Cointime

Download App
iOS & Android

The Federal Reserve and Critical Moments in U.S. Monetary Policy

In 2021, the U.S. missed a once-in-a-generation opportunity to refinance its national debt at near zero-rates. With soaring interest rates and a looming debt storm approaching, the actions of the Treasury and Federal Reserve have never been more important. We decided to look back at the history of monetary policy from the establishment of the Federal Reserve in 1913 until today to put what’s happening into historical context. 

Here’s the story:

Subscribe now


1. The Need for a Central Bank

Before the creation of the Federal Reserve, the U.S. had a fragmented banking system that often faced financial and liquidity crises. Due to regional disparities in available funds and the absence of a central bank, transferring money from areas with surplus to those with deficits was challenging, hindering an effective response.

The Panic of 1907 exposed these systemic weaknesses. What began as two speculators failing to corner a copper mining stock led to widespread financial contagion as depositors fled the banks they feared could be exposed to losses. As the panic intensified, John Pierpont Morgan joined forces with other wealthy financiers to backstop the struggling banks. 

Morgan's intervention highlighted the need for a robust solution to America's cyclical banking issues that didn’t rely on affluent individuals. The 1908 Aldrich-Vreeland Act and establishment of the 'National Monetary Commission' prompted a covert meeting on Jekyll Island in 1910, attended by some of America's leading financial minds, to devise a blueprint for a central banking system that could stabilize the currency and act as a lender of last resort.

2. The Birth of the Federal Reserve

After the meeting, Senator Nelson Aldrich (of the Aldrich-Vreeland Act) worked to formalize the plan and subsequently introduced it to Congress in 1912. While it was initially rejected due to fears of granting too much power to bankers, the election of Woodrow Wilson in 1912 brought a renewed focus on banking reform. In 1913, the Federal Reserve Act was signed into law, laying the foundations for a new central banking system.

The structure of the Federal Reserve was a delicate balancing act designed to accommodate public and private interests. Unlike other central banks around the world, the Federal Reserve isn’t just one central bank. It comprises 12 regional banks overseen by a central Board of Governors appointed by the President and confirmed by the Senate. This design helped to assuage concerns about centralized power and political control over the banking system.

3. The Great Depression

The early years of the Federal Reserve were marked by the 1929 stock market crash and the subsequent Great Depression, arguably the Fed’s most challenging period. A series of policy missteps, including raising interest rates to defend the dollar-gold peg instead of loosening monetary policy, deepened America’s economic woes. 

Sweeping reforms to the Fed were introduced under FDR’s New Deal. The Banking Act of 1933 enforced the separation of commercial and investment banking, and established the FDIC to insure bank deposits. The Gold Reserve Act of 1934 gave the President the authority to change the gold value of the dollar, allowing for more flexible and expansionary monetary policy, and the Banking Act of 1935 gave the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve authority over discount rates in each Federal Reserve district, instead of Reserve Banks setting rates themselves.

4. The Postwar Era and Bretton Woods

As WWII came to a close, economic leaders convened at Bretton Woods in New Hampshire to establish a new monetary system. At the center of this was the U.S. dollar. The Bretton Woods system pegged various currencies to the dollar, and pegged the dollar to U.S  gold reserves at $35/ounce.

In the 1960s, the U.S. began to run an extensive balance of payments deficit, where the country’s total imports significantly exceeded exports. This was primarily due to overseas military spending for the Vietnam War, resulting in an increase in dollars held abroad. Other countries, particularly France, became skeptical about the U.S.’s ability to maintain its gold-dollar link given America’s growing dollar supply and public debt. 

Concerned about potential devaluation of its dollar holdings, France began to exchange its dollar reserves for gold from the U.S. Treasury, precipitating a significant outflow of U.S. gold reserves as other countries followed suit. If the trend continued, America's gold reserves could be depleted, threatening the dollar's convertibility and potentially leading to a financial crisis.

The crisis culminated in 1971 when President Nixon shocked the world by announcing that the dollar would no longer be convertible into gold, marking the end of the Bretton Woods system and transitioning the world into an era of Fiat currency. 

5. Financial Deregulation and the Tech Bubble

The 1980s and 1990s saw a wave of financial deregulation. The Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act of 1999 repealed many key provisions of the Banking Act of 1933 which separated commercial and investment banking activities, fueling greater integration in the financial services industry. Meanwhile, the late 1990s witnessed the tech bubble, highlighted as “irrational exuberance” by Fed Chairman Alan Greenspan as early as 1996. Instead of intervening at the time, the Fed opted to address the consequences of the bubble by responding with a wave of interest rate cuts to cushion the fallout.

