Return to Virginia Business - February 2003

Figuring out what the Fed does

If mystery makes for fascination, then the U.S. Federal Reserve System should be a spellbinder. Business people stay glued to CNN or an Internet news service each time the Fed’s Open Market Committee meets to decide whether to raise or lower the fed funds rate. Each meeting is preceded by days of speculation. Stock markets quiver immediately after each decision. But what does the Fed do and how does it do it? Not many people know.

We at Virginia Business have been curious for some time about the role of Richmond’s Federal Reserve Bank. One thing that sparked our interest was the high state of security at its headquarters in a distinctive white tube downtown. The added security dates back even before the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks. And, the Richmond Fed, which covers most of the Mid-Atlantic region and is one of 12 Fed districts, is one of Richmond’s and Virginia’s few remaining emblems of finance. Most of the big banks that made Richmond a banking center have fled to Atlanta or Charlotte, but the Fed remains and that’s a source of pride.

When we talked over the possibility of a Fed story some months ago, one writer came to mind — Jack Milligan. Based in Charlottesville, Jack seemed a natural since he is highly experienced in financial reporting and writing. Before coming to the Old Dominion, Jack was editor-in-chief of U.S. Banker magazine in New York and had been an editor and writer at Institutional Investor. Central bank matters aren’t that easy to decipher, but Jack’s experience and understanding cut to the quick. We also decided to tie our Fed piece together with our annual State of the State comparisons of how Virginia stacks up against other states. In this case, we chose to look at Virginia’s performance versus that of the other four states in the Richmond Fed District. To round out the Fed package, Senior Editor Robert Burke writes an intriguing tale about how during the Cold War, the Fed had its own secure, bombproof bunker near Culpeper.

Another individual who helped the story immensely is J. Alfred Broaddus Jr., the Richmond Fed’s president. The Richmond native is not only a serious academic in economics but works hard to reach out to people from all strata of business. Jack and I spent two hours with him. By raising the level of the Richmond Fed’s research and analysis, Broaddus has won strong respect from Fed members and watchers everywhere, including Alan Greenspan.

I came to understand just how much power central banks have by watching them in other countries. One was Russia, where I was working for Business Week back in 1993. Communism had fallen only 18 months or so before. The Central Bank of Russia was trying hard to reel back inflation, which at one point approached 2,000 percent per year. Just as the monster seemed to be caged, Central Bank President Viktor Geraschenko blundered by deciding to call in the currency. He created pandemonium as ordinary Russians saw their life savings vanish over the period of one weekend.

Virginians can be glad that our Fed is a little more sophisticated. So what does the Fed do? Read our package.

Peter Galuszka
Executive Editor

Peter Galuszka

 

 

 

 

 

Return to Virginia Business - February 2003