| by
Lynn Elaine Browne
Issue Number 1 (January/February) 2001
Over the past thirty years, the activities of the Federal
Reserve System have undergone major change. Public interest
and confidence in monetary policy have grown immensely.
Low inflation has emerged, if not as the primary objective
of monetary policy, at least as a more central focus
than it was thirty years ago. The Federal Reserve System
has also undergone changes. Reserve Banks now charge
for many of their financial services, rather than providing
them free to banks that are System members. Placed in
competition with commercial banks in providing financial
services, Reserve Banks have striven to be more efficient,
more responsive, and more innovative. At the same time,
Reserve Banks have played increasingly active and increasingly
visible roles in their communities and their Districts,
providing economic expertise and civic leadership.
Frank Morris, President of the Federal Reserve Bank
of Boston from 1968 to 1988, was a key contributor to
all these developments. His influence was felt most
strongly in the conduct of monetary policy, in the evolution
of the payments system, and in shaping the role that
Reserve Banks play in their regions. Accordingly, this
conference in his honor focused on these three areas
and on the developments that have occurred since 1968
and the prospects and challenges ahead. Three sessions
addressed issues in monetary policy, and one each tackled
payments and the role of the regional Reserve Banks.
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