FOMC vs. FED — What’s the Difference?

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In financial news, you often hear about the Fed and the FOMC, sometimes even in the same headline. They are connected, but not the same thing. Here’s a simple breakdown.

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The Federal Reserve (FED)

The Federal Reserve System, usually called the Fed, is the central bank of the United States.
It was created in 1913 to provide the country with a safe, flexible, and stable monetary and financial system.

The Fed has three main parts:

  1. Board of Governors in Washington, D.C.
  2. 12 Regional Federal Reserve Banks spread across major cities like New York, Chicago, and San Francisco.
  3. Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC), which sets monetary policy.

The Fed’s responsibilities go far beyond interest rates. It supervises banks, maintains financial stability, regulates payment systems, and works to keep inflation under control while supporting maximum employment.


The FOMC

The Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) is a specific part of the Fed.
Its job is to decide on monetary policy, especially when it comes to:

  • Setting short-term interest rates.
  • Guiding money supply through open market operations (buying and selling government securities).
  • Signaling how the Fed sees the economy evolving.

The FOMC consists of:

  • 7 members of the Board of Governors.
  • President of the New York Fed.
  • 4 of the remaining 11 Reserve Bank presidents, who rotate.

Together, they make the key decisions that directly affect markets, like whether to raise, cut, or hold interest rates.


The Difference in One Sentence

The Fed is the entire U.S. central banking system.
The FOMC is the part of the Fed that sets interest rates and manages monetary policy.

So when headlines say, “The Fed cut rates”, it is technically the FOMC making that decision — but under the umbrella of the Federal Reserve System.


Why It Matters

Understanding this difference helps make sense of financial news.

  • When the Fed is mentioned broadly, it can refer to all of its functions — regulation, stability, banking supervision.
  • When the FOMC is mentioned, it’s almost always about interest rates and monetary policy, the decisions that move stock markets, currencies, and bonds.

In short: the FOMC is the Fed’s decision-making engine for monetary policy, while the Fed is the entire central bank of the United States.



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