๐ Link to the Text of the Act
๐ Why It Was Done
Enacted to create a central banking system for the United States. The Act established the Federal Reserve System to provide a safer, more flexible, and more stable monetary and financial system.
๐ Pre-existing Law or Constitutional Rights
Before 1913, the U.S. lacked a true central bank. Banking panics in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, especially the Panic of 1907, exposed the need for a lender of last resort and coordinated monetary policy.
๐ Overreach or Proper Role?
Supporters argue the Fed provides stability and modern tools for economic management. Critics contend it concentrates too much power in an unelected body and fuels inflation or asset bubbles through monetary interventions.
๐ Who or What It Controls
- โขFederal Reserve Board of Governors (central policymaking body)
- โขFederal Reserve Banks (regional banks)
- โขMember banks (national banks required to join, state banks optional)
- โขMonetary supply, interest rates, and credit conditions nationwide
๐ Key Sections / Citations
- โข12 U.S.C. ยง 221 (short title and definitions)
- โข12 U.S.C. ยง 225a (monetary policy objectives)
- โข12 U.S.C. ยง 248 (powers of the Federal Reserve Board)
- โข12 U.S.C. ยง 342 (discounting commercial paper)
๐ Recent Changes or Live Controversies
- โขExpanded powers after the 2008 financial crisis (quantitative easing, emergency lending)
- โขCOVID-19 pandemic stimulus programs broadened its scope further
- โขOngoing debates about transparency, independence, and its role in addressing climate and digital currencies
๐ Official Sources
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