Bitcoin
Education

US Federal Reserve & Central Bank Policies

40
1. Introduction

Every economy in the world runs on money – but money is not just about paper notes or coins. Behind every financial system stands a central authority that manages the flow of money, credit, and liquidity. In the United States, that authority is the Federal Reserve System, commonly known as “The Fed.”

The Federal Reserve doesn’t just print money – it plays a much bigger role. It manages interest rates, regulates banks, provides stability during crises, and sets the overall monetary policy that affects the stock market, bond market, inflation, employment, housing, and even global trade.

To truly understand the global economy, traders, investors, and policymakers must understand how the Federal Reserve works and what central bank policies mean.

2. The Birth of the Federal Reserve

Before the Fed was established in 1913, the U.S. economy was chaotic. The country suffered repeated banking panics in the late 1800s and early 1900s. Banks failed often, depositors lost money, and there was no central authority to stabilize markets during crises.

The panic of 1907 became the turning point. With no central bank, private financiers like J.P. Morgan personally organized rescues for failing banks. This made it clear that America needed a central institution.

Thus, in December 1913, Congress passed the Federal Reserve Act, creating the Federal Reserve System. Its goals were:

Provide stability to the banking system

Act as a “lender of last resort”

Manage monetary policy to prevent panics

Support sustainable economic growth

3. Structure of the Federal Reserve

The Fed is not a single building or a single person. It’s a networked system designed to balance independence with government oversight.

The Main Parts:

Board of Governors – Based in Washington D.C., made up of 7 members appointed by the U.S. President. They guide overall policy.

Federal Reserve Banks – 12 regional banks across major U.S. cities (like New York, Chicago, San Francisco). They implement policies and interact with commercial banks.

Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) – The most important decision-making body for monetary policy, particularly interest rates.

Member Banks – Thousands of commercial banks that hold reserves with the Fed and borrow when needed.

This system ensures checks and balances: the Fed is independent in decision-making but still accountable to Congress and the public.

4. Objectives of the Federal Reserve (Dual Mandate)

Unlike many central banks that focus only on inflation, the Federal Reserve has a dual mandate:

Price Stability – Keep inflation under control (not too high, not too low).

Maximum Employment – Ensure that as many people as possible have jobs in a healthy economy.

Additionally, financial stability and moderate long-term interest rates are also implicit goals.

5. Tools of the Federal Reserve

The Fed has several powerful tools to shape the economy:

(A) Monetary Policy Tools

Open Market Operations (OMO) – Buying and selling U.S. government securities (like Treasury bonds) to control money supply.

Buying securities → injects money → lowers interest rates → boosts growth.

Selling securities → absorbs money → raises interest rates → slows inflation.

Federal Funds Rate (Interest Rate Policy)

The Fed sets a target for the rate banks charge each other for overnight loans.

Lowering rates → cheaper borrowing → more spending & investing.

Raising rates → expensive borrowing → cooling the economy.

Reserve Requirements

The percentage of deposits banks must keep as reserves. Lower requirements → more lending. Higher requirements → less lending.

Rarely used today, as OMO and interest rates are more effective.

Discount Rate

The interest rate charged when commercial banks borrow directly from the Fed.

(B) Unconventional Tools (Used in Crises)

Quantitative Easing (QE) – Large-scale purchase of government bonds or mortgage-backed securities to inject liquidity (used after the 2008 crisis and COVID-19).

Forward Guidance – Communicating future policy intentions to influence market expectations.

Emergency Lending Programs – Special facilities to rescue banks, companies, or markets (example: COVID-19 corporate bond buying programs).

6. How Fed Policies Influence the Economy

The chain of influence looks like this:

Fed Actions → Interest Rates & Liquidity → Consumer & Business Borrowing → Investment & Spending → Employment & Inflation → Stock & Bond Markets → Overall Economy

Example:

If inflation is too high, the Fed raises rates → mortgages, car loans, business loans become expensive → spending falls → demand cools → inflation comes down.

If unemployment is high, the Fed cuts rates → cheaper credit → businesses expand → jobs increase.

7. Historical Policy Examples
(A) Great Depression (1930s)

The Fed failed to act aggressively, allowing banks to collapse.

Lesson: Central banks must act as lenders of last resort in crises.

(B) 1970s Inflation

Inflation reached double digits due to oil shocks and loose policy.

Fed Chair Paul Volcker (1979–1987) raised interest rates dramatically, even up to 20%, to crush inflation.

Short-term pain but long-term stability.

(C) 2008 Financial Crisis

Housing bubble burst, banks collapsed (Lehman Brothers).

Fed slashed rates to near 0%, launched QE worth trillions, and bailed out the system.

Critics said it encouraged risk-taking, but it prevented a depression.

(D) COVID-19 Pandemic (2020)

Fed cut rates to 0%, launched unlimited QE, provided emergency loans, and stabilized global dollar liquidity.

Prevented a financial collapse during lockdowns.

8. Impact on Global Markets

The Federal Reserve’s policies don’t just affect the U.S.—they impact the entire world because:

The U.S. dollar is the global reserve currency.

Most international trade, commodities (like oil), and debt are priced in dollars.

When the Fed raises rates, capital flows back to the U.S., causing emerging markets to suffer currency weakness and capital outflows.

When the Fed cuts rates, global liquidity rises, and risk assets (stocks, crypto, real estate) boom worldwide.

This is why traders globally watch every FOMC meeting, speech, and policy announcement.

9. Criticisms & Challenges of the Fed

While the Fed is powerful, it faces criticism:

Too much influence on markets – Investors often say markets are addicted to “easy money.”

Delay in action – Policies work with a time lag, so the Fed sometimes reacts late.

Political pressures – Even though independent, Presidents often criticize Fed decisions.

Income inequality – QE and asset purchases often benefit wealthy investors more than ordinary citizens.

Global ripple effects – Rate hikes in the U.S. can trigger crises in developing nations.

10. The Future of Central Bank Policies

As economies evolve, central banks face new challenges:

Digital Currencies (CBDCs) – The Fed is studying a “digital dollar.”

Climate Risks – Some argue central banks should consider environmental stability.

Geopolitical Pressures – Sanctions, trade wars, and global fragmentation may test Fed policy.

Technology & AI – Data-driven finance could change how monetary policy is transmitted.

Conclusion

The U.S. Federal Reserve is not just an American institution – it’s a global financial powerhouse. Its policies affect inflation, jobs, housing, stock markets, currencies, and even geopolitics.

Understanding the Fed means understanding how money moves, how economies grow or shrink, and how financial markets react.

For traders and investors, following Fed decisions is as important as tracking company earnings or global news. Every rate hike, cut, or policy signal from the Fed sends ripples across the world’s financial oceans.

In short, the Federal Reserve is like the captain of the world’s financial ship – sometimes steering smoothly, sometimes making hard turns, but always holding the power to influence the course of global markets.

Disclaimer

The information and publications are not meant to be, and do not constitute, financial, investment, trading, or other types of advice or recommendations supplied or endorsed by TradingView. Read more in the Terms of Use.