Federal Reserve System.
Publié le 10/05/2013
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and their powers were also expanded.
For example, discount rates now had to be approved periodically by the board.
Sales and purchases of governmentsecurities—the open-market operation that previously had been managed solely at the discretion of the presidents of the reserve banks—were centralized in the FederalOpen Market Committee (FOMC), consisting of the seven governors, the president of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, and four other reserve bank presidentsserving on a rotating basis.
Since 1935, Congress has given additional powers to the Board of Governors.
These powers include control over mergers, bank holdingcompanies, U.S.
offices of international banks, and the reserves of all depository institutions.
IV MONETARY CONTROL
The Fed is best known to the public for the influence it has on interest rates by “loosening” or “tightening” the money supply.
The term money supply has various technical definitions ( see Money), but basically it is the amount of currency, coin, and checking account balances available at any one time in the U.S.
financial system. The interest rate that Fed policymakers focus on primarily is the federal funds rate, the interest rate at which banks lend money to other banks that need to makeloans.
The Federal Reserve's open market operations are the most flexible and most frequently used instrument of controlling the money supply and the federal funds rate.When the FOMC decides that the money supply is growing too slowly to meet the economy’s needs or that interest rates are too high, the Fed purchases U.S.
Treasurysecurities on the open market—that is, from the public and banks—thus injecting cash into the financial system and expanding bank reserves and lowering the federalfunds rate.
This process enables banks to loan more money, which helps businesses and consumers and helps the economy grow faster.
Conversely, should the moneysupply or economy grow more rapidly than is desired or should interest rates be too low, which may lead to inflation (a sustained increase in prices), the FOMC will sell securities of the Department of the Treasury on the open market.
Such sales reduce bank reserves and raise the federal funds rate and thus slow down the economy.Generally, this reduces the money supply and protects against inflation.
Although the open-market operation is the most flexible and the most frequently used instrument of monetary policy, similar results can be achieved by changing therequired reserve ratio—that is, the percentage of deposits that banks must maintain on reserve as cash deposits at the Federal Reserve banks.
When the requiredreserve ratio is raised, banks are unable to create as much money as they previously were able to because a larger portion of their assets must be held in reserve; theconverse is true when the reserve ratio is reduced.
Also among its general controls, the Federal Reserve can make changes in the discount rate, the rate of interest at which the Fed lends money to banks.
By raising thediscount rate, the Fed discourages banks from borrowing money from the Fed.
The Fed does this typically when it wants to reduce the money supply and slow theeconomy.
Conversely, to increase the money supply and expand the economy, the Fed lowers the discount rate.
A discount rate change may, at times, reinforce open-market operations.
It may also, at times, have an “announcement effect,” signaling a change in the Federal Reserve's underlying evaluation of economic conditions.
The Federal Reserve also has a narrow role in regulating operations of the stock market.
It may selectively lower or raise the margin requirement, which is thepercentage of a stock price that must be provided in cash by someone who buys the stock on credit.
The margin requirement, a legacy of depression legislation, aims tocurb market speculation.
The Credit Control Act of 1969 authorized the U.S.
president to give additional controls to the Federal Reserve.
In 1980 the act was used as a means of controllingvarious types of consumer credit.
The Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act of 1999 gave the Fed regulatory authority over the new financial services holding companies.
Thesecompanies can offer banking, issue securities (stocks and bonds) and insurance, and other financial services all “under one roof.” The Glass-Steagall Act of 1933 hadprohibited banks from engaging in many of these activities, such as underwriting securities and insurance, because they were deemed risky at the time.
V EFFECTS OF FEDERAL RESERVE POLICIES
Most economists today tend to believe that the policy record of the Federal Reserve has had mixed results during the Fed’s history and that occasionally Fed actionshave increased rather than decreased economic instability.
Many economists would agree, for example, that the Federal Reserve is partly to blame for the severity ofthe Great Depression of the 1930s because the Fed allowed the money supply to shrink dramatically.
On the other hand, many economists believe that the record ofprice stability during the late 1950s, 1960s, and 1990s was partly due to the Fed's effective monetary policy.
Even this successful anti-inflation policy, however, had itscritics who argued that the tight monetary policy raised interest rates to unusually high levels.
Criticism was muted when both inflation and interest rates steadilydropped through the mid- and late 1980s and into the early 1990s.
Most economists recognize that some economic problems, such as the negative economic impact ofthe oil shortage of the 1980s, are supply-related phenomena that the Federal Reserve is powerless to resolve.
VI RELATIONS WITH THE GOVERNMENT
The Federal Reserve is sometimes considered a fourth branch of the U.S.
government because it is made up of a powerful group of national policymakers freed from theusual restrictions of governmental checks and balances.
Indeed, the Board of Governors is formally independent of the executive branch and protected by tenure wellbeyond that allotted to the U.S.
president.
In practice, the president will typically listen carefully to the Fed’s policy suggestions.
The Fed and the president frequentlyshare the same economic agenda, but sometimes they have different agendas.
The relationship between the Federal Reserve and Congress is more complex.
On the one hand, because it was created by Congress, the central bank is unmistakably acreature of Congress, being responsible to it for its mandate and its continued existence.
On the other hand, the self-financing feature of the Federal Reserve preventsCongress from exercising influence through its budgetary authority.
Thus, the Federal Reserve is relatively free from the partisan political pressures that operate in theCongress, although the Fed must report frequently to Congress on the conduct of monetary policy.
See also Banking.
Reviewed By:James M.
JohannesMicrosoft ® Encarta ® 2009. © 1993-2008 Microsoft Corporation.
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