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The Fed’s Three Parts: Washington, Wall Street, Main Street
December 05, 2018
By Christine Smith

The Federal Reserve System—or Fed, for short—was structured so that monetary policymakers hear from many
different voices around the country. The Fed was designed with three distinct but complementary components:
1. The Board of Governors in Washington, D.C.
2. A Reserve bank in New York City, long considered to be the nation’s financial capital.
3. 11 additional Reserve banks located throughout the United States.
The Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis is among these regional Reserve banks, which are designed to represent the
voice of Main Street.

A Policymaker’s Reflections

In this video, St. Louis Fed President James Bullard recounts how last decade’s financial crisis demonstrated the
importance of the Fed's decentralized structure. These and other reflections on his first 10 years as president and
CEO became the foundation for the St. Louis Fed’s 2017 annual report.
"I think it is incumbent on the Main Street component of the Fed to push back against its Washington and Wall
Street counterparts, to represent Main Street America the way it was intended in the original Federal Reserve Act,"
Bullard said in the report. "I felt that the crisis actually brought out the role of the regional Federal Reserve banks
pretty extensively."

Additional Resources
More about Bullard’s role as a Reserve bank CEO
Open Vault: Four Ways the St. Louis Fed Listens to Main Street
Open Vault: Operation Outreach: How a Fed President Connects with Local Economies

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Christine Smith
Christine Smith is a manager with the St. Louis Fed’s communications team.