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What Is the Federal Reserve?

Erajah
ErajahFounder, Scypion Finance
Updated June 8, 20264 min read
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The Federal Reserve (the Fed) is the central bank of the United States, responsible for implementing monetary policy, regulating and supervising banks, and maintaining the stability of the financial system.

Structure and Independence

The Federal Reserve System consists of:

The Board of Governors: Seven members including the Chair, appointed by the President and confirmed by the Senate. The Chair serves a 4-year term renewable once.

The Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC): Consists of the seven Board members plus five presidents of the 12 regional Federal Reserve banks. This committee meets eight times annually to set monetary policy.

12 Regional Federal Reserve Banks: Located throughout the country (New York, Boston, Philadelphia, Cleveland, Richmond, Atlanta, Chicago, St. Louis, Minneapolis, Kansas City, Dallas, and San Francisco). These regional banks interact with local banks and businesses.

The Fed's independence is a critical feature of U.S. governance. Congress created it but removed direct political control so monetary policy decisions are based on economic data, not political pressure.

The Three Core Responsibilities

1. Monetary Policy

The Fed controls the money supply and interest rates to achieve price stability (low, stable inflation) and maximum employment. Its primary tool is setting the federal funds rate, which influences all other interest rates in the economy.

2. Bank Regulation and Supervision

The Fed regulates and supervises banks to ensure they're sound and not taking excessive risks. This includes:

  • Capital requirements (banks must hold enough equity)
  • Stress tests (testing banks' ability to survive financial crises)
  • Consumer protection rules (lending practices, disclosure requirements)

3. Financial System Stability

The Fed acts as lender of last resort during financial crises. During the 2008 financial crisis, the Fed provided emergency lending to prevent total system collapse. The Fed also oversees payment systems and works to prevent systemic failures.

The Dual Mandate

The Federal Reserve has a "dual mandate" set by Congress: price stability and maximum employment.), these goals sometimes conflict. When inflation is high, the Fed must raise rates, which slows growth and increases unemployment. When unemployment is high, the Fed wants to lower rates, which can increase inflation.

The Fed's target inflation rate is 2% annually (measured by the Personal Consumption Expenditures Price Index). The Fed tries to keep inflation near this target while maximizing employment—a difficult balance.

How the Fed Creates Money

Contrary to popular belief, the Fed doesn't print physical cash (that's the Bureau of Engraving and Printing). Instead, the Fed creates electronic money through "open market operations."

When the Fed wants to increase money supply:

  1. It buys government securities (Treasury bonds) from banks
  2. It credits the banks' reserve accounts with new digital money
  3. Banks now have more reserves and can lend more
  4. This increases the money supply

Conversely, the Fed can reduce money supply by selling securities and reducing reserve balances.

During Quantitative Easing (QE), the Fed buys massive quantities of government securities and mortgage-backed securities, flooding the system with money. The Fed did this during the 2008 financial crisis and again in 2020.

Tools of Monetary Policy

Open Market Operations (OMO): Buying and selling government securities to influence money supply

Discount Rate: The interest rate the Fed charges banks for emergency loans

Reserve Requirements: The percentage of deposits banks must hold in reserves (the Fed reduced this to 0% in 2020)

Interest on Reserves: The Fed pays interest on banks' reserve balances, influencing how much banks are willing to lend

The 2020 Response

During the COVID-19 pandemic, the Fed responded aggressively:

  • Lowered the federal funds rate to 0% (March 2020)
  • Launched massive QE, buying $120+ billion daily of government and mortgage securities
  • Lent to businesses through special emergency programs
  • Created swap lines with other central banks

These actions prevented financial collapse but also contributed to inflation later. By 2022, the Fed was raising rates aggressively to combat 8% inflation.

Fed Independence and Criticism

The Fed's independence is essential but controversial. Supporters argue it prevents political short-termism from overriding sound policy. Critics argue unelected officials shouldn't control monetary policy without direct accountability.

Congress can change the Fed's mandate, remove the Chair, or alter its structure, but the Fed's day-to-day decisions are independent from political pressure.

The Impact on Your Financial Life

The Fed's decisions affect you directly:

  • Your mortgage rate (Fed policy influences mortgage rates)
  • Your savings yields (Fed policy influences what banks pay on savings)
  • Your credit card APR (Fed policy influences the prime rate, which flows to credit cards)
  • Your employment prospects (Fed policy affects overall economic growth)

Understanding Fed policy helps you understand economic cycles and make better financial decisions.

◆ Sources

  1. Federal Reserve Official Website
  2. Federal Reserve — Structure of the Federal Reserve System
  3. Federal Reserve — Credit and Liquidity Programs and the Balance Sheet
Erajah
Erajah
Founder, Scypion Finance

Founded Scypion Finance because the gap between financial news and real understanding is too wide — and nobody should have to navigate economics alone. Every article starts from zero because that's where most people actually are.

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