The Federal Reserve Board of Governors administers the Federal Reserve System. It has seven members, who are
appointed by the president to serve overlapping 14-year terms. Its most important monetary policy decisions are
made by the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC), which consists of the seven governors, the president of the
Federal Reserve Bank of New York, and presidents of four other Federal Reserve banks who serve on a rotating basis.
Although the Federal Reserve System periodically must report on its actions to Congress, the governors are, by law,
independent from Congress and the president. Reinforcing this independence, the Fed conducts its most important
policy discussions in private and often discloses them only after a period of time has passed. It also raises all
of its own operating expenses from investment income and fees for its own services. The Federal Reserve has three
main tools for maintaining control over the supply of money and credit in the economy. The most important is known
as open market operations, or the buying and selling of government securities. To increase the supply of money, the
Federal Reserve buys government securities from banks, other businesses, or individuals, paying for them with a
check (a new source of money that it prints); when the Fed's checks are deposited in banks, they create new
reserves -- a portion of which banks can lend or invest, thereby increasing the amount of money in circulation. On
the other hand, if the Fed wishes to reduce the money supply, it sells government securities to banks, collecting
reserves from them. Because they have lower reserves, banks must reduce their lending, and the money supply drops
accordingly. The Fed also can control the money supply by specifying what reserves deposit-taking institutions must
set aside either as currency in their vaults or as deposits at their regional Reserve Banks. Raising reserve
requirements forces banks to withhold a larger portion of their funds, thereby reducing the money
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