I have blanked and I cannot shake it.  My apologies
for what seems a bonehead question.  (Certainly not my
first.)  Old textbooks aren't helping me, either.

There are three money supply tools used by the Fed.
It can buy & sell bonds, it can change the reserve
requirement, or it can change the interest rate it
charges banks on overnight loans, right?

If the money supply is increasing over time, then it
can't be because of the second two, since they can
only go so low.  Is it the first that causes money
supply to grow at x% per year?  How does this happen?

Losing my mind,
jsh

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