The Federal Reserve Is, and Always Has Been, Politicized

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Audit the Fed recently took a step closer to becoming law, when it was favorably reported by the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform. This means the House could vote on the bill at any time. The bill passed by voice vote without any objections, although Fed defenders did launch hysterical attacks on the bill during the debate as well as at a hearing on the bill the previous week.
One representative claimed that auditing the Fed would result in rising interest rates, a stock market crash, a decline in the dollar’s value, and a complete loss of confidence in the US economy. Those who understand economics know that all of this is actually what awaits America unless we change our monetary policy. Passing the audit bill is the vital first step in that process, since an audit can provide Congress a road map to changing the fiat currency system.

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Another charge leveled by the Fed’s defenders is that subjecting the Fed to an audit would make the Fed subject to political pressure. There are two problems with this argument. First, nothing in the audit bill gives Congress or the president any new authority to interfere in the Federal Reserve’s operations. Second, and most importantly, the Federal Reserve has a long history of giving in to presidential pressure for an “accommodative” monetary policy.The most notorious example of Fed chairmen tailoring monetary policy to fit the demands of a president is Nixon-era Federal Reserve Chair Arthur Burns. Burns and Nixon may be an extreme example — after all no other president was caught on tape joking with the Fed chair about Fed independence, but every president has tried to influence the Fed with varying degrees of success. For instance, Lyndon Johnson summoned the Fed chair to the White House to berate him for not tailoring monetary policy to support Johnson’s guns and butter policies.Federal Reserve chairmen have also used their power to shape presidential economic policy. According to Maestro, Bob Woodward’s biography of Alan Greenspan, Bill Clinton once told Al Gore that Greenspan was a “man we can deal with,” while Treasury Secretary Lloyd Bentsen claimed the Clinton administration and Greenspan’s Fed had a “gentleman’s agreement” regarding the Fed’s support for the administration’s economic policies.

The Federal Reserve has also worked to influence the legislative branch. In the 1970s, the Fed organized a campaign by major banks and financial institutions to defeat a prior audit bill. The banks and other institutions who worked to keep the Fed’s operations a secret are not only under the Fed’s regulatory jurisdiction, but are some of the major beneficiaries of the current monetary system.

There can be no doubt that, as the audit bill advances through the legislative process, the Fed and its allies will ramp up both public and behind-the-scenes efforts to kill the bill. Can anyone dismiss the possibility that Janet Yellen will attempt to “persuade” Donald Trump to drop his support for Audit the Fed in exchange for an “accommodative” monetary policy that supports the administration’s proposed spending on overseas militarism and domestic infrastructure?

While auditing the Fed is supported by the vast majority of Americans, it is opposed by powerful members of the financial elite and the deep state. Therefore, those of us seeking to change our national monetary policy must redouble our efforts to force Congress to put America on a path to liberty, peace, and prosperity by auditing, then ending, the Fed.

 

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4 Comments
lanet
lanet
April 17, 2017 3:20 pm

The criminal monopoly “fed” created, owned, operated by the subhuman slim jews.

Boat Guy
Boat Guy
April 17, 2017 5:20 pm

I don’t know if the religious affiliation has as much to do with the fed and policies . I do know a minority benefit from its contortionist maneuvers that infect our American economy and they own all of it . Jew and non Jew alike those benefiting from this system need to be crushed by the American judicial system . To bad they own that too !
A bill forced into law by a simple majority of congressman and senators on Christmas Eve 1913 should never be allowed to stand now . This lack of standing goes for income tax and the withholding forced to be done by employers ! If people had to write a check every quarter and send it to the federal government treasury a whole lot of BULL SHIT WOULD CHANGE !
I love it when I hear some idiot tell me WOW I’m getting $2,400 back and they think they are lucky . I think your stupid : you just gave the most ridiculous idiotic managers of your money $200 per month for these idiots to piss away leaving you and your children deeper in debt ! And now you think you are a winner getting some of your own money back like they are doing you a favor . You probably paid somebody $50 to clue you in and your happy ! Uncle Sam just fucked your asshole dry and you liked it so much you are looking forward to next year . We as a nation are beyond hope now !

Chubby Bubbles
Chubby Bubbles
April 17, 2017 7:41 pm

I think this “Fed” stuff is—to a large degree—a red herring.

Are they corrupt in manipulating rates? Sure, probably so.. BUT they cannot pull rabbits out of hats where rabbits do not exist.

The reason interest rates are low is not because of nefarious doings, but because interest rates really need to be low (in fact, negative). We are in a phase of de-growth, the final phase for this industrial civilization.

De-growth means investments return less than the capital put into them. Negative interest rates should prevail (and do, due to QE). Otherwise, we don’t really have mechanisms in our theoretical economy for Going Backwards. There is no Reverse Gear. (Funny Eric Peters doesn’t get this.)

Mechanisms for Going Backwards exist, though.. and how.. in the real material economy, the economy few people write about here aside from Hardscrabble Farmer. If some politician or other could conjure up *PROSPERITY* just by jiggering a few figures.. don’t you think they would? All they are doing now is mashing their foot on the accelerator, but there are only fumes in the gas tank. Mr. Peters?

We cannot have infinite growth on a finite planet. Conventional economics base themselves on infinite exponential growth and extraction (and population), hence conventional economics are Broken, and anyone continuing to rely on these models after seeing how Broken they are is a Moron.

Tony
Tony
  Chubby Bubbles
April 18, 2017 2:19 pm

Negative rates help no one except banks, wall street, and moneyed interests. Middle class savers, retirees, and young families get screwed!