Volcker Rule

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Introduction

The Federal Reserve Act was enacted in 1913, which created the central banking system of the United States, the Federal Reserve. The federal reserve acts as the bank to bankers and the bank to the federal government. The goals of the Federal Reserve are to create a safer, flexible, stable financial system. The primary responsibility of the Federal Reserve is to formulate and implement the monetary policy of the nation. Another one responsibility of the Federal Reserve is to supervise and regulate banking institutions and maintain consumer confidence in practices. Additionally the Federal Reserve provides financial services to depository institutions, the U.S. government, and foreign central banks. They clear checks, process electronic payments, and distribute money to United States financial institutions.

The system is still in tact today. The central bank, for the most part, is independent of political process. The Federal Reserve must regularly report to Congress to address important issues that the House and Senate may have. Throughout the years, since the establishment of the Federal Reserve, there has been periods of tension with Congress. In 1929 the stock market crashed. Although the United States economy entered into a depression six months before the fall of the stock market prices on the “New York stock exchange in October of 1929” many still claim the catalyst of the great depression was the crash itself. The efficient market hypothesis suggests the opposite, that the great depression was the cause of the stock market crash. Prior to the great depression, the Government relied on “impersonal market forces to achieve the necessary economic correction”. Theorists of the efficient market hypothesis b...

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...rule proposed by President Obama and his administration, on January 21, 2010, limits how federally insured banks use their own capital to place bets on the market, retracting towards a more regulated financial system as was once implemented by the GSA. The rationale behind the proposal is to prevent failure of banking institutions which destabilize and damage the economy. This has left many banks concerned that if the limitations, dubbed the Volcker Rule, are enacted, banks will lose a substantial amount of revenue. The Volcker Rule was inspired by the former chairman of the Federal Reserve, Paul Volcker, and as initially proposed, would prohibit bank holding companies and financial services from owning, investing, or sponsoring hedge funds, private equity funds, and proprietary trading for the entities own profit unrelated to activity conducted to service customers.

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