Thursday, July 9, 2009

The Fed Must Be Stopped

Our country currently finds itself in the midst of the worst economic crisis since the 1930s and, as during all economic crises, people search for the answer as to why this has happened. Not only have large financial firms been affected, but also mainstays of American industry such as GM and Chrysler, all the way down to the Mom & Pop stores on Main Street. The easy way out is to blame the traditional scapegoats: foreign governments, fraudulent businessmen, and greedy speculators. But the real villain is far more sinister; the organization entrusted with maintaining a stable dollar and touted as the guarantor of economic stability – the Federal Reserve. In the United States, monetary policy has been the domain of the Federal Reserve since its inception in 1913. Since that time we have had a number of cyclical recessions, each one following a boom caused by the Federal Reserve's loose monetary policy. The problem with the Federal Reserve is that it interferes with market pricing functions. Interest rates are a price just like any other and arise because of the fact that people prefer to consume in the present rather than in the future. The extent to which people defer present consumption is reflected in interest rates, which in a free market are determined by the spontaneous interactions and decisions of millions of people. Fed intervention to set prices throws markets and interest rates out of equilibrium. When the Federal Reserve pushes interest rates below what the market rate would be, everyone wants to borrow money for long-term projects. Shortages of loanable funds would occur, except that the Federal Reserve has the ability to create bank balances out of thin air. The Fed can create a bank ledger on paper, or on a computer, establish a balance of millions or billions of dollars, and then spend these dollars out into the economy. Loans become cheap, and the result of these lower interest rates is an economic boom which eventually manifests itself as a bubble. Beginning in 2001, the Federal Reserve pushed interest rates to as low as one percent, which after adjusting for inflation meant that the real interest rate was negative, so businesses were actually making money by taking out loans. This was the fuel for the housing bubble and the reason there are 19 million empty houses today. Because of this awesome power to create money out of thin air, the Fed has jumped in to stabilize ailing financial firms by pledging over $7 trillion through various guarantee programs and credit facilities. This is equivalent to over half of the entire nation's GDP. Over $1 trillion of this is already in play, propping up banks and other institutions that should be allowed to fail. All of this has taken place with no oversight by Congress. The Fed was created by Congress, and it is unconscionable that we have allowed it to act in such a way without our oversight. Currently the Federal Reserve's credit facilities, open market operations, and agreements with foreign governments and central banks are all exempt from any sort of audit or oversight. Earlier this year I introduced the Federal Reserve Transparency Act, HR 1207, that would remove all restrictions on Federal Reserve audits and call for a f ull audit of the Federal Reserve System to be completed by the end of 2010. At this writing, 245 of my fellow Congressmen have cosponsored this bill and we hope to have hearings in the near future. In the Senate, Republicans Jim DeMint, Mike Crapo and David Vitter have cosponsored S. 604, companion legislation introduced by Bernie Sanders. I am very encouraged by the tremendous growing momentum on Capitol Hill. Our Founding Fathers never intended for a single entity such as the Federal Reserve to have this much power. In fact, there is no authority in the Constitution for the federal government to create a central bank, to enact legal tender laws, or to print paper money. The Tenth Amendment is quite clear that “The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people.” The states themselves are prohibited from emitting bills of credit, i.e. paper money, arising from the Founders' negative experiences with paper money during the Revolutionary War. Cheap, un-backed, easily counterfeited paper money nearly lost the Revolution, until the government returned to minting gold and silver coins. Unfortunately, like too many other lessons learned by the Founders, the painful experiences of paper money have been forgotten by those living in the pres ent. We even ignore the experiences of Germans in the 1920s, Argentines in the 1980s, and Zimbabweans over the past decade. The Fed doubled the monetary base last fall in a matter of months, and God help us if any of this high-powered money begins to make its way through the economy. An audit of the Fed is only the first step towards returning to where our Founders intended this country to be. The Founders knew that paper money could ruin a country, and drafted the Constitution in such a way that they thought would ensure sound, commodity-backed currency. Unfortunately, the Constitution was dispensed with long ago, and we find ourselves now suffering under an unconstitutional regime of un-backed paper money. Until we abolish the Federal Reserve and return to a stable currency that is not able to be manipulated to create boom and bust cycles, we will continue down the path of economic ruin. Congress Ron Paul serves the fourteenth district of Texas and is honorary chairman of Campaign for Liberty. His new book, End the Fed (Grand Central Publishing) will release on September 16th and is available for pre-order on Amazon.

