The Federal Reserve System and Central Banking in the US

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The Federal Reserve System and Central Banking in the US Christ University, Bangalore, India March 10, 2014 Sonya Ravindranath Waddell Regional Economist

Overview A Little History of the Federal Reserve System Structure of the Fed Key Responsibilities of the Fed Payments Supervision and Regulation of Financial Institutions Monetary Policy More on Monetary Policy 2

First Bank of the United States 1791-1811 Second Bank of the United States 1817-1837 3

4

Federal Reserve Act of 1913 5

The Compromise Borne Out: The Fed Federal Reserve System Centralized Decentralized Board of Governors Washington, D.C. Twelve Regional Reserve Banks 6

7

!!!!!!!!!!!! 8

Our Primary Functions Monetary Policy Banking Supervision and Regulation Payments 9

Monetary Policy We manage the nation s money supply to keep inflation low and help the economy grow. 10

Banking Supervision and Regulation We supervise financial institutions to help protect our nation s financial system. 11

Payments We safeguard the integrity of our nation s payments systems. 12

What Else Do We Do? 13

Knowledge of and Presence in the Region 14

Payments Knowledge of and Presence in the Region 15

Supervision and Regulation Payments Knowledge of and Presence in the Region 16

Payments Supervision and Regulation Monetary Policy Knowledge of and Presence in the Region 17

Monetary Policy What is monetary policy? Objectives of monetary policy How monetary policy differs from fiscal policy Who decides monetary policy? How are monetary policy and fiscal policy independent in the US? What are the major tools of monetary policy? 18

Objectives of Monetary Policy promote effectively the goals of maximum employment, stable prices, and moderate long-term interest rates 19

Monetary Policy Supply of Money and Credit 20

Monetary Policy Fiscal Policy Supply of Money and Credit Taxing and Spending 21

22

Monetary Policy Wasn t Always Independent Until the Banking Act of 1935, the Treasury Secretary and the Comptroller of the Currency were on the Board. 23

Monetary Policy Wasn t Always Independent Until the Banking Act of 1935, the Treasury Secretary and the Comptroller of the Currency were on the Board. In 1949, Chairman McCabe announced that the Fed would conduct monetary policy with a primary regard to business conditions. 24

Monetary Policy Wasn t Always Independent Until the Banking Act of 1935, the Treasury Secretary and the Comptroller of the Currency were on the Board. In 1949, Chairman McCabe announced that the Fed would conduct monetary policy with a primary regard to business conditions. The Treasury Accord of 1951 solidified the Fed s independence. 25

Tools of Monetary Policy Open market operations (federal funds rate) 26

Tools of Monetary Policy Open market operations (federal funds rate) Discount rate 27

Tools of Monetary Policy Open market operations (federal funds rate) Discount rate Reserve requirements 28

Tools of Monetary Policy Open market operations (federal funds rate) Discount rate Reserve requirements Interest on reserves 29

Tools of Monetary Policy Open market operations (federal funds rate) Discount rate Reserve requirements Interest on reserves Other tools (starting in 2007) 30

Starting in 2007, Everything Changed Financial crisis Initial shock: housing downturn in 05 and 06 Losses on housing-related assets Uncertainty about where else losses were hiding Financial market volatility rose considerably in 2007, threatening to grind economic activity to a halt. 31

Starting in 2007, Everything Changed Financial crisis Initial shock: housing downturn in 05 and 06 Losses on housing-related assets Uncertainty about where else losses were hiding Financial market volatility rose considerably in 2007, threatening to grind economic activity to a halt. The Great Recession and slow recovery 32

First Unusual Event: Financial Crisis Fed usually lends only to banks (through discount window) During crisis, lent to certain (new) institutions and markets 33

First Unusual Event: Financial Crisis 34

Second Unusual Event: The Zero Bound Source: Board of Governors/Haver Analytics 35

Economic Weakness Persisted Despite ZLB Source: Bureau of Economic Analysis/Haver Analytics 36

Economic Weakness Persisted Despite ZLB Note: FOMC forecast is the central tendency for the Q4 levels, from the December 2013 meeting. Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics, Board of Governors, Haver Analytics 37

What to Do at ZLB? Central bankers identified three unconventional monetary policies: Expanding balance sheet (buying lots more assets) Changing composition of balance sheet (buying different stuff) Making people believe policy will stay easy for a long time We did all three. 38

Unconventional MP #1: Expand Balance Sheet 39

Unconventional MP #1: Expand Balance Sheet Also called quantitative easing or large scale asset purchases (LSAPs) Goal: With short-term rates stuck at zero, reduce long-term interest rates to stimulate spending 40

Unconventional MP #2: Alter Balance Sheet Normal Treasury purchases usually aren t large enough relative to size of the market to directly affect longer term Treasury rates. Now Fed is intentionally making purchases large enough to lower lending rates in these markets Mortgage-backed securities Long-term treasuries (Maturity Extension Program, or Operation Twist ) 41

Unconventional MP #3: Forward Guidance Since 1999, FOMC post-meeting statements have hinted about future policy Statements ramped up considerably for an extended period at least through mid-2013 for a considerable time after the economic recovery strengthens until unemployment falls to 6.5% as long as medium-term inflation stays under 2.5% 42

Since 2007, Central Banking Now Includes Being the lender of last resort in a new way A large balance sheet, many excess reserves, and IOR Monetary policy at the zero bound Buying more than just Treasuries Strong forward guidance 43

Since 2007, Central Banking Now Includes Much of this is uncharted territory for any central bank, and it will take several years to identify the full effects. Despite new policy, the Fed remains committed to its same monetary policy objectives. 44

And Now, Tapering December 18, 2013 FOMC meeting: In light of the cumulative progress toward maximum employment and the improvement in the outlook for labor market conditions, the Committee decided to modestly reduce the pace of its asset purchases. Beginning in January, the Committee will add to its holdings of agency mortgage-backed securities at a pace of $35 billion per month rather than $40 billion per month, and will add to its holdings of longer-term Treasury securities at a pace of $40 billion per month rather than $45 billion per month. 45

The Bottom Line The regional structure of the Federal Reserve System was born out of compromise in 1913 and is still critical to our primary functions. The independence of monetary policy and monetary policymakers is critical to the ability of policy-makers to control inflation and to think about the long-term well-being of the U.S. economy. In recent years, the Fed has engaged some unconventional monetary policy tools that have caused great debate among policymakers and among the broader public. 46

The views expressed here are those of the speaker, and do not necessarily represent those of the Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond or the Federal Reserve System. 47