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Later this month Congress will have an unprecedented
opportunity to force the Federal Reserve to provide meaningful transparency
to lawmakers and taxpayers. HR 459, my bill known as “Audit the
Fed,” is scheduled for a vote before the full Congress in July. More
than 270 of my colleagues cosponsored the bill, and it has the support of
congressional leadership. But its passage in the House of Representatives is
only the beginning of the battle, as many Senators and the President still
don’t see the critical need to have a national discussion about
monetary policy.
The American public now senses that the Fed’s
actions, especially since 2008, are enormously inflationary and will cause
great harm to the American economy in the long run. They are beginning to
understand what so many economists still don’t understand, which is
that inflation is a monetary phenomenon, and rising prices are merely a
symptom of that phenomenon. Prices eventually rise when the supply of US
dollars (paper or electronic) grows faster than the available goods and
services being chased by those dollars.
This fundamental truth has been thoroughly explained by Milton Friedman and
many others, so today’s Keynesian economists have no excuse for their
claims that “inflation is under control.” Ordinary Americans
don’t need a PhD simply to look at the Fed’s balance sheet and
understand the staggering amount of money creation that has occurred in
recent years. They know it will have harmful consequences for all of us
eventually.
I've spoken at length about inflation, and how Fed money creation is
effectively a tax. Every dollar created out of thin air dilutes the value of
the dollars in your pocket and your savings in the bank. But the truth is
that we are only beginning to see the results of the Fed’s dramatic
increase in the money supply. As former Fed Chair Alan Greenspan himself
explained last week to Larry Kudlow, most of the
dollar deposits created by the Fed via successive rounds of
“quantitative easing” remain on the balance sheet of Fed member
banks. Because of very rational economic fears, banks are not lending,
businesses are not expanding, and individuals are shedding debt. So, the
trillions of dollars created by the Fed since 2008 remained largely undeployed. When those dollars eventually make their way
into the world economy, prices across all sectors of the economy are likely
to rise dramatically.
The true evil of inflation is that newly created money benefits politically
favored financial interests, especially banks, on the front end. Over time,
however, the net result of monetary inflation is always the devaluation of
savings and purchasing power. This devaluation discourages saving, which is
the key to capital accumulation and investment in a healthy economy.
Inflation also tends to hurt seniors and those living on fixed incomes the
most.
For decades the Fed has operated without any meaningful oversight whatsoever,
resulting in the loss of savings, loss of purchasing power, and loss of
quality of life for all Americans. It causes individuals and businesses to
make bad decisions, misallocating their capital because market signals have
been distorted. It causes financial ruin by engineering the inevitable boom
and bust cycles that so many erroneously blame on capitalism. And it does all
this in secrecy, to the benefit of the financial and political classes. It is
time to Audit the Fed, as a first step toward ending its unchecked power over
our money and economic fortunes.
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