are also nominated by the region s member banks but class B board members are supposed to represent the interests of the public Lastly class C board members are appointed by the board of governors and are also intended to represent the interests of the public 71 Legal status of regional Federal Reserve Banks edit The Federal Reserve Banks have an intermediate legal status with some features of private corporations and some features of public federal agencies The United States has an interest in the Federal Reserve Banks as tax exempt federally created instrumentalities whose profits belong to the federal government but this interest is not proprietary 72 In Lewis v United States 73 the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit stated that The Reserve Banks are not federal instrumentalities for purposes of the FTCA the Federal Tort Claims Act but are independent privately owned and locally controlled corporations The opinion went on to say however that The Reserve Banks have properly been held to be federal instrumentalities for some purposes Another relevant decision is Scott v Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City 72 in which the distinction is made between Federal Reserve Banks which are federally created instrumentalities and the board of governors which is a federal agency Regarding the structural relationship between the twelve Federal Reserve banks and the various commercial member banks political science professor Michael D Reagan has written 74 the ownership of the Reserve Banks by the commercial banks is symbolic they do not exercise the proprietary control associated with the concept of ownership nor share beyond the statutory dividend in Reserve Bank profits Bank ownership and election at the base are therefore devoid of substantive significance despite the superficial appearance of private bank control that the formal arrangement creates nbsp Plaque marking a bank as a memberMember banks edit A member bank is a private institution and owns stock in its regional Federal Reserve Bank All nationally chartered banks hold stock in one of the Federal Reserve Banks State chartered banks may choose to be members and hold stock in their regional Federal Reserve bank upon meeting certain standards The amount of stock a member bank must own is equal to 3 of its combined capital and surplus 75 However holding stock in a Federal Reserve bank is not like owning stock in a publicly traded company These stocks cannot be sold or traded and member banks do not control the Federal Reserve Bank as a result of owning this stock From their Regional Bank member banks with 10 billion or less in assets receive a dividend of 6 while member banks with more than 10 billion in assets receive the lesser of 6 or the current 10 year Treasury auction rate 76 The remainder of the regional Federal Reserve Banks profits is given over to the United States Treasury Department In 2015 the Federal Reserve Banks made a profit of 100 2 billion and distributed 2 5 billion in dividends to member banks as well as returning 97 7 billion to the U S Treasury 22 About 38 of U S banks are members of their regional Federal Reserve Bank 24 77 Accountability edit An external auditor selected by the audit committee of the Federal Reserve System regularly audits the Board of Governors and the Federal Reserve Banks The GAO will audit some activities of the Board of Governors These audits do not cover most of the Fed s monetary policy actions or decisions including discount window lending direct loans to financial institutions open market operations and any other transactions made under the direction of the Federal Open Market Committee nor may the GAO audit dealings with foreign governments and other central banks 78 The annual and quarterly financial statements prepared by the Federal Reserve System conform to a basis of accounting that is set by the Federal Reserve Board and does not conform to Generally Accepted Accounting Principles GAAP or government Cost Accounting Standards CAS The financial reporting standards are defined in the Financial Accounting Manual for the Federal Reserve Banks 79 The cost accounting standards are defined in the Planning and Control System Manual 79 As of 27 August 2012 update the Federal Reserve Board has been publishing unaudited financial reports for the Federal Reserve banks every quarter 80 On November 7 2008 Bloomberg L P brought a lawsuit against the board of governors of the Federal Reserve System to force the board to reveal the identities of firms for which it provided guarantees during the financial crisis of 2007 2008 81 Bloomberg L P won at the trial court 82 and the Fed s appeals were rejected at both the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit and the U S Supreme Court The data was released on March 31 2011 83 Monetary policy editFurther information Monetary policy of the United States and Fractional reserve banking The term monetary policy refers to the actions undertaken by a central bank such as the Federal Reserve to influence economic activity the overall demand for goods and services to help promote national economic goals The Federal Reserve Act of 1913 gave the Federal Reserve authority to set monetary policy in the United States The Fed s mandate for monetary policy is commonly known as the dual mandate of promoting maximum employment and stable prices the latter being interpreted as a stable inflation rate of 2 percent per year on average The Fed s monetary policy influences economic activity by influencing the general level of interest rates in the economy which again via the monetary transmission mechanism affects households and firms demand for goods and services and in turn employment and inflation 27 Interbank lending edit The Federal Reserve sets monetary policy by influencing the federal funds rate which is the rate of interbank lending of reserve balances The rate that banks charge each other for these loans is determined in the interbank market and the Federal Reserve influences this rate through the tools of monetary policy described in the Tools section below The federal funds rate is a short term interest rate that the FOMC focuses on which affects the longer term interest rates throughout the economy The Federal Reserve explained the implementation of its monetary policy in 2021 The FOMC has the ability to influence the federal funds rate and thus the cost of short term interbank credit by changing the rate of interest the Fed pays on reserve balances that banks hold at the Fed A bank is unlikely to lend to another bank or to any of its customers at an interest rate lower than the rate that the bank can earn on reserve balances held at the Fed And because overall reserve balances are currently abundant if a bank wants to borrow reserve balances it likely will be able to do so without having to pay a rate much above the rate of interest paid by the Fed 27 Changes in the target for the federal funds rate affect overall financial conditions through various channels including subsequent changes in the market interest rates that commercial banks and other lenders charge on short term and longer term loans and changes in asset prices and in currency exchange rates which again affects private consumption investment and net export By easening or tightening the stance of monetary policy i e lowering or raising its target for the federal funds rate the Fed can either spur or restrain growth in the overall US demand for goods and services 27 Tools edit There are four main tools of monetary policy that the Federal Reserve uses to implement its monetary policy 84 85 Tool DescriptionInterest on reserve balances IORB Interest paid on funds that banks hold in their reserve balance accounts at their Federal Reserve Bank 86 IORB is the primary tool for moving the federal funds rate within the target range 84 Overnight reverse repurchase agreement ON RRP facility The Fed s standing offer to many large nonbank financial institutions to deposit funds at the Fed and earn interest Acts as a supplementary tool for moving the FFR within the target range 84 Open market operations Purchases and sales of U S Treasury and federal agency securities Used to maintain an ample supply of reserves 84 Discount window The Fed s lending to banks at the discount rate 87 Helps put a ceiling on the FFR 84 Federal funds rate edit Further information Federal funds rate nbsp The Federal Reserve System implements monetary policy largely by targeting the federal funds rate This is the interest rate that banks charge each other for overnight loans of federal funds which are the reserves held by banks at the Fed This rate is actually determined by the market and is not explicitly mandated by the Fed The Fed therefore tries to align the effective federal funds rate with the targeted rate mainly by adjusting its IORB rate 88 The Federal Reserve System usually adjusts the federal funds rate target by 0 25 or 0 50 at a time Interest on reserve balances edit The interest on reserve balances IORB is the interest that the Fed pays on funds held by commercial banks in their reserve balance accounts at the individual Federal Reserve System banks It is an administrated interest rate i e set directly by the Fed as opposed to a market interest rate which is determined