Do We Need the Fed?

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Stocks rose Wednesday following the Federal Reserve’s announcement of the first interest rate increase since 2006. However, stocks fell just two days later. One reason the positive reaction to the Fed’s announcement did not last long is that the Fed seems to lack confidence in the economy and is unsure what policies it should adopt in the future.

At her Wednesday press conference, Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen acknowledged continuing “cyclical weakness” in the job market. She also suggested that future rate increases are likely to be as small, or even smaller, then Wednesday’s. However, she also expressed concerns over increasing inflation, which suggests the Fed may be open to bigger rate increases.

Many investors and those who rely on interest from savings for a substantial part of their income cheered the increase. However, others expressed concern that even this small rate increase will weaken the already fragile job market.

These critics echo the claims of many economists and economic historians who blame past economic crises, including the Great Depression, on ill-timed money tightening by the Fed. While the Federal Reserve is responsible for our boom-bust economy, recessions and depressions are not caused by tight monetary policy. Instead, the real cause of economic crisis is the loose money policies that precede the Fed’s tightening.

When the Fed floods the market with artificially created money, it lowers the interest rates, which are the price of money. As the price of money, interest rates send signals to businesses and investors regarding the wisdom of making certain types of investments. When the rates are artificially lowered by the Fed instead of naturally lowered by the market, businesses and investors receive distorted signals. The result is over-investment in certain sectors of the economy, such as housing.

This creates the temporary illusion of prosperity. However, since the boom is rooted in the Fed’s manipulation of the interest rates, eventually the bubble will burst and the economy will slide into recession. While the Federal Reserve may tighten the money supply before an economic downturn, the tightening is simply a futile attempt to control the inflation resulting from the Fed’s earlier increases in the money supply.

After the bubble inevitably bursts, the Federal Reserve will inevitability try to revive the economy via new money creation, which starts the whole boom-bust cycle all over again. The only way to avoid future crashes is for the Fed to stop creating inflation and bubbles.

Some economists and policy makers claim that the way to stop the Federal Reserve from causing economic chaos is not to end the Fed but to force the Fed to adopt a “rules-based” monetary policy. Adopting rules-based monetary policy may seem like an improvement, but, because it still allows a secretive central bank to manipulate the money supply, it will still result in Fed-created booms and busts.

The only way to restore economic stability and avoid a major economic crisis is to end the Fed, or at least allow Americans to use alterative currencies. Fortunately, more Americans than ever are studying Austrian economics and working to change our monetary system.

Thanks to the efforts of this growing anti-Fed movement, Audit the Fed had twice passed the House of Representatives, and the Senate is scheduled to vote on it on January 12. Auditing the Fed, so the American people can finally learn the full truth about the Fed’s operations, is an important first step in restoring a sound monetary policy. Hopefully, the Senate will take that step and pass Audit the Fed in January.

 

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13 Comments
DDearborn
DDearborn
December 22, 2015 11:02 am

Hmmm

The problem sadly isn’t so much that we no longer need the “FED”. The problem was, and remains that we NEVER needed the FED.The “FED” has knowingly and with premeditation stolen the wealth of the nation. And at this late date there is nothing much left for them to steal. Consequently their umbridled power to manipulate and control has been greatly diminished. Despite their constant and very public drumbeat of rhetoric to the contrary, the “FED” meaning the owners of the 12 federal reserve banks, most of whom are not even US citizens, would like nothing better than to escape quietly into the night.

DDearborn
DDearborn
December 22, 2015 11:10 am

Hmmm

I would like to add that I don’t believe that the average person on the street has any idea what a terrible legacy the “FED” is leaving us with. Each 1/4 of a percentage point the “FED” raises interest rate adds about 50 Billion dollars in interest payments due on the national debt. In other words if interest rates rise only a couple of points Americans will being spending roughly half of every federal tax dollar in interest payments to the crooked slim that own the FED reserve banks with money that we gave them for free which they are now charging us 6% interest. Insanity doesn’t begin to describe the FED. It is high time that its owners be arrested and tried for economic treason

Sensetti
Sensetti
December 22, 2015 11:24 am

Who would manage the U.S. Currency should we end the Fed?

Sensetti
Sensetti
December 22, 2015 11:28 am

Would we straight away go to a balanced budget, you spend no more than you take in?

Sensetti
Sensetti
December 22, 2015 11:31 am
Sensetti
Sensetti
December 22, 2015 12:01 pm

So we’re gonna end the Fed, balance our budget, not spend more than we take in while paying off our current debt. I would really love to have someone explain to me exactly how we could get that done. I would very capably explain that this behemoth of a welfare state that has been created would collapse in on itself and destroy the infrastructure of this country.

It would take another generation or two of slow methodical steps to unwind this monstrous mountain of debt and dependancy. Just like personnel debt you don’t live the high life on credit cards and magically just stop and maintain your current standards of living while paying off the debt you incurred. It would take a group of very smart people over many, many years to unwind this mess. So my question is this who would manage the money and debt payoff? Would it be the crooked politicians in Washington on both sides that are already bought off? Or would you prefer a professional group of bankers and financiers to manage the project. Somebody gotta do. Any ideas?

I despise pie in the sky thinking, it’s a bunch of dishonest bullshit. My father taught me as a young man you have to play the cards you are holding in your hand. Sitting around yammering about some idealistic Utopia that doesn’t exist at this time and with no intelligent way to get there anytime soon is a futile exercise.

Sensetti
Sensetti
December 22, 2015 12:09 pm

Let me clarify something. I’m all for ending the Fed, I’ve just never seen anyone lay out a workable plan for doing so, with all the specifics I addressed above. And BTW their are many more!

robert h siddell jr
robert h siddell jr
December 22, 2015 4:06 pm

The Fed is financial cancer.

Sensetti
Sensetti
December 22, 2015 5:00 pm

Robert I totally agree but sometimes with cancer the cure kills you quicker and more violently than the cancer does. I guess no one can answer my question as to who would replace the Fed. What outstanding group would we replace them with?

Bea Lever
Bea Lever
December 22, 2015 6:28 pm

Admin +1000

Don’t need them now and NEVER did.The Fed was created was to PREVENT the mess we have NOW that THEY have caused? Throw the bums out.

Sensetti
Sensetti
December 23, 2015 6:52 am

No, I’m not brainwashed! I just know the same tyrants that just passed the spending bill would be in charge of any new monetary system. Is Congress efficient at anything? I’d be willing to bet we would not be any better off than we are now.

Here’s the bottom line, nothing will change until after collapse, there’s no public momentum, none. Best case scenario we go sideways for a few more years, after that who knows we may end up with a military dictatorship. We had a financial meltdown in 08 it’s now 2015, it’s not been a bad seven years for me. Moving sideways is as good as it gets now, when that trend breaks we fall off the cliff.

Sensetti
Sensetti
December 23, 2015 7:15 am

B lever,

Throw the bums out! Sweet! I’m a realist, it’s not going to happen, why waste your time beating your chest about something with Zero chance of happening. Give me any logical path to ending the Federal Reserve Bank, and please don’t forget details of your public relations campaign to convince Joe public ending their financial system will be a good thing. Hey, start with SSS, convince him the Fed propping up the markets is a bad thing for his retirement income. When you get that done run down the 77 million baby boomers getting ready to retire and get their blessings. Not gonna happen!! You may not need the Fed but they are going to drive the car you are riding in all the way to the crash site. So turn the music up and enjoy the ride!! Peace!