For more than three decades, the Federal Reserve has steadily expanded its role in the American economy. From a relatively narrow mandate as a lender of last resort to commercial banks, to inflation and employment targeting, it now operates as a systemic backstop for entire financial markets, allocating credit, supporting asset prices, and shaping macroeconomic policy in ways few Americans fully understand. While defenders of the Fed frame these developments as pragmatic responses to crises, a broader historical lens, especially Robert Higgs’s “Ratchet Effect” theory, suggests a more...
















