Congressman Ron Paul (R-TX) is attracting a lot of attention for his proposal to audit the Federal Reserve bank, the independent financial powerhouse that creates and regulates our money.
In other words, as he wrote in Forbes recently, Paul is 'Fed up' with the complete lack of transparency.
From Dr. Paul's op-ed:
The Federal Reserve's recent and unprecedented actions in the realm of monetary policy have provoked a backlash among the American people. Trillions of dollars worth of loans and guarantees have been provided to Wall Street firms, while Main Street Americans suffocate under harsh taxation, the prospect of higher debt levels and increasing inflation. These events have awakened many Americans to problems with the Fed's loose monetary policy, the bubbles it has created in the past and the potential hyperinflation it might cause in the future.
One of the fallacies of modern economics is the idea that a central bank is required in order to keep inflation low and promote economic growth. In reality, it is the central bank's monetary policy that causes inflation and depresses economic growth. Inflation is an increase in the supply of money, which in our day and age is directly caused or initiated by central banks. All other things being equal, inflation results in a rise in prices. A so-called "mild" rate of inflation of 3% per year leads to a 56% rise in prices over a 15-year period. Even a "low" rate of inflation of 2% per year leads to a 35% rise over that same period. How is that conducive to long-term growth?
A common misconception is that the Fed is completely independent of political pressures. While the Fed has far too much authority to make agreements with foreign governments and central banks, or create temporary liquidity facilities, the governors and--more important--the chairman, are appointed by the president.
Read on.
1 comment:
Ron Paul is right but you have to wonder where his voice was for so many years. It seems since Obama as made transpatency his Policy every now is all over it. How much will this cost the taxpayers? Paul has good ideas but he's still trying to rise the South back to the days of his youth. That ain't happening. Ron Paul is 74 years old and as a young adult things weere much different and those years were the way some would like to have back. 1956 as Ron was 21 years old he often speaks of those golden years. I remember that year seeing things I couldn't believe could happen to people.
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