University Distinguished Lecture
Behind the Scenes on September 11:
How the Federal Reserve Made Sure that Cash Machines
and Credit Cards Kept Working
Abstract
Interest rate changes get the headlines, but they aren't the focus of
the daily work of the 20,000 Federal Reserve employees. These people
spend their time making sure that the financial system works smoothly
and that when we want to buy things, it is straightforward to pay for
them.
The financial system is our economic plumbing. And just like the
plumbing in our homes and offices, when it works nobody notices. But
just like a water main break, a financial crisis is something that
everyone notices. The day-to-day job of the people who work for the
Federal Reserve is to keep our financial plumbing working. They make
sure that money can flow quickly and easily to where people want it to
go.
The terrorist attacks on September 11, 2001, created both human
tragedy and financial crisis. But the work of the people at the
Federal Reserve contained the financial fallout. In my lecture, I
will explain what the Federal Reserve did to ensure that if one of us
went to the bank machine at noon on September 11, 2001, cash still
came out; and that our credit cards still worked if we wanted to use
them to buy groceries on the way home.
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