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Does the Bell Toll for the Fed?

IMG Auteur
Publié le 10 novembre 2015
585 mots - Temps de lecture : 1 - 2 minutes
( 4 votes, 5/5 ) , 2 commentaires
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Last week Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen hinted that the Federal Reserve Board will increase interest rates at the board's December meeting. The positive jobs report that was released following Yellen's remarks caused many observers to say that the Federal Reserve's first interest rate increase in almost a decade is practically inevitable.

However, there are several reasons to doubt that the Fed will increase rates anytime in the near future. One reason is that the official unemployment rate understates unemployment by ignoring the over 94 million Americans who have either withdrawn from the labor force or settled for part-time work. Presumably the Federal Reserve Board has access to the real unemployment numbers and is thus aware that the economy is actually far from full employment.

The decline in the stock market following Friday's jobs report was attributed to many investors' fears over the impact of the predicted interest rate increase. Wall Street's jitters about the effects of a rate increase is another reason to doubt that the Fed will soon increase rates. After all, according to former Federal Reserve official Andrew Huszar, protecting Wall Street was the main goal of "quantitative easing," so why would the Fed now risk a Christmastime downturn in the stock markets?

Donald Trump made headlines last week by accusing Janet Yellen of keeping interest rates low because she does not want to risk another economic downturn in President Obama's last year in office. I have many disagreements with Mr. Trump, but I do agree with him that the Federal Reserve's polices may be influenced by partisan politics.

Janet Yellen would hardly be the first Fed chair to allow politics to influence decision-making. Almost all Fed chairs have felt pressure to "adjust" monetary policy to suit the incumbent administration, and almost all have bowed to the pressure. Economists refer to the Fed's propensity to tailor monetary policy to suit the needs of incumbent presidents as the "political" business cycle.

Presidents of both parties, and all ideologies, have interfered with the Federal Reserve's conduct of monetary policy. President Dwight D. Eisenhower actually threatened to force the Fed chair to resign if he did not give in to Ike's demands for easy money, while then-Federal Reserve Chair Arthur Burns was taped joking about Fed independence with President Richard Nixon.

The failure of the Fed's policies of massive money creation, corporate bailouts, and quantitative easing to produce economic growth is a sign that the fiat money system's day of reckoning is near. The only way to prevent the monetary system's inevitable crash from causing a major economic crisis is the restoration of a free-market monetary policy.

One positive step Congress may take this year is passing the Audit the Fed bill. Fortunately, Senator Rand Paul is using Senate rules to force the Senate to hold a roll-call vote on Audit the Fed. The vote is expected to take place in the next two-to-three weeks. If Audit the Fed passes, the American people can finally learn the full truth about the Fed's operations. If it fails, the American people will at least know which senators side with them and which ones side with the Federal Reserve.

Allowing a secretive central bank to control monetary policy has resulting in an ever-expanding government, growing income inequality, a series of ever-worsening economic crises, and a steady erosion of the dollar's purchasing power. Unless this system is changed, America, and the world, will soon experience a major economic crisis. It is time to finally audit, then end, the Fed.

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Great article!! The Fed has over the years (and certainly not singlehandedly) altered the very concept of what money is. Besides the debt itself, there is bank leverage, derivatives, options, and other exotic multiplications of real monetary value, interconnected and hidden liabilities, "innovative" accounting, and the resulting failure of individuals, businesses, state and local governments, and federal entities to live within their means. The artificially low cost of money, dictated by the Fed and not the market, has only accentuated the problem.

Dodd-Frank was a good start, but one has to wonder about it's implementation, the creative ability of institutions to find other routes to excess, and the very real and credible fear of the deflationary effects.

However, it is better to confront the problem now with full transparency, rather than by default, by edict, and in a future of even worse conditions. In an age of almost universal transparency, what could the Fed possibly be hiding that we, the people , don't deserve to know?
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While I agree with all the points in the article, the final sentence seems to indicate that auditing the Fed then ending the Fed is the solution to all our problems. I think this statement begs the question "Is it possible to end the Fed?" With trillions of dollars of debt on its books, it seems to me that the Fed is by far the biggest "too big to fail" bank. Won't ending the Fed and unwinding all that debt cause a tsunami of financial problems worldwide? The result of auditing the Fed will likely force politicians of all parties to face the specter of solving an unsolvable problem - the country is bankrupt. What politician wants that? The easiest path for the politicians will be to try to avoid voting on this issue if at all possible.
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Great article!! The Fed has over the years (and certainly not singlehandedly) altered the very concept of what money is. Besides the debt itself, there is bank leverage, derivatives, options, and other exotic multiplications of real monetary value, inte  Lire la suite
8310508 - 17/11/2015 à 16:33 GMT
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