- The US Federal Reserve, commonly called the Fed, is the central banking system of the United States. It is responsible for managing monetary policy, ensuring financial stability, and supervising the banking system.
- Established in 1913, through the Federal Reserve Act, after repeated financial panics exposed weaknesses in the US banking system.
Structure
The Federal Reserve has a decentralised structure with public oversight:
- Board of Governors (Washington, D.C.)
- 7 members appointed by the US President and confirmed by the Senate
- Serve 14-year terms
- Headed by a Chair (currently the most influential monetary authority in the world)
- 12 Regional Federal Reserve Banks
- Located in major US cities (New York, Chicago, San Francisco, etc.)
- Act as operational arms of the Fed
- Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC)
- Main monetary policy body
- Members: 7 Governors + President of New York Fed + 4 rotating regional Fed presidents
Core Objectives (Dual Mandate)
The Fed is legally mandated to pursue:
- Price stability (control inflation)
- Maximum employment
- Moderate long-term interest rates
Key Functions
- Monetary Policy: Controls money supply and credit conditions
- Bank Regulation & Supervision: Oversees banks and financial institutions
- Financial Stability: Acts as lender of last resort during crises
- Payments System: Manages interbank payments and clearing systems
- Economic Research: Produces data and analysis guiding policy
Main Monetary Policy Tools
- Policy Interest Rate (Federal Funds Rate)
- Open Market Operations (buying/selling government securities)
- Reserve Requirements
- Quantitative Easing (QE) and Quantitative Tightening (QT)
- Forward Guidance (communication to influence expectations)
Global Importance
- Fed decisions strongly impact:
- Global capital flows
- Exchange rates
- Emerging markets, including India
- Rate hikes often trigger capital outflows from developing economies
- Rate cuts usually increase global liquidity
Independence
- Operates independently of the US government in decision-making
- Accountable to US Congress
- Financially self-sustaining (does not rely on Congressional funding)