Central
banks exist for a single reason – to inflate the supply of paper currency. They are a currency-creating and currency-inflating
institution. This serves two interest
groups in the main. One is the fractional-reserve
banks that they regulate. The other is the government that created them.
For
the banks, the alternative to a central bank is to be
subject to the forces of market
competition. This is something they are striving to avoid. Without a central bank to issue
paper currency to them at critical
times when they become overextended, the fractional-reserve banks would compete for the safety of funds deposited with them. Gold would be an important currency. Banks
that overexpanded into unsafe lending
would face customer withdrawals that they could not meet. Competition would restrain bank lending. The central bank relaxes the constraints placed upon banks
by competition. It organizes
the banks into a banking cartel.
For
the government, the alternatives are two. Either it
must compete for funds in
the market along side all other borrowers, or else it can directly
(via its treasury department) inflate the supply of paper currency itself. The government does not want to compete in the market. It wants as much power and freedom of
action as it can get. So the first alternative is
anathema to it. The
second alternative has been tried and found wanting many times historically. The problem with it is that
most governments cannot control their own currency issues when they have direct control. They inflate too much. Usually,
they destroy their currencies altogether.
Neither the fractional-reserve
banks nor the government have an alternative to achieve
their ends but a central bank.
Central banks exist because these two interest groups are behind them. Neither wants market competition. Central banks are an anti-competitive
institution.
Central
banks exist to inflate paper currencies. That is their mission. That is their reason for being. If the currency in use
in a country were gold, a central bank could not inflate. The supply of gold currency would be subject to market forces. It could not be inflated at
the will of central bankers.
Since neither banks nor the government want to be subject to market forces, they do not want the currency to be gold.
However, it is also not in their interest to have
hyperinflation. Neither the banks
nor the governments have complete freedom of currency issue, if they wish to survive. Therefore, many central banks still maintain holdings of gold
and vary them through time. The reason for this is to restrain
the issuance of paper currency to some extent. It is to influence the
value of a currency in a
direction that the central bank
desires. Central banks do
not hold gold merely as
an historical relic or
out of inertia or because
they have nothing better to hold or because of time-honored custom.
They hold it because it
supports or backs the value of a paper currency.
Although central banks
exist to inflate paper currencies, they do so within
limits. When central bankers decide on how much to inflate, they are optimizing some sort of utility. They have
value scales and they are
making choices according to these value scales. Although there will be
many influences on their choices, varying over time and from case to case, still the reason for their possessing the power to issue currency
remains that they are at the helm of an anti-competitive
institution designed to serve banks
and the government.
If
currency were gold, there would be
no need for a central bank
among those willing to compete in markets. Central bankers owe their livelihoods
and power to the replacement of gold by paper currencies that they can issue at will, within
limits that they themselves impose so as not utterly to destroy their currencies and their own livelihoods.
Most
of the economists that attain positions of power in the central bank of the U.S., which is the Federal Reserve (the
FED), have been trained and selected
to be stupid, at least publically, when it comes
to the central bank. In that
way, they can convincingly deliver lies and misconceptions
as if they were truths. They can avoid confronting
the fact of why their central bank exists.
On
October 22, 2011, Federal
Reserve Governor Elizabeth A. Duke said
"...the
Federal Reserve System's
structure was designed by
Congress to give it a broad perspective on the
U.S. economy. Most of the Fed's
actions are indeed focused
on the whole economy."
The
first sentence is myth. The idea
that Congress created and designed the FED as
a benign institution that
might benefit the U.S. economy is myth.
The
second sentence is at
best a half-truth. Yes,
the Fed’s employees
spend a great deal of
time concocting economic models and examining economic data. They believe themselves to be wrestling with all sorts of difficulties
and economic issues. Some
no doubt see themselves as beleaguered
figures and heroes struggling
to do right and arrive at policies
that benefit or even save the American economy. They realize that their actions will have economic effects, even if they have been trained minutely and in great detail to be stupid as to what these effects
are.
But
what they believe and mythologize about
the FED and themselves pales in comparison
with the reality. In the end, they
buy and sell securities. They make loans. They
intervene on behalf of chosen banks, central banks, and governments. They control the supply of bank reserves and paper currency. In the end, the
amorphous and ill-defined
thing called "the economy", which to them is only
a long and ever-varying list
of assorted statistics, is not their focus. They serve the banks and the government.