6. The 21st Century

2008 was a defining moment for the Fed. What began as a subprime mortgage crisis in 2007 spiraled into a Global Financial Crisis by 2008. The Fed’s response ushered in a new era of zero-interest-rate policy (ZIRP) and quantitative easing (QE), where they purchased long-term securities to inject liquidity into the economy and keep interest rates low. This playbook was repeated and extended for the COVID-19 pandemic, where the Fed slashed interest rates to zero and extended QE to purchase blue-chip and junk bonds.

7. Quantitative Tightening

When met with pent up demand and supply chain shocks following COVID lockdowns, this expansionary monetary policy resulted in some of the highest inflation rates seen since the 1980s. In an attempt to quell this problem, the Fed enacted one of the most aggressive interest rate hiking cycles in U.S. monetary history. Since Q1 of 2022, the Federal Funds Rate has gone from near zero to more than 5%. This led to a precipitous decline in valuations for growth assets, especially in tech, biotech, SPACs, and virtually all other negative cash flow businesses. 

Summary:

  • After recurring financial panics, notably in 1907, the U.S. established the Federal Reserve in 1913 to stabilize the banking system.
  • The Fed's early missteps worsened the Great Depression, leading to key reforms like the Banking Act which established the FDIC, and the Gold Reserve Act which relaxed the U.S. Dollar-Gold peg.
  • Post-WWII, the U.S. dollar was central in global finance, but rising debts and the Vietnam War expenditures led to gold outflows and the end of gold convertibility in 1971.
  • The late 20th century saw deregulation and the tech bubble, with the Fed adopting a reactive stance.
  • The 2008 Financial Crisis and COVID-19 saw the Fed introduce zero-interest-rate policy and quantitative easing.
  • Zero rates and pent up demand resulted in soaring inflation in 2022. The Fed responded with one one of the most aggressive interest rate hiking cycles in U.S. history.

Share

Comments

All Comments

Recommended for you

  • ETH breaks through $2100

    market shows ETH breaking through $2100, currently at $2100.24, with a 24-hour increase of 7.65%. The market is highly volatile, please manage your risks accordingly.

  • BTC falls below $66,000

    the market shows BTC falling below 66,000 USD, currently at 65,996.42 USD, a 24-hour decline of 2.35%, with significant market fluctuations, please manage your risk properly.

  • YesGo Makes Its Public Debut: Joining Forces with Ecosystem and Industry Leaders to Usher in a New Era of On-Chain Native Commerce

    Hong Kong, February 11, 2026 – As one of the most visionary cross-sector dialogues held during Hong Kong Consensus Week, the YesGo Ecosystem Partner Meeting concluded successfully yesterday. This closed-door event, spearheaded by YesGo and co-hosted by Nexus Chain and compliant digital asset exchange CoinMy, brought together a select group of global ecosystem partners, industry KOLs, and media representatives.

  • The number of Americans filing for unemployment benefits last week was 227,000.

     initial jobless claims in the United States last week were 227,000, estimated at 224,000, previous value was 231,000.

  • BTC breaks through $68,000

     the market shows BTC breaking through $68,000, currently at $68,023.93, with a 24-hour decline of 1.36%. The market is highly volatile, please manage your risk accordingly.

  • [Consensus HK] ENI CEO Arion Ho: Decentralization is an Engineering Choice, Not a Slogan

    At the Consensus Hong Kong 2026 summit, ENI Founder and CEO Arion Ho joined the DeFi Lead at CoinDesk and executives from Paradigm and Blockdaemon to debate the future of DeFi decentralization. Ho delivered a sharp critique of the industry’s current trajectory, asserting that decentralization should never be about "slogan-style freedom," but is fundamentally a rigorous engineering choice.

  • Trump praised the non-farm payroll data and urged the Federal Reserve to cut interest rates to the "lowest in the world."

    US President Trump posted on social media, "Employment data is excellent, far exceeding expectations! The US should pay much less interest on borrowing costs (bonds!). We have once again become the world's number one power, and therefore deserve the lowest interest rates ever. This will bring at least one trillion dollars in interest savings annually — the budget will not only be balanced but will have a substantial surplus. Wow! The golden age of America has arrived!!!"

  • BTC falls below $67,000

    the market shows BTC falling below $67,000, currently at $66,991.58, with a 24-hour decline of 3.41%. The market is highly volatile, please manage your risk accordingly.

  • BTC falls below $69,000

     the market shows BTC fell below 69,000 USD, currently at 68,996.18 USD, with a 24-hour decline of 2.21%. The market is highly volatile, please manage your risk accordingly.

  • BTC falls below $70,000

     the market shows BTC falling below $70,000, currently at $69,990, with a 24-hour decline of 1.04%. The market is highly volatile, please manage your risk accordingly.