Fed History/Structure
Inflaiton and Prices
Fiscal and Monetary Policy
Financial Crises
Economic Thinkers
100

Q: Under the Fed's structure, these two groups rotate voting seats on the FOMC — only 5 of these presidents vote at any given time alongside the 7 Board of Governors members. Name the one Reserve Bank president who holds a permanent voting seat

A: Who is the President of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York

100

Q: This measure of inflation, preferred by the Federal Reserve for policy decisions, excludes food and energy prices

A: What is Core PCE (Personal Consumption Expenditures)

100

Q: This type of policy involves government decisions about taxation and spending to influence the economy, and is controlled by Congress

A: What is fiscal policy

100

Q: This term describes the problem where financial institutions take on excessive risk because they believe the government will rescue them if they fail, a central criticism of the 2008 bailouts

A: What is moral hazard

100

Q: This 18th-century economist wrote 'The Wealth of Nations' and introduced the concept of the 'invisible hand' guiding free markets

A: Who is Adam Smith

200

Q: This secret 1910 meeting on a Georgia island, attended by Senator Aldrich and top bankers, produced the blueprint that would become the Federal Reserve Act

A: What is the Jekyll Island meeting

200

Q: This term describes a sustained period in which inflation and unemployment rise simultaneously, famously occurring in the U.S. during the 1970s

A: What is stagflation

200

Q: When the government spends more than it collects in tax revenue, this results, which must be financed by borrowing through Treasury securities

A: What is a budget deficit (or fiscal deficit)

200

Q: During the 2008 crisis, the Fed invoked this rarely used emergency lending authority under the Federal Reserve Act to bail out AIG and create special lending facilities for non-bank institutions

A: What is Section 13(3)

200

Q: This economist argued that in a liquidity trap, monetary policy becomes ineffective and advocated for government spending to stimulate demand during recessions

A: Who is John Maynard Keynes

300

Q: In 1951, this agreement between the Fed and the Treasury Department freed the central bank from its obligation to peg interest rates on government bonds, restoring the Fed's monetary policy independence

A: What is the Treasury-Fed Accord of 1951

300

Q: This Fed Chair aggressively raised interest rates to nearly 20% in the early 1980s to break double-digit inflation, triggering a severe recession

A: Who is Paul Volcker

300

Q: This Keynesian concept refers to the amplified effect on GDP that results from an initial change in government spending or taxation

A: What is the fiscal multiplier

300

Q: In March 2020, the Fed established this facility to directly purchase corporate bonds for the first time in its history, crossing a line it had not crossed even during the Great Recession

A: What is the Secondary Market Corporate Credit Facility (SMCCF)

300

Q: This Chicago School economist championed the idea that inflation is 'always and everywhere a monetary phenomenon' and advocated for rules-based monetary policy

A: Who is Milton Friedman

400

Q: This 1978 legislation formally established the Fed's dual mandate of maximum employment and stable prices, replacing the earlier Employment Act of 1946's single focus on full employment

A: What is the Humphrey-Hawkins Full Employment Act (Full Employment and Balanced Growth Act of 1978)

400

Q: This curve illustrates the inverse short-run relationship between inflation and unemployment, suggesting policymakers face a tradeoff between the two

A: What is the Phillips Curve

400

Q: This phenomenon occurs when increased government borrowing drives up interest rates, thereby reducing private investment and partially offsetting the stimulus effect

A: What is crowding out

400

Q: After Silicon Valley Bank's collapse in 2023, the Fed created this emergency lending program allowing banks to borrow against Treasury and agency securities at par value, preventing forced fire sales

A: What is the Bank Term Funding Program (BTFP)

400

Q: This monetary policy rule suggests the central bank should adjust the nominal interest rate in response to deviations of inflation from target and output from potential

A: What is the Taylor Rule

500

Q: Before the Fed, the U.S. had two earlier attempts at central banking. Name both institutions and the approximate decades they operated

A: What are the First Bank of the United States (1791–1811) and the Second Bank of the United States (1816–1836)

500

Q: This economic concept describes a situation where people's beliefs about future inflation become self-fulfilling because workers demand higher wages and firms raise prices in anticipation

A: What are inflation expectations (or an expectations-driven wage-price spiral)

500

Q: This proposition states that government debt financing and tax financing are equivalent because rational consumers anticipate future taxes and increase savings accordingly, neutralizing fiscal stimulus

A: What is Ricardian Equivalence

500

Q: This theory, associated with economist Hyman Minsky, argues that long periods of financial stability paradoxically breed instability as market participants take on increasingly speculative and Ponzi-like financing structures

A: What is the Financial Instability Hypothesis (Minsky Moment)

500

Q: This Nobel Prize-winning economist developed the theory of rational expectations, arguing that people use all available information to forecast economic variables, undermining the effectiveness of systematic monetary policy

A: Who is Robert Lucas