by the forces of supply and demand 88 As banks are unlikely to lend their reserves in the FFR market for less than they get paid by the Fed the IORB guides the effective FFR and is used as the primary tool of the Fed s monetary policy 89 88 Open market operations edit Further information Open market operations Open market operations are done through the sale and purchase of United States Treasury security sometimes called Treasury bills or more informally T bills or Treasuries The Federal Reserve buys Treasury bills from its primary dealers which have accounts at depository institutions 90 The Federal Reserve s objective for open market operations has varied over the years During the 1980s the focus gradually shifted toward attaining a specified level of the federal funds rate the rate that banks charge each other for overnight loans of federal funds which are the reserves held by banks at the Fed a process that was largely complete by the end of the decade 91 Until the 2007 2008 financial crisis the Fed used open market operations as its primary tool to adjust the supply of reserve balances in order to keep the federal funds rate around the Fed s target 92 This regime is also known as a limited reserves regime 89 After the financial crisis the Federal Reserve has adopted a so called ample reserves regime where open market operations leading to modest changes in the supply of reserves are no longer effective in influencing the FFR Instead the Fed uses its administered rates in particular the IORB rate to influence the FFR 89 88 However open market operations are still an important maintenance tool in the overall framework of the conduct of monetary policy as they are used for ensuring that reserves remain ample 89 Repurchase agreements edit Further information Repurchase agreement To smooth temporary or cyclical changes in the money supply the desk engages in repurchase agreements repos with its primary dealers Repos are essentially secured short term lending by the Fed On the day of the transaction the Fed deposits money in a primary dealer s reserve account and receives the promised securities as collateral When the transaction matures the process unwinds the Fed returns the collateral and charges the primary dealer s reserve account for the principal and accrued interest The term of the repo the time between settlement and maturity can vary from 1 day called an overnight repo to 65 days 93 Discount window and discount rate edit Further information Discount window The Federal Reserve System also directly sets the discount rate which is the interest rate for discount window lending overnight loans that member banks borrow directly from the Fed This rate is generally set at a rate close to 100 basis points above the target federal funds rate The idea is to encourage banks to seek alternative funding before using the discount rate option 94 The equivalent operation by the European Central Bank is referred to as the marginal lending facility 95 Both the discount rate and the federal funds rate influence the prime rate which is usually about 3 percentage points higher than the federal funds rate Term Deposit facility edit The Term Deposit facility is a program through which the Federal Reserve Banks offer interest bearing term deposits to eligible institutions 96 It is intended to facilitate the implementation of monetary policy by providing a tool by which the Federal Reserve can manage the aggregate quantity of reserve balances held by depository institutions Funds placed in term deposits are removed from the accounts of participating institutions for the life of the term deposit and thus drain reserve balances from the banking system The program was announced December 9 2009 and approved April 30 2010 with an effective date of June 4 2010 97 Fed Chair Ben S Bernanke testifying before the House Committee on Financial Services stated that the Term Deposit Facility would be used to reverse the expansion of credit during the Great Recession by drawing funds out of the money markets into the Federal Reserve Banks 98 It would therefore result in increased market interest rates acting as a brake on economic activity and inflation 99 The Federal Reserve authorized up to five small value offerings in 2010 as a pilot program 100 After three of the offering auctions were successfully completed it was announced that small value auctions would continue on an ongoing basis 101 Quantitative Easing QE policy edit A little used tool of the Federal Reserve is the quantitative easing policy 102 Under that policy the Federal Reserve buys back corporate bonds and mortgage backed securities held by banks or other financial institutions This in effect puts money back into the financial institutions and allows them to make loans and conduct normal business The bursting of the United States housing bubble prompted the Fed to buy mortgage backed securities for the first time in November 2008 Over six weeks a total of 1 25 trillion were purchased in order to stabilize the housing market about one fifth of all U S government backed mortgages 103 Expired policy tools edit Reserve requirements edit An instrument of monetary policy adjustment historically employed by the Federal Reserve System was the fractional reserve requirement also known as the required reserve ratio 104 The required reserve ratio set the balance that the Federal Reserve System required a depository institution to hold in the Federal Reserve Banks 105 The required reserve ratio was set by the board of governors of the Federal Reserve System 106 The reserve requirements have changed over time and some history of these changes is published by the Federal Reserve 107 As a response to the financial crisis of 2008 the Federal Reserve started making interest payments on depository institutions required and excess reserve balances The payment of interest on excess reserves gave the central bank greater opportunity to address credit market conditions while maintaining the federal funds rate close to the target rate set by the FOMC 108 The reserve requirement did not play a significant role in the post 2008 interest on excess reserves regime 109 and in March 2020 the reserve ratio was set to zero for all banks which meant that no bank was required to hold any reserves and hence the reserve requirement effectively ceased to exist 1 Temporary policy tools during the financial crisis edit In order to address problems related to the subprime mortgage crisis and United States housing bubble several new tools were created The first new tool called the Term auction facility was added on December 12 2007 It was announced as a temporary tool 110 but remained in place for a prolonged period of time 111 Creation of the second new tool called the Term Securities Lending Facility was announced on March 11 2008 112 The main difference between these two facilities was that the Term auction Facility was used to inject cash into the banking system whereas the Term securities Lending Facility was used to inject treasury securities into the banking system 113 Creation of the third tool called the Primary Dealer Credit Facility PDCF was announced on March 16 2008 114 The PDCF was a fundamental change in Federal Reserve policy because it enabled the Fed to lend directly to primary dealers which was previously against Fed policy 115 The differences between these three facilities was described by the Federal Reserve 116 The Term auction Facility program offers term funding to depository institutions via a bi weekly auction for fixed amounts of credit The Term securities Lending Facility will be an auction for a fixed amount of lending of Treasury general collateral in exchange for OMO eligible and AAA Aaa rated private label residential mortgage backed securities The Primary Dealer Credit Facility now allows eligible primary dealers to borrow at the existing Discount Rate for up to 120 days Some measures taken by the Federal Reserve to address the financial crisis had not been used since the Great Depression 117 Term auction facility edit Further information Term auction facility The Term auction Facility was a program in which the Federal Reserve auctioned term funds to depository institutions 110 The creation of this facility was announced by the Federal Reserve on December 12 2007 and was done in conjunction with the Bank of Canada the Bank of England the European Central Bank and the Swiss National Bank to address elevated pressures in short term funding markets 118 The reason it was created was that banks were not lending funds to one another and banks in need of funds were refusing to go to the discount window Banks were not lending money to each other because there was a fear that the loans would not be paid back Banks refused to go to the discount window because it was usually associated with the stigma of bank failure 119 120 121 122 Under the Term auction Facility the identity of the banks in need of funds was protected in order to avoid the stigma of bank failure 123 Foreign exchange swap lines with the European Central Bank and Swiss National Bank were opened so the banks in Europe could have access to U S dollars 123 The final Term Auction Facility auction was carried out on March 8 2010 124 Term securities lending facility edit The Term securities Lending