No comments:

Post a Comment

Firearms Training

Front Sight Firearms Training

Global Warming Hoax Blogs

Exported Energy Income

Exported Energy Income
$200 Billion Annual Income

Delivered Cost of Electrical Energy

Delivered Cost of Electrical Energy

Imported Energy

Imported Energy
$300 Billion Annual Cost

Long-lived Trees are Growing Faster

Long-lived Trees are Growing Faster

U.S. Forests Have Increased 40% in 50 Years

U.S. Forests Have Increased 40% in 50 Years

Qualitative Greenhouse Effect

Qualitative Greenhouse Effect

Production Normalized

Production Normalized
Orange Trees, Pine Trees, etc

Atmospheric Methane is Leveling

Atmospheric Methane is Leveling
methane concentration

Atmospheric CO2 Enrichment ppm

Atmospheric CO2 Enrichment ppm

Ocean Surface

Ocean Surface
Watts per square meter

Atomospheric CO2 Concentration ppm

Atomospheric CO2 Concentration ppm

Antarctic Ice Core Temperature

Antarctic Ice Core Temperature
Termperature Rise per 30%

Temperature Trend per Decade

Temperature Trend per Decade
1940-1996 *C

Global Temperature Deviation *C

Global Temperature Deviation *C

Solar Activity Charts

Solar Activity Charts

Before Hydrocarbon Use Increase

Before Hydrocarbon Use Increase
and During Increase Chart

There Has Been No Increase in Maximum Hurricane Wind Speed or Number of Violent Atlantic Hurricanes

There Has Been No Increase in Maximum Hurricane Wind Speed or Number of Violent Atlantic Hurricanes

There Has Been No Increase in Number of Atlantic Hurricanes That Make Landfall

There Has Been No Increase in Number of Atlantic Hurricanes That Make Landfall

Number of Tornadoes in U.S. Is Decreasing

Number of Tornadoes in U.S. Is Decreasing

U.S. Rainfall Is Increasing at 1.8 inches per Century

U.S. Rainfall Is Increasing at 1.8 inches per Century

U.S. Temperature Increase per Century

U.S. Temperature Increase per Century

Temperature Vs Solar Activity Chart

Temperature Vs Solar Activity Chart

Intermediate Trends

Intermediate Trends

Solar Activity

Solar Activity

Before Hydrocarbon

Before Hydrocarbon

Medieval Climate Optimum

Medieval Climate Optimum

Celebrating Freedom

Celebrating Freedom

Dont Tread On Me

Dont Tread On Me

Stop Obama Care

Stop Obama Care

Live Free or Die Hard

Live Free or Die Hard

Christians Against Leftist Heresy

Communism in the U.S.

Communism in the United States is something of an anomaly. The basic principles of communism are, by design, at odds with the free enterprise foundation of U.S. capitalism. The freedom of individuals to privately own property, start a business, and own the means of production is a basic tenet of U.S. government, and communism opposes this arrangement. However, there have been, are, and probably always will be communists in the United States.


Shariah Awareness Ribbon

Shariah Awareness Ribbon

Constitution Amendments

Our Constitutional Amendments are bound in order of importance. When our 1st Amendment erodes enough, our 2nd will soon fall, too; followed by all of the liberties we have known as citizens of the United States. Many live in denial that this will occur; however, by simply looking one can see the footprint of our sovereignty disappearing in the sand. My most important priviledge is the freedom to openly worship the Almighty God of the Heavens and Earth. Without that ability, the United States will be no greater than the countries we assign ourselves to occupy in the name of "freedom". -Suzanne

Ati-atihan Festival

Ati-atihan Festival

Festival Panay Island 1980

Festival Panay Island 1980

Subic Bay RP

Subic Bay RP
Christmas party 1979

Search This Blog

Add to Technorati Favorites

Followers

Statcounter


View My Stats

Blog Archive

AddThis

Bookmark and Share

About Me

My photo
I have 4 children, and many grand kids. I love scrapbooking, cooking with family and friends, painting Rousseau like canvas's, creating glass beaded works of art, collect frogs with crowns. I like to work with people selling property.