A
recent example of the FED
serving the banks is the case of derivatives losses at Bank of America (BAC). BAC wanted to
move losses from its Merrill Lynch subsidiary into its banking
unit, whose deposits are
FDIC insured. The FDIC objected.
The FED overruled the FDIC. This loads the risk onto taxpayers rather than the stockholders of Bank of
America.
In
the 2008 financial difficulties,
the FED served (bailed
out) certain large investment bankers
and insurance companies
and assorted others. Preserving certain of these was essential in order to preserve the financial system
over which the FED presides.
That was its way of saving the banks and the government. It was its way
of saving itself too.
Now that
the FED exists, it has another major reason for its existence, which is to preserve itself and expand its own powers.
It now exists, not only to serve banks and the government, but to serve itself.
This means to serve its membership, staff and bureaucracy.
It will strive to enhance its jurisdiction
among the competing regulatory agencies of government.
The
FED is a political and politicized institution. It is
not some sort of objective economic
policy-implementing institution. For this reason, it can be
expected to maneuver in order to deflect criticism and insulate itself from accountability.
At times it will release trial balloons so as to influence opinion and place itself
in a more favorable light. The FED will attempt to make itself look progressive and open to change and improvement. Do not be fooled. These maneuvers do not change the basic reality. The FED is not a benign
institution that has arisen
in a free market in order
to increase the welfare
of Americans. It is a malign, self-serving, bank-serving, government-serving
institution designed to thwart
competition among banks and enhance the size and powers of government.
Chairman
Ben S. Bernanke, in his
speech of October 18, 2011, tries to position the
FED as an institution beneficially responding to the events of recent years:
"My remarks will
focus on how central banks responded
to recent challenges related
to the conduct of both monetary policy and the
promotion of financial stability
and how, as a result of that
experience, the analysis
and execution of these two key functions
may change."
We can always expect a self-serving spiel from Bernanke, dressed up in academic language. He doesn’t disappoint us. In Bernanke’s
hands, inflation becomes "innovative".
He wraps central banking
in the hoary myth of the
central banker as cavalry
– always riding to
the rescue:
"Even as central banks were innovative in the operation of their monetary policies, they were forced
to be equally innovative in restoring and maintaining financial stability. Serving as a lender of last resort--standing
ready in a crisis to lend to solvent but illiquid financial institutions
that have adequate collateral--is, of course, a traditional function of central
banks. Indeed, the need for an institution that could serve this function was a primary motivation for the creation
of the Federal Reserve in
1913."
Does Bernanke
believe that the FED was created to serve as a
"lender of last resort"?
Yes, he does. He has been trained to be stupid. He has been chosen to head the FED because he exemplifies that stupidity. He has been trained not to understand what this last resort lending actually means and does. Every dollar of currency creation is a theft of value from existing currency holders. It is like splitting
a stock 2 for 1, in which case the price of each share falls by half. For Bernanke to understand the Austrian view of business cycles as induced
by monetary excess would be far beyond his present
capabilities. That has literally
been educated out of him
by his economics
training. The previous chairman, Alan Greenspan, comes across as quite a different case. He understands. As chairman, he seems to have come to the belief
that the markets were stupid and could be manipulated
indefinitely.
Gary
North has advised Occupy Wall Street to Occupy
Liberty Street, on which the Federal
Reserve Bank of New York is located.
This is good advice.
The
FED exists as a privileged
institution. Those privileges
should be terminated. But since the FED
serves government as well
as banks, the government does not want to end the FED.
Can that be done by confronting local
police? Such confrontations show that there is
a problem. They make politicians take note. But determined and articulate political movements that demand an end to FED privileges
are essential. Ron Paul and/or a mere handful of elected officials should not be the sole voices heard in Washington that are demanding an end to the FED.
I
think even better advice is to Occupy Capitol Hill. Let it be in peace and non-violently. Is that even possible in this day and age? I think not. Then confrontation
has to be in mind and
spirit. It has to be in words.
It has to be in media of communication. It has to be in formal declarations. It has to be through organizations making formal demands. It has to be in all
sorts of ways that people
devise. In Estonia in
1987-1991, it was partly through the Singing Revolution. Street protests are all right as far as they
go, but confronting police is
not a complete solution. Confronting
power with demands is essential. What demands? Liberty, liberty, and more liberty. Freedom from the FED is one such demand.
Michael S. Rozeff
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