Facility was a 28 day facility that offered Treasury general collateral to the Federal Reserve Bank of New York s primary dealers in exchange for other program eligible collateral It was intended to promote liquidity in the financing markets for Treasury and other collateral and thus to foster the functioning of financial markets more generally 125 Like the Term auction Facility the TSLF was done in conjunction with the Bank of Canada the Bank of England the European Central Bank and the Swiss National Bank The resource allowed dealers to switch debt that was less liquid for U S government securities that were easily tradable The currency swap lines with the European Central Bank and Swiss National Bank were increased The TSLF was closed on February 1 2010 126 Primary dealer credit facility edit The Primary Dealer Credit Facility PDCF was an overnight loan facility that provided funding to primary dealers in exchange for a specified range of eligible collateral and was intended to foster the functioning of financial markets more generally 116 It ceased extending credit on March 31 2021 127 Asset Backed Commercial Paper Money Market Mutual Fund Liquidity Facility edit The Asset Backed Commercial Paper Money Market Mutual Fund Liquidity Facility ABCPMMMFLF was also called the AMLF The Facility began operations on September 22 2008 and was closed on February 1 2010 128 All U S depository institutions bank holding companies parent companies or U S broker dealer affiliates or U S branches and agencies of foreign banks were eligible to borrow under this facility pursuant to the discretion of the FRBB Collateral eligible for pledge under the Facility was required to meet the following criteria was purchased by Borrower on or after September 19 2008 from a registered investment company that held itself out as a money market mutual fund was purchased by Borrower at the Fund s acquisition cost as adjusted for amortization of premium or accretion of discount on the ABCP through the date of its purchase by Borrower was rated at the time pledged to FRBB not lower than A1 F1 or P1 by at least two major rating agencies or if rated by only one major rating agency the ABCP must have been rated within the top rating category by that agency was issued by an entity organized under the laws of the United States or a political subdivision thereof under a program that was in existence on September 18 2008 and had stated maturity that did not exceed 120 days if the Borrower was a bank or 270 days for non bank Borrowers Commercial Paper Funding Facility edit On October 7 2008 the Federal Reserve further expanded the collateral it would loan against to include commercial paper using the Commercial Paper Funding Facility CPFF The action made the Fed a crucial source of credit for non financial businesses in addition to commercial banks and investment firms Fed officials said they would buy as much of the debt as necessary to get the market functioning again They refused to say how much that might be but they noted that around 1 3 trillion worth of commercial paper would qualify There was 1 61 trillion in outstanding commercial paper seasonally adjusted on the market as of 1 October 2008 update according to the most recent data from the Fed That was down from 1 70 trillion in the previous week Since the summer of 2007 the market had shrunk from more than 2 2 trillion 129 130 This program lent out a total 738 billion before it was closed Forty five out of 81 of the companies participating in this program were foreign firms Research shows that Troubled Asset Relief Program TARP recipients were twice as likely to participate in the program than other commercial paper issuers who did not take advantage of the TARP bailout The Fed incurred no losses from the CPFF 131 History editTimeline of central banking in the United StatesDates System1782 1791 Bank of North America de facto under the Confederation Congress 1791 1811 First Bank of the United States1811 1816 No central bank1816 1836 Second Bank of the United States1837 1862 Free Banking Era1846 1921 Independent Treasury System1863 1913 National Banks1913 present Federal Reserve SystemSources 132 Central banking in the United States 1791 1913 edit Main article History of central banking in the United States The first attempt at a national currency was during the American Revolutionary War In 1775 the Continental Congress as well as the states began issuing paper currency calling the bills Continentals 133 The Continentals were backed only by future tax revenue and were used to help finance the Revolutionary War Overprinting as well as British counterfeiting caused the value of the Continental to diminish quickly This experience with paper money led the United States to strip the power to issue Bills of Credit paper money from a draft of the new Constitution on August 16 1787 134 as well as banning such issuance by the various states and limiting the states ability to make anything but gold or silver coin legal tender on August 28 135 In 1791 the government granted the First Bank of the United States a charter to operate as the U S central bank until 1811 136 The First Bank of the United States came to an end under President Madison when Congress refused to renew its charter The Second Bank of the United States was established in 1816 and lost its authority to be the central bank of the U S twenty years later under President Jackson when its charter expired Both banks were based upon the Bank of England 137 Ultimately a third national bank known as the Federal Reserve was established in 1913 and still exists to this day First Central Bank 1791 and Second Central Bank 1816 edit The first U S institution with central banking responsibilities was the First Bank of the United States chartered by Congress and signed into law by President George Washington on February 25 1791 at the urging of Alexander Hamilton This was done despite strong opposition from Thomas Jefferson and James Madison among numerous others The charter was for twenty years and expired in 1811 under President Madison when Congress refused to renew it 138 In 1816 however Madison revived it in the form of the Second Bank of the United States Years later early renewal of the bank s charter became the primary issue in the reelection of President Andrew Jackson After Jackson who was opposed to the central bank was reelected he pulled the government s funds out of the bank Jackson was the only President to completely pay off the national debt 139 but his efforts to close the bank contributed to the Panic of 1837 The bank s charter was not renewed in 1836 and it would fully dissolve after several years as a private corporation From 1837 to 1862 in the Free Banking Era there was no formal central bank From 1846 to 1921 an Independent Treasury System ruled From 1863 to 1913 a system of national banks was instituted by the 1863 National Banking Act during which series of bank panics in 1873 1893 and 1907 occurred 8 9 10 Creation of Third Central Bank 1907 1913 edit Main article History of the Federal Reserve System The main motivation for the third central banking system came from the Panic of 1907 which caused a renewed desire among legislators economists and bankers for an overhaul of the monetary system 8 9 10 140 During the last quarter of the 19th century and the beginning of the 20th century the United States economy went through a series of financial panics 141 According to many economists the previous national banking system had two main weaknesses an inelastic currency and a lack of liquidity 141 In 1908 Congress enacted the Aldrich Vreeland Act which provided for an emergency currency and established the National Monetary Commission to study banking and currency reform 142 The National Monetary Commission returned with recommendations which were repeatedly rejected by Congress A revision crafted during a secret meeting on Jekyll Island by Senator Aldrich and representatives of the nation s top finance and industrial groups later became the basis of the Federal Reserve Act 143 The House voted on December 22 1913 with 298 voting yes to 60 voting no The Senate voted 43 25 on December 23 1913 144 President Woodrow Wilson signed the bill later that day 145 Federal Reserve Act 1913 edit Main article Federal Reserve Act nbsp Newspaper clipping December 24 1913The head of the bipartisan National Monetary Commission was financial expert and Senate Republican leader Nelson Aldrich Aldrich set up two commissions one to study the American monetary system in depth and the other headed by Aldrich himself to study the European central banking systems and report on them 142 In early November 1910 Aldrich met with five well known members of the New York banking community to devise a central banking bill Paul Warburg an attendee of the meeting and longtime advocate of central banking in the U S later wrote that Aldrich was bewildered at all that he had absorbed abroad and he was faced with the difficult task of writing a highly technical bill while being harassed by the daily grind of his parliamentary duties 146 After ten days of deliberation the bill which would later be referred to as the Aldrich Plan was agreed upon It had several key components including a central bank with a Washington based headquarters and fifteen