The Monetary Power of the Periphery: Dallas’s Role in Defending the Dollar
Richard Fisher, former President of the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas, once remarked that "money and banking, in the end, is a confidence game." This sentiment underscores the strategic importance of regional Fed banks like Dallas in maintaining the integrity of the U.S. financial system.
Dallas, often overlooked in Michael Lewis’s Wall Street narratives, serves as a critical node in the decentralized structure of the Federal Reserve. Its distance from New York—1,547 miles—was deliberate, designed to insulate monetary policy from concentrated political or financial influence.
The Federal Reserve’s 12 regional banks, including Dallas, reflect economic diversity and distribute power geographically. This decentralization remains a bulwark against systemic risks, even as the financial landscape evolves.