A
handful of banks grew so large that financial authorities declared them
"too big to fail." Removed from market discipline, the banks became
wards of the government requiring massive creation of new money by the
Federal Reserve in order to support through the policy of Quantitative
Easing the prices of financial instruments on the banks' balance sheets
and in order to finance at low interest rates trillion dollar federal
budget deficits associated with the long recession caused by the
financial crisis.
The Fed's policy of monetizing one trillion dollars of bonds annually
put pressure on the US dollar, the value of which declined in terms of
gold.