branches located throughout the U S in geographically strategic locations and a uniform elastic currency based on gold and commercial paper Aldrich believed a central banking system with no political involvement was best but was convinced by Warburg that a plan with no public control was not politically feasible 146 The compromise involved representation of the public sector on the board of directors 147 Aldrich s bill met much opposition from politicians Critics charged Aldrich of being biased due to his close ties to wealthy bankers such as J P Morgan and John D Rockefeller Jr Aldrich s son in law Most Republicans favored the Aldrich Plan 147 but it lacked enough support in Congress to pass because rural and western states viewed it as favoring the eastern establishment 5 148 In contrast progressive Democrats favored a reserve system owned and operated by the government they believed that public ownership of the central bank would end Wall Street s control of the American currency supply 147 Conservative Democrats fought for a privately owned yet decentralized reserve system which would still be free of Wall Street s control 147 The original Aldrich Plan was dealt a fatal blow in 1912 when Democrats won the White House and Congress 146 Nonetheless President Woodrow Wilson believed that the Aldrich plan would suffice with a few modifications The plan became the basis for the Federal Reserve Act which was proposed by Senator Robert Owen in May 1913 The primary difference between the two bills was the transfer of control of the board of directors called the Federal Open Market Committee in the Federal Reserve Act to the government 5 138 The bill passed Congress on December 23 1913 149 on a mostly partisan basis with most Democrats voting yea and most Republicans voting nay 138 Federal Reserve era 1913 present edit Main article History of the Federal Reserve Key laws affecting the Federal Reserve have been 150 Federal Reserve Act 1913 Glass Steagall Act 1933 Banking Act of 1935 Employment Act of 1946 Federal Reserve Treasury Department Accord of 1951 Bank Holding Company Act of 1956 and the amendments of 1970 Federal Reserve Reform Act of 1977 International Banking Act of 1978 Full Employment and Balanced Growth Act 1978 Depository Institutions Deregulation and Monetary Control Act 1980 Financial Institutions Reform Recovery and Enforcement Act of 1989 Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation Improvement Act of 1991 Gramm Leach Bliley Act 1999 Financial Services Regulatory Relief Act 2006 Emergency Economic Stabilization Act 2008 Dodd Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act 2010 Measurement of economic variables editThe Federal Reserve records and publishes large amounts of data A few websites where data is published are at the board of governors Economic Data and Research page 151 the board of governors statistical releases and historical data page 152 and at the St Louis Fed s FRED Federal Reserve Economic Data page 153 The Federal Open Market Committee FOMC examines many economic indicators prior to determining monetary policy 154 Some criticism involves economic data compiled by the Fed The Fed sponsors much of the monetary economics research in the U S and Lawrence H White objects that this makes it less likely for researchers to publish findings challenging the status quo 155 Net worth of households and nonprofit organizations edit nbsp Total Net Worth Balance Sheet of Households and Nonprofit Organizations 1949 2012The net worth of households and nonprofit organizations in the United States is published by the Federal Reserve in a report titled Flow of Funds 156 At the end of the third quarter of fiscal year 2012 this value was 64 8 trillion At the end of the first quarter of fiscal year 2014 this value was 95 5 trillion 157 Money supply edit Further information Money supply The most common measures are named M0 narrowest M1 M2 and M3 In the United States they are defined by the Federal Reserve as follows Measure DefinitionM0 The total of all physical currency plus accounts at the central bank that can be exchanged for physical currency M1 M0 those portions of M0 held as reserves or vault cash the amount in demand accounts checking or current accounts M2 M1 most savings accounts money market accounts and small denomination time deposits certificates of deposit of under 100 000 M3 M2 all other CDs deposits of eurodollars and repurchase agreements nbsp The Federal Reserve stopped publishing M3 statistics in March 2006 saying that the data cost a lot to collect but did not provide significantly useful information 158 The other three money supply measures continue to be provided in detail nbsp Inflation Deflation M2 money supply increases Year YearPersonal consumption expenditures price index edit Further information Personal consumption expenditures price index The Personal consumption expenditures price index also referred to as simply the PCE price index is used as one measure of the value of money It is a United States wide indicator of the average increase in prices for all domestic personal consumption Using a variety of data including United States Consumer Price Index and U S Producer Price Index prices it is derived from the largest component of the gross domestic product in the BEA s National Income and Product Accounts personal consumption expenditures One of the Fed s main roles is to maintain price stability which means that the Fed s ability to keep a low inflation rate is a long term measure of their success 159 Although the Fed is not required to maintain inflation within a specific range their long run target for the growth of the PCE price index is between 1 5 and 2 percent 160 There has been debate among policy makers as to whether the Federal Reserve should have a specific inflation targeting policy 161 Inflation and the economy edit Most mainstream economists favor a low steady rate of inflation 162 Chief economist and advisor to the Federal Reserve the Congressional Budget Office and the Council of Economic Advisers 163 164 Diane C Swonk observed in 2022 that From the Fed s perspective you have to remember inflation is kind of like cancer If you don t deal with it now with something that may be painful you could have something that metastasized and becomes much more chronic later on 165 Low as opposed to zero or negative inflation may reduce the severity of economic recessions by enabling the labor market to adjust more quickly in a downturn and reduce the risk that a liquidity trap prevents monetary policy from stabilizing the economy 166 The task of keeping the rate of inflation low and stable is usually given to monetary authorities Unemployment rate edit Further information Unemployment rate United States Bureau of Labor Statistics and List of U S states by unemployment rate nbsp United States unemployment rates 1975 2010 showing variance between the fifty statesOne of the stated goals of monetary policy is maximum employment The unemployment rate statistics are collected by the Bureau of Labor Statistics and like the PCE price index are used as a barometer of the nation s economic health Budget editThe Federal Reserve is self funded Over 90 percent of Fed revenues come from open market operations specifically the interest on the portfolio of Treasury securities as well as capital gains losses that may arise from the buying selling of the securities and their derivatives as part of Open Market Operations The balance of revenues come from sales of financial services check and electronic payment processing and discount window loans 167 The board of governors Federal Reserve Board creates a budget report once per year for Congress There are two reports with budget information The one that lists the complete balance statements with income and expenses as well as the net profit or loss is the large report simply titled Annual Report It also includes data about employment throughout the system The other report which explains in more detail the expenses of the different aspects of the whole system is called Annual Report Budget Review These detailed comprehensive reports can be found at the board of governors website under the section Reports to Congress 168 Remittance payments to the Treasury edit nbsp Federal Reserve remittances to the U S Treasury annually nbsp Federal Reserve Remittances to the Treasury weekly The Federal Reserve has been remitting interest that it has been receiving back to the United States Treasury Most of the assets the Fed holds are U S Treasury bonds and mortgage backed securities that it has been purchasing as part of quantitative easing since the 2007 2008 financial crisis In 2022 the Fed started quantitative tightening QT and selling these assets and taking a loss on them in the secondary bond market As a result the nearly 100 billion that it was remitting annually to the Treasury is expected to be discontinued during QT 169 170 Balance sheet edit nbsp Federal reserve assets held Other assets US Treasuries Mortgage backed security nbsp Total combined assets for all 12 Federal Reserve Banks 2007 2009 nbsp Total combined liabilities for all 12 Federal Reserve Banks 2007 2009One of the keys to understanding the Federal Reserve is the Federal Reserve balance sheet or balance statement In accordance with Section 11 of the Federal Reserve Act the board of governors of the Federal Reserve System publishes once each week the Consolidated Statement of Condition of All Federal Reserve Banks showing the condition of each Federal Reserve bank and a consolidated statement for all Federal Reserve banks The board of governors requires that excess earnings of the Reserve Banks be transferred to the Treasury as interest on Federal Reserve notes 171 The Federal Reserve releases its balance sheet every Thursday 172 Below is the balance sheet as of 8 April 2021 update in billions of dollars ASSETS Gold Stock 11 04Special Drawing Rights Certificate Acct 5 20Treasury Currency Outstanding Coin 1 46Securities unamortized premiums and discounts repurchase agreements and loans 7550 43 Securities Held Outright 7146 06 U S Treasury Securities 4959 03 Bills 326 04 Notes and Bonds nominal 4251 66 Notes and Bonds inflation indexed 334 76 Inflation Compensation 46 57 Federal Agency Debt Securities 2 35 Mortgage Backed Securities 2184 68Unamortized premiums on securities held outright 351 11Unamortized discounts on securities held outright 9 56Repurchase Agreements 0Loans 62 81Net portfolio holdings of Commercial Paper Funding Facility II LLC 8 56Net portfolio holdings of Corporate Credit Facilities LLC 25 94Net portfolio holdings of MS Facilities LLC Main Street Lending Program 30 96Net portfolio holdings of Municipal Liquidity Facility LLC 11 41Net portfolio holdings of TALF II LLC 5 28Items in process of collection 0 04Bank premises 1 91Central bank liquidity swaps 0 87Foreign currency denominated assets 21 37Other Assets 34 42Total Assets 7708 88 LIABILITIES Federal Reserve notes net of F R Bank holdings 2101 19Reverse repurchase agreements 272 07Deposits 5234 02 Term deposits held by depository institutions 0 Other deposits held by depository institutions 3944 06 U S Treasury general account 954 97 Foreign official 32 25 Other Deposits 302 74Deferred availability cash items 0 15Treasury contributions to credit facilities 51 78Other liabilities and accrued dividends 10 40Total liabilities 7669 62 CAPITAL AKA Net Equity Capital Paid In 32 48Surplus 6 79Other Capital 0Total Capital 39 27MEMO off balance sheet items Marketable securities held in custody for foreign official and international accounts 3548 94Marketable U S Treasury Securities 3114 90Federal agency debt and mortgage backed securities 346 41Other securities 87 62Securities lent to dealers 40 45 Overnight 40 45U S Treasury securities 40 45Federal agency debt securities 0 In addition the balance sheet also indicates which assets are held as collateral against Federal Reserve Notes Federal Reserve Notes and CollateralFederal Reserve Notes Outstanding 2255 55 Less Notes held by F R Banks 154 35 Federal Reserve notes to be collateralized 2101 19Collateral held against Federal Reserve notes 2101 19 Gold certificate account 11 04 Special drawing rights certificate account 5 20 U S Treasury agency debt and mortgage backed securities pledged 2084 96 Other assets pledged 0Criticism editMain articles Criticism of the Federal Reserve and Causes of the Great Depression nbsp 30 year mortgage average 30 Year Treasury Bond 10 Year Treasury Bond 2 Year Treasury Bond 3 month Treasury Bond Effective Federal Funds Rate CPI inflation year year RecessionsThe Federal Reserve System has faced various criticisms since its inception in 1913 Criticisms include lack of transparency and claims that it is ineffective 173 nbsp Money supply decreased significantly between Black Tuesday and the Bank Holiday in March 1933 when there were massive bank runs across the United StatesSee also editConsumer leverage ratio Core inflation Farm Credit System Fed model Federal Home Loan Banks Federal Reserve Police Federal Reserve Statistical Release Free banking Gold standard Government debt Greenspan put History of Federal Open Market Committee actions History of central banking in the United States Independent Treasury Legal Tender Cases List of economic reports by U S government agencies Securities market participants United States Title 12 of the Code of Federal Regulations United States Bullion Depository known as Fort Knox List of central banksReferences edit a b Reserve Requirements Federal Reserve System Retrieved May 10 2020 The Federal Reserve Bank Discount Window amp Payment System Risk Website Federal Reserve System Retrieved July 26 2023 Open Market Operations Archive Federal Reserve System Retrieved July 26 2023 Interest on Required Reserve Balances and Excess Balances Federal Reserve System Retrieved July 26 2023 a b c Born of a panic Forming the Federal Reserve System The Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis August 1988 Archived from the original on May 16 2008 a b c BoG 2006 pp 1 Just before the founding of the Federal Reserve the nation was plagued with financial crises At times these crises led to panics in which people raced to their banks to withdraw their deposits A particularly severe panic in 1907 resulted in bank runs that wreaked havoc on the fragile banking system and ultimately led Congress in 1913 to write the Federal Reserve Act Initially created to address these banking panics the Federal Reserve is now charged with a number of broader responsibilities including fostering a sound banking system and a healthy economy BoG 2005 pp 1 2 a b c Panic of 1907 J P Morgan Saves the Day US history com Retrieved December 6 2014 a b c Born of a Panic Forming the Fed System The Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis Retrieved December 6 2014 a b c Abigail Tucker October 29 2008 The Financial Panic of 1907 Running from History Smithsonian Magazine Retrieved December 6 2014 BoG 2005 pp 1 It was founded by Congress in 1913 to provide the nation with a safer more flexible and more stable monetary and financial system Over the years its role in banking and the economy has expanded Patrick Sue C 1993 Reform of the Federal Reserve System in the Early 1930s The Politics of Money and Banking Garland ISBN 978 0 8153 0970 3 12 U S C 225a What is the Federal Reserve s mandate in setting monetary policy Federalreserve gov January 25 2012 Archived from the original on January 26 2012 Retrieved April 30 2012 The Congress established two key objectives for monetary policy maximum employment and stable prices in the Federal Reserve Act These objectives are sometimes referred to as the Federal Reserve s dual mandate a b FRB Mission Federalreserve gov November 6 2009 Retrieved October 29 2011 BoG 2005 pp v See structure Federal Reserve Districts Federal Reserve Online n d Retrieved August 29 2011 Federal Reserve Board Advisory Councils Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System Archived from the original on April 13 2015 FAQ Who owns the Federal Reserve Federal Reserve website Retrieved December 1 2015 Lapidos Juliet September 19 2008 Is the Fed Private or Public Slate Retrieved August 29 2011 Toma Mark February 1 2010 Federal Reserve System EH Net Encyclopedia Economic History Association Archived from the original on May 13 2011 Retrieved February 27 2011 Federal Reserve System eh net Who owns the Federal Reserve Bank FactCheck March 31 2008 Retrieved February 26 2014 Coins and Currency US Dept of Treasury website August 24 2011 Archived from the original on December 3 2010 Retrieved August 29 2011 a b Press Release Federal Reserve Board announces Reserve Bank income and expense data and transfers to the Treasury for 2015 Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System January 11 2016 Retrieved March 12 2016 Press Release Federal Reserve System publishes annual financial statements www federalreserve gov Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System March 22 2021 Retrieved January 4 2022 a b c FAQ Who Owns the Federal Reserve Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System Retrieved December 1 2015 Federal Reserve Act Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System May 14 2003 Archived from the original on May 17 2008 a b BoG 2006 pp 1 a b c d Federal Reserve Board Monetary Policy What Are Its Goals How Does It Work Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System July 29 2021 Retrieved August 10 2023 Bernanke Ben October 24 2003 Remarks by Governor Ben S Bernanke At the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas Conference on the Legacy of Milton and Rose Friedman s Free to Choose Dallas Texas text FRB Speech FederalReserve gov Remarks by Governor Ben S Bernanke Conference to Honor Milton Friedman University of Chicago Nov 8 2002 Milton Friedman Anna Jacobson Schwartz 2008 B Bernanke s speech to M Friedman The Great Contraction 1929 1933 New ed Princeton University Press p 247 ISBN 978 0 691 13794 0 BoG 2005 pp 83 Lender of last resort Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis Retrieved May 21 2010 Humphrey Thomas M January 1 1989 Lender of Last Resort The Concept in History SSRN 2125371 a b c The Federal Reserve Monetary Policy and the Economy Everyday Economics Dallasfed org Archived from the original on December 22 2007 Retrieved August 29 2011 Press Release Federal Reserve Board with full support of the Treasury Department authorizes the Federal Reserve Bank of New York to lend up to 85 billion to the American International Group AIG Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve September 16 2008 Retrieved August 29 2011 Andrews Edmund L de la Merced Michael J Walsh Mary Williams September 16 2008 Fed s 85 Billion Loan Rescues Insurer The New York Times Retrieved September 17 2008 How Currency Gets into Circulation Federal Reserve Bank of New York June 2008 Retrieved August 29 2011 Annual Production Reports Engraving amp Printing www bep gov Retrieved January 6 2023 Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System 2021 2021 Currency Budget PDF federalreserve gov Federal Funds Federal Reserve Bank of New York August 2007 Retrieved August 29 2011 Cook Timothy Q Laroche Robert K eds 1993 Instruments of the Money Market PDF Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond Retrieved August 29 2011 Speech Kohn The Evolving Role of the Federal Reserve Banks Federalreserve gov November 3 2006 Retrieved August 29 2011 Frequently Asked Questions Federal Reserve System Archived from the original on February 17 2010 Retrieved February 19 2010 The Board of Governors the Federal Reserve Banks and the Federal Reserve System as a whole are all subject to several levels of audit and review Under the Federal Banking Agency Audit Act the Government Accountability Office GAO has conducted numerous reviews of Federal Reserve activities Federal Reserve System Current and Future Challenges Require System wide Attention Statement of Charles A Bowsher PDF United States General Accounting Office July 26 1996 Retrieved August 29 2011 BoG 2005 pp 4 5 See example Advantages of Being Becoming a State Chartered Bank Arkansas State Bank Department March 31 2009 Retrieved August 29 2011 U S Code Title 12 Chapter 3 Subchapter 7 Section 301 Powers and duties of board of directors suspension of member bank for undue use of bank credit Law cornell edu June 22 2010 Retrieved August 29 2011 BoG 2005 pp 83 85 The Role of the Federal Reserve System Innovation and Education Renewing the Northeast Ohio Economy Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland Archived from the original on March 15 2013 Retrieved June 24 2013 Who We Are Archived from the original on December 8 2015 Retrieved December 1 2015 Is The Fed Public Or Private Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia Retrieved June 29 2012 Van Loo Rory August 1 2018 Regulatory Monitors Policing Firms in the Compliance Era Faculty Scholarship 119 2 369 12 U S C 247 The Federal Reserve Monetary Policy and the Economy PDF Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas Report May 2006 Archived from the original PDF on May 23 2022 a b FRB Board Members Federalreserve gov July 20 2011 Retrieved August 29 2011 See 12 U S C 242 See 12 U S C 241 a b Goldstein Steve December 27 2011 Obama to nominate Stein Powell to Fed board MarketWatch Retrieved December 27 2011 Jerome Powell Visiting Scholar Archived from the original on December 21 2011 Lanman Scott Runningen Roger December 27 2011 Obama to Choose Powell Stein for Fed Board Bloomberg LP Retrieved December 27 2011 Robb Greg April 29 2010 Obama nominates 3 to Federal Reserve board MarketWatch Retrieved April 29 2010 Lanman Scott September 30 2010 Yellen Raskin Win Senate Approval for Fed Board of Governors Bloomberg LP Retrieved December 27 2011 Censky Annalyn February 10 2011 Fed inflation hawk Warsh resigns CNNMoney Retrieved December 27 2011 Chan Sewell February 10 2011 Sole Fed Governor With Close Ties to Conservatives Resigns The New York Times Retrieved December 27 2011 Robb Greg March 28 2012 Senator to block quick vote on Fed picks report MarketWatch Retrieved March 28 2012 Robb Greg Stein sworn in as Fed governor MarketWatch May 30 2012 Retrieved May 30 2012 Lowrey Annie January 6 2014 Senate Confirms Yellen as Fed Chairwoman The New York Times Archived from the original on January 2 2022 Retrieved January 6 2014 Puzzanghera Jim January 10 2014 Obama to nominate Stanley Fischer 2 others to Federal Reserve seats Retrieved December 26 2021 Goldstein Steve Jeremy Stein to resign from Federal Reserve MarketWatch April 3 2014 Retrieved April 3 2014 Appelbaum Binyamin Allan Landon Community Banker Nominated to Federal Reserve The New York Times January 6 2015 Retrieved January 6 2015 Leubsdorf Ben Kathryn Dominguez to Be Nominated for Fed Governor Wall Street Journal July 20 2015 Retrieved July 20 2015 Press Release Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System Federal Reserve February 10 2017 Retrieved March 27 2017 BoG 2005 pp 11 12 Fed Appointments IGM Forum Woodward G Thomas July 31 1996 Money and the Federal Reserve System Myth and Reality CRS Report for Congress No 96 672 E Congressional Research Service Library of Congress Retrieved November 23 2008 Federal Reserve Bank Presidents Federalreserve gov July 20 2011 Retrieved August 29 2011 US Code Title 12 Subchapter VII Directors of Federal Reserve Banks Reserve Agents and Assistants Law cornell edu June 22 2010 Retrieved August 29 2011 a b Kennedy C Scott v Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City et al Archived June 14 2007 at the Wayback Machine 406 F 3d 532 Archived May 17 2010 at the Wayback Machine 8th Cir 2005 680 F 2d 1239 Archived May 15 2010 at the Wayback Machine 9th Cir 1982 Michael D Reagan The Political Structure of the Federal Reserve System American Political Science Review Vol 55 March 1961 pp 64 76 as reprinted in Money and Banking Theory Analysis and Policy p 153 ed by S Mittra Random House New York 1970 Section 2 3 Subscription to Stock by National Banks Federal Reserve Act Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System December 14 2010 Retrieved February 6 2011 Section 5 1 Amount of Shares Increase and Decrease of Capital Surrender and Cancellation of Stock Federal Reserve Act Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System December 14 2010 Retrieved February 6 2011 Section 7 Division of Earnings Federal Reserve Act Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System May 24 2018 Retrieved August 23 2020 Who owns the Federal Reserve Bank Archived from the original on October 26 2010 Retrieved October 16 2010 Federal Reserve Membership Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond Retrieved April 30 2012 Reddy Sudeep August 31 2009 What would a federal reserve audit show The Wall Street Journal Retrieved August 29 2011 a b Financial Accounting Manual for Federal Reserve Banks January 2018 Retrieved September 19 2018 Federal Reserve Board begins practice of publishing Reserve Bank financial reports on a quarterly basis Federal Reserve Bank August 27 2012 Retrieved November 24 2012 Chittum Ryan August 25 2009 Bloomberg Wins Its Lawsuit Against the Federal Reserve Columbia Journalism Review Retrieved November 24 2012 Docket entry 31 Bloomberg L P v Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System case no 1 08 cv 09595 LAP U S District Court for the District of New York Bradley Keoun Kuntz Phil et al The Fed s Secret Liquidity Lifelines Bloomberg Archived from the original on March 15 2012 Retrieved March 17 2012 Torres Craig March 31 2011 Fed Releases Discount Window Loan Records Under Court Order Businessweek Retrieved December 20 2012 a b c d e The Fed Explained What the Central Bank Does PDF www federalreserve gov Federal Reserve System Publication August 2021 p 42 Retrieved August 10 2023 Federal Reserve Board Policy Tools Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System Retrieved February 15 2022 Interest on Reserve Balances Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System August 9 2023 Retrieved August 10 2023 The Discount Window and Discount Rate www federalreserve gov July 11 2023 Retrieved August 10 2023 a b c d Ihrig Jane Weinbach Gretchen C Wolla Scott A September 2021 Teaching the Linkage Between Banks and the Fed R I P Money Multiplier research stlouisfed org Retrieved August 10 2023 a b c d Ihrig Jane Wolla Scott A August 2020 The Fed s New Monetary Policy Tools research stlouisfed org Retrieved August 10 2023 Open Market Operations New York Federal Reserve Bank August 2007 Retrieved October 29 2011 Monetary Policy Open Market Operations Federalreserve gov January 26 2010 Archived from the original on April 13 2001 Retrieved August 29 2011 Open Market Operations www federalreserve gov Retrieved August 10 2023 Repurchase and Reverse Repurchase Transactions Ny frb org Federal Reserve Bank of New York August 2007 Retrieved August 29 2011 Federal Reserve Bank San Francisco 2004 Patricia S Pollard February 2003 A Look Inside Two Central Banks The European System of Central Banks and the Federal Reserve System Federal Reserve Bank of St Louis Review 85 2 11 30 doi 10 3886 ICPSR01278 OCLC 1569030 Federal Reserve Board Term Deposit Facility Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System Retrieved February 15 2022 Reserve Requirements of Depository Institutions Policy on Payment System Risk 75 Federal Register 86 May 5 2010 pp 24384 24389 Testimony before the House Committee on Financial Services regarding Unwinding Emergency Federal Reserve Liquidity Programs and Implications for Economic Recovery March 25 2010 Archived from the original on October 7 2010 GPO Access Serial No 111 118 Retrieved September 10 2010 Federal Reserve Board approves amendments to Regulation D authorizing Reserve Banks to offer term deposits Federalreserve gov April 30 2010 Retrieved August 29 2011 Board authorizes small value offerings of term deposits under the Term Deposit Facility Federalreserve gov May 10 2010 Retrieved August 29 2011 Board authorizes ongoing small value offerings of term deposits under the Term Deposit Facility Federalreserve gov September 8 2010 Retrieved August 29 2011 Why Quantitative Tightening Is on the Fed s Agenda Again Bloomberg January 5 2022 Retrieved April 3 2022 Federal Reserve Mortgage Purchase Program Planet Money NPR August 26 2010 Retrieved August 29 2011 BoG 2005 pp 30 BoG 2005 pp 27 BoG 2005 pp 31 Feinman Joshua N June 1993 Reserve Requirements History Current Practice and Potential Reform PDF Federal Reserve Bulletin 569 589 Retrieved August 29 2011 Board announces that it will begin to pay interest on depository institutions required and excess reserve balances Federal Reserve October 6 2008 Retrieved August 29 2011 Federal Reserve Actions to Support the Flow of Credit to Households and Businesses Federal Reserve System March 15 2020 Retrieved May 10 2020 a b FRB Temporary Auction Facility FAQ Federalreserve gov January 12 2009 Retrieved August 29 2011 Federal Reserve intends to continue term TAF auctions as necessary Federalreserve gov December 21 2007 Retrieved August 29 2011 Announcement of the creation of the Term Securities Lending Facility Federal Reserve March 11 2008 Retrieved August 29 2011 Fed Seeks to Limit Slump by Taking Mortgage Debt bloomberg com March 12 2008 The step goes beyond past initiatives because the Fed can now inject liquidity without flooding the banking system with cash Unlike the newest tool the past steps added cash to the banking system which affects the Fed s benchmark interest rate By contrast the TSLF injects liquidity by lending Treasuries which doesn t affect the federal funds rate That leaves the Fed free to address the mortgage crisis directly without concern about adding more cash to the system than it wants Federal Reserve Announces Establishment of Primary Dealer Credit Facility Federal Reserve Bank of New York Newyorkfed org March 16 2008 Retrieved August 29 2011 Lanman Scott March 20 2008 Fed Says Securities Firms Borrow 28 8 Bln With New Financing Bloomberg com Retrieved August 29 2011 a b Primary Dealer Credit Facility Frequently Asked Questions Federal Reserve Bank of New York Newyorkfed org February 3 2009 Retrieved August 29 2011 Fed Announces Emergency Steps to Ease Credit Crisis Economy Cnbc com Reuters March 17 2008 Retrieved August 29 2011 Announcement of the creation of the Term Auction Facility FRB Press Release Federal Reserve and other central banks announce measures designed to address elevated pressures in short term funding markets federalreserve gov December 12 2007 US banks borrow 50bn via new Fed facility Financial Times February 18 2008 Archived from the original on December 10 2022 Before its introduction banks either had to raise money in the open market or use the so called discount window for emergencies However last year many banks refused to use the discount window even though they found it hard to raise funds in the market because it was associated with the stigma of bank failure Fed Boosts Next Two Special Auctions to 30 Billion Bloomberg January 4 2008 The Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System established the temporary Term Auction Facility dubbed TAF in December to provide cash after interest rate cuts failed to break banks reluctance to lend amid concern about losses related to subprime mortgage securities The program will make funding from the Fed available beyond the 20 authorized primary dealers that trade with the central bank A dirty job but someone has to do it economist com December 13 2007 Retrieved August 29 2011 The Fed s discount window for instance through which it lends direct to banks has barely been approached despite the soaring spreads in the interbank market The quarter point cuts in its federal funds rate and discount rate on December 11 were followed by a steep sell off in the stockmarket The hope is that by extending the maturity of central bank money broadening the range of collateral against which banks can borrow and shifting from direct lending to an auction the central bankers will bring down spreads in the one and three month money markets There will be no net addition of liquidity What the central bankers add at longer term maturities they will take out in the overnight market But there are risks The first is that for all the fanfare the central banks plan will make little difference After all it does nothing to remove the fundamental reason why investors are worried about lending to banks This is the uncertainty about potential losses from subprime mortgages and the products based on them and given that uncertainty the banks own desire to hoard capital against the chance that they will have to strengthen their balance sheets Unclogging the system economist com December 13 2007 Retrieved August 29 2011 a b Robb Greg December 12 2007 Fed top central banks to flood markets with cash Marketwatch com Retrieved August 29 2011 Federal Reserve Board Term Auction Facility Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System November 24 2015 Retrieved August 11 2023 Term Securities Lending Facility Frequently Asked Questions Newyorkfed org Retrieved December 6 2014 Federal Reserve Board Term Securities Lending Facility Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System Retrieved August 11 2023 Federal Reserve Board Primary Dealer Credit Facility Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System Retrieved August 11 2023 Asset Backed Commercial Paper Money Market Mutual Fund Liquidity Facility Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System Retrieved May 27 2010 Yahoo Finance Stock Market Live Quotes Business amp Finance News finance yahoo com Archived from the original on December 16 2008 Yahoo Finance Stock Market Live Quotes Business amp Finance News Archived from the original on October 15 2015 Wilson Linus Wu Yan August 22 2011 Does Receiving TARP Funds Make it Easier to Roll Your Commercial Paper Onto the Fed SSRN 1911454 Greenspan Chairman Alan May 2 1998 Our banking history History of the Federal Reserve Federal reserve education org Chapter 1 Early Experiments in Central Banking PDF Historical Beginnings The Federal Reserve 1999 Timeline of U S Currency History U S Currency Education Program Archived from the original on October 4 2016 Retrieved June 8 2016 Mr Govr MORRIS moved to strike out and emit bills on the credit of the U States If the United States had credit such bills would be unnecessary if they had not unjust amp useless On the motion for striking out N H ay Mas ay Ct ay N J no Pa ay Del ay Md no Va ay N C ay S C ay Geo ay Avalon law yale edu Retrieved April 30 2012 US Constitution Article 1 Section 10 no state shall emit Bills of Credit make any Thing but gold and silver Coin a Tender in Payment of Debts Flamme Karen 1995 Annual Report A Brief History of Our Nation s Paper Money Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco Archived from the original on February 27 2010 Retrieved August 26 2010 British Parliamentary reports on international finance the Cunliffe Committee and the Macmillan Committee reports Ayer Publishing 1978 ISBN 978 0 405 11212 6 description of the founding of Bank of England Its foundation in 1694 arose out the difficulties of the Government of the day in securing subscriptions to State loans Its primary purpose was to raise and lend money to the State and in consideration of this service it received under its Charter and various Act of Parliament certain privileges of issuing bank notes The corporation commenced with an assured life of twelve years after which the Government had the right to annul its Charter on giving one year s notice Subsequent extensions of this period coincided generally with the grant of additional loans to the State a b c Johnson Roger December 1999 Historical Beginnings The Federal Reserve PDF Federal Reserve Bank of Boston p 8 Retrieved July 23 2010 Gordon John Steele February 19 2009 A Short History of the National Debt The Wall Street Journal Herrick Myron March 1908 The Panic of 1907 and Some of Its Lessons Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science 31 2 8 25 doi 10 1177 000271620803100203 JSTOR 1010701 S2CID 144195201 a b Flaherty Edward June 16 1997 A Brief History of Central Banking in the United States Netherlands University of Groningen Archived from the original on July 28 2012 Retrieved November 17 2007 a b Whithouse Michael May 1989 Paul Warburg s Crusade to Establish a Central Bank in the United States The Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis Archived from the original on May 16 2008 Retrieved August 29 2011 For years members of the Jekyll Island Club would recount the story of the secret meeting and by the 1930s the narrative was considered a club tradition Jekyllislandhistory com Archived from the original on June 11 2012 Retrieved April 30 2012 Papers of Frank A Vanderlip I wish I could sit down with you and half a dozen others in the sort of conference that created the Federal Reserve Act PDF Retrieved April 30 2012 The Federal Reserve Act of 1913 A Legislative History Llsdc org Retrieved April 30 2012 Affixes His Signature at 6 02 pm Using Four Gold Pens PDF The New York Times December 24 1913 Retrieved April 30 2012 a b c Paul Warburg s Crusade to Establish a Central Bank in the United States The Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis a b c d America s Unknown Enemy Beyond Conspiracy PDF American Institute of Economic Research Archived from the original PDF on January 10 2022 Born of a Panic Forming the Fed System Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis 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gives the total assets total liabilities and net worth This chart is of the net worth Balance Sheet of Households and Nonprofit Organizations Archived August 11 2014 at the Wayback Machine June 5 2014 Discontinuance of M3 Federalreserve gov November 10 2005 Retrieved August 29 2011 BoG 2006 pp 10 Is the Fed s Definition of Price Stability Evolving PDF Federal Reserve Bank of St Louis November 9 2010 Retrieved February 13 2011 Remarks by Governor Ben S Bernanke A perspective on inflation targeting Federalreserve gov March 25 2003 Retrieved August 29 2011 What s The Fuss Over Inflation Targeting Businessweek com November 7 2005 Archived from the original on July 28 2011 Retrieved August 29 2011 Bernanke Ben S 2005 The Inflation Targeting Debate University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0 226 04471 2 Retrieved August 29 2011 The Inflation Targeting Debate National Bureau of Economic Research Studies in Business Cycles University of Chicago Press via press uchicago edu Hummel Jeffrey Rogers January 2007 Death and Taxes Including Inflation the Public versus Economists p 56 Diane C Swonk lsa umich edu University of Michigan LSA Department of Economics Retrieved October 14 2022 Grant Thornton names Diane Swonk as chief economist www businesswire com January 8 2018 Retrieved February 2 2019 Inflation remains stubbornly high despite Federal Reserve s efforts to stabilize costs Amna Nawaz PBS October 13 2022 Retrieved October 14 2022 Svensson Lars E O Fall 2003 Escaping from a Liquidity Trap and Deflation The Foolproof Way and Others Journal of Economic Perspectives 17 4 145 166 doi 10 1257 089533003772034934 S2CID 17420811 Demonstrating Knowledge of the Fed Chicago Federal Reserve Archived from the original on May 28 2008 Retrieved March 17 2008 A Z Listing of Board Publications Federalreserve gov August 10 2011 Retrieved August 29 2011 Alloway Tracy October 10 2022 It s Official The Fed s in the Red Bloomberg Wigglesworth Robin October 10 2022 Are central banks going bankrupt Financial Times Archived from the original on December 10 2022 96th Annual Report 2008 Federal Reserve PDF Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System June 2009 Retrieved August 29 2011 Factors Affecting Reserve Balances of Depository Institutions and Condition Statement of Federal Reserve Banks Federal Reserve Retrieved March 20 2008 The Fed Factors Affecting Reserve Balances H 4 1 Release Dates www federalreserve gov Retrieved October 15 2020 Grace Wyler May 8 2012 Ron Paul Is Hosting A Hearing On Ending The Federal Reserve Right Now Business Insider Inc Lamb Brian October 28 1994 Book Discussion on The Road to Serfdom Milton Friedman C SPAN LAMB What do you think of the Federal Reserve Board today Milton FRIEDMAN I ve long been in favor of abolishing it There s no institution in the United States that has such a high public standing and such a poor record of performance Bundled references edit 5 6 7 8 9 10 16 17 18 19 20 Bibliography editRecent edit Sarah Binder amp Mark Spindel 2017 The Myth of Independence How Congress Governs the Federal Reserve Princeton University Press Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System 2005 The Federal Reserve System Purposes and Functions PDF Archived from the original PDF on January 11 2014 Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System 2006 The Federal Reserve in Plain English from the St Louis Fed Congressional Research Service Changing the Federal Reserve s Mandate An Economic Analysis Congressional Research Service Federal Reserve Unconventional Monetary Policy Options Conti Brown Peter The Power and Independence of the Federal Reserve Princeton University Press 2016 Epstein Lita amp Martin Preston 2003 The Complete Idiot s Guide to the Federal Reserve Alpha Books ISBN 0 02 864323 2 Greider William 1987 Secrets of the Temple Simon amp Schuster ISBN 0 671 67556 7 nontechnical book explaining the structures functions and history of the Federal Reserve focusing specifically on the tenure of Paul Volcker Hafer R W The Federal Reserve System An Encyclopedia Greenwood Press 2005 451 pp 280 entries ISBN 0 313 32839 0 Lavelle Kathryn C 2013 Money and Banks in the American Political System New York Cambridge University Press 978 1 107 60916 7 Explains basic political processes surrounding the Federal Reserve in the broader system of Congress and the Executive Branch Meyer Laurence H 2004 A Term at the Fed An Insider s View HarperBusiness ISBN 0 06 054270 5 focuses on the period from 1996 to 2002 emphasizing Alan Greenspan s chairmanship during the 1997 Asian financial crisis the stock market boom and the financial aftermath of the September 11 2001 attacks Woodward Bob Maestro Greenspan s Fed and the American Boom 2000 study of Greenspan in the 1990s Historical edit Broz J Lawrence 1997 The International Origins of the Federal Reserve System Cornell University Press ISBN 9780801433320 Carosso Vincent P 1973 The Wall Street Trust from Pujo through Medina Business History Review 47 421 437 doi 10 2307 3113365 JSTOR 3113365 S2CID 154895813 Chandler Lester V 1971 American Monetary Policy 1928 1941 Harper amp Row ISBN 9780060412272 Epstein Gerald Ferguson Thomas December 1984 Monetary Policy Loan Liquidation and Industrial Conflict Federal Reserve System Open Market Operations in 1932 Journal of Economic History 44 957 984 doi 10 1017 S0022050700033040 S2CID 154187176 Friedman Milton Schwartz Anna Jacobson 1963 A Monetary History of the United States 1867 1960 Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0691003542 Kubik Paul J 1996 Federal Reserve Policy during the Great Depression The Impact of Interwar Attitudes regarding Consumption and Consumer Credit Journal of Economic Issues 30 3 829 842 doi 10 1080 00213624 1996 11505838 Link Arthur 1956 Wilson The New Freedom Princeton University Press pp 199 240 Livingston James Origins of the Federal Reserve System Money Class and Corporate Capitalism 1890 1913 1986 Lowenstein Roger 2015 America s Bank The Epic Struggle to Create the Federal Reserve Penguin Press ISBN 978 0143109846 Marrs Jim 2000 Secrets of Money and the Federal Reserve System Rule by Secrecy 64 78 Mayhew Anne Ideology and the Great Depression Monetary History Rewritten Journal of Economic Issues 17 June 1983 353 360 Meltzer Allan H 2004 A History of the Federal Reserve Volume 1 1913 1951 ISBN 978 0 226 51999 9 cloth and ISBN 978 0 226 52000 1 paper Meltzer Allan H 2009 A History of the Federal Reserve Volume 2 Book 1 1951 1969 ISBN 978 0 226 52001 8 Meltzer Allan H 2009 A History of the Federal Reserve Volume 2 Book 2 1969 1985 ISBN 978 0 226 51994 4 Mullins Eustace C The Secrets of the Federal Reserve 1952 John McLaughlin ISBN 0 9656492 1 0 Roberts Priscilla Quis Custodiet Ipsos Custodes The Federal Reserve System s Founding Fathers and Allied Finances in the First World War Business History Review 1998 72 585 603 Rothbard Murray 2007 The Case Against the Fed Ludwig von Mises Institute ISBN 978 1467934893 Shull Bernard The Fourth Branch The Federal Reserve s Unlikely Rise to Power and Influence 2005 ISBN 1 56720 624 7 Steindl Frank G Monetary Interpretations of the Great Depression 1995 Temin Peter 1976 Did Monetary Forces Cause the Great Depression W W Norton amp Company ISBN 978 0393092097 Wells Donald R The Federal Reserve System A History 2004 West Robert Craig Banking Reform and the Federal Reserve 1863 1923 1977 Wicker Elmus A Reconsideration of Federal Reserve Policy during the 1920 1921 Depression Journal of Economic History 1966 26 223 238 Wicker Elmus Federal Reserve Monetary Policy 1917 33 1966 Wicker Elmus The Great Debate on Banking Reform Nelson Aldrich and the Origins of the Fed Ohio State University Press 2005 Wood John H A History of Central Banking in Great Britain and the United States 2005 Wueschner Silvano A Charting Twentieth Century Monetary Policy Herbert Hoover and Benjamin Strong 1917 1927 Greenwood Press 1999 Further reading editSmialek Jeanna 2023 Limitless The Federal Reserve Takes on a New Age of Crisis New York Alfred A Knopf ISBN 9780593320235 OCLC 1322058230 External links editFederal Reserve at Wikipedia s sister projects nbsp Definitions from Wiktionary nbsp Media from Commons nbsp News from Wikinews nbsp Quotations from Wikiquote nbsp Texts from Wikisource nbsp Textbooks from Wikibooks nbsp Resources from Wikiversity nbsp Wikisource has the text of the 1922 Encyclopaedia Britannica article Federal Reserve Banking System Official website nbsp Federal Reserve System in the Federal Register Records of the Federal Reserve System in the National Archives Record Group 82 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Federal Reserve amp oldid 1202918355, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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