The
debate about the Fed is under way, and thank goodness. But as with many policy
debates, there really shouldn’t be a debate at all. That’s because, if you
think about it, the idea of central banking makes no sense.
We don’t have a government-created central repository
that plans and manages shoe distribution. The market takes care of that. We
don’t have one for cabbage, keyboards or curtains. Somehow, we get books,
clothes, tree-cutting services and everything else we need and want without a
central planning agency that manages the quantity available, fixes the prices
of the products and bails out the firms when they overextend themselves.
Why should money and banking be any different? Money is a commodity. Banking is a business. They both originated in the market, not the state. They should have been left that way, so that the quality of the product could be subject to market discipline. In a market economy, things work themselves out. There is supply and there is demand. Entrepreneurs take notice of profit opportunities and jump in to pull the two together.
This is how the world works for us. This is how it has
always worked. This is how we get our software, coffee, sheet music and beef.
It’s how we get our cars, the parts that keep them running and the gas that
fuels them.
The world is man-made in every respect, and the hands
that made it productive, efficient, dynamic and socially beneficial operated
within the market matrix. The simple relationships of learning, exchanging and
competing gave rise to a glorious system that manages to sustain a global population
of 7 billion people.
The Fed is a nonmarket institution, much like public
housing and the space shuttle. It is a Dark Age creation that still exists for
no apparent reason. By Dark Age, I mean, of course, the world before 1995, when
the Web — meaning all information — became accessible to the world. Before
that, the world remained mostly in the dark, when government controlled the
information we could access and private truth had to be shared through paper
sent through the government mail system.
During the Dark Age, only geniuses like Ludwig von
Mises and F.A. Hayek knew that the Fed was a hoax. Most everyone else imagined
that the people at the Fed were doing magical, wonderful things inside hallowed
walls so that the economy would be stable and grow. Its board of governors was
populated by people who knew the economic future and held the power to steer it
in a way that benefited everyone.
Thanks to the digital age, we now have access to what
really goes on. In the last 12 months alone, we’ve been inundated by reports of
what actually goes on at the Fed. In 2006, according to released transcripts of
its board meetings, its wise men were busy reassuring themselves that
absolutely nothing was fundamentally wrong with real estate and that all other
economic structures were humming along beautifully.
It is fascinating to read those candid transcripts.
Far from being an open forum for discussion, Greenspan and Bernanke preside
with all power to determine results, practically daring any of their
subordinates to disagree with the consensus they arrive at beforehand. The Fed
economist sometimes pops up his head to say that all is not well, but it’s like
a game of Whac-A-Mole: He gets the hammer on the head every time.
It’s the worst case of bad corporate management you
can find on record. It makes Dilbert’s world look like a paragon of management
success. There is no openness, no truthfulness. If the chairman makes a joke,
you must laugh. If the chairman says all is well, you must agree. If the
chairman says he knows the future, you must be in awe of his insight. All
dissent must be coached within a puffy framework that raises only a slight and
probably irrelevant concern, and it is still likely to be punished.
Then there is the problem that it is not entirely
clear, even to the people in the room: what precisely they can do about
anything. They know what they are doing is important and want to believe that
they have tremendous power. But here’s the problem…The Fed really has only one
significant power: to create the conditions intended to encourage a change in
the supply of money and credit.
That’s a huge power, but it is not a precise one. The
money supply is a lot like an unruly child. Lots of times, the kid will obey
you. Sometimes, and unpredictably, it will not. It depends on the mood, the
context, the prevailing temperament, the rewards and punishments. And even when
the kid obeys, the results are not always what you intend. The council of
parents can meet and plan all day, but in the end, the kid has a mind of its
own.
Two notable examples follow. In the early 1930s, the
Fed was desperate to expand the money supply as a matter of both policy and
practice. There was no intention to let the supply collapse, as Murray Rothbard
has shown. The problem was that the Fed had to depend on the banking system to
make it happen through the loan markets. But the system was broke, and it never
happened.
The same thing happened again from 2008 and forward.
The Fed did everything possible to manufacture a far-reaching monetary inflation,
but failed to make it profitable for the banking system to cooperate. Contrary
to the Fed’s wishes, it never fully materialized. Their efforts only ended up
subsidizing failure and preventing a much-needed and deep market correction.
The sheer power of the Fed was in full display in
2008, and all the public records indicate what it was used for. The Fed
provided liquidity for its friends. They said that they did it all for the
nation, but it is unclear that the nation got anything at all from the deal.
What is clear is that its friends survived and thrived, whereas many
institutions should have gone belly up, as the capitalist system would dictate.
That’s the essence of its power and the core of what the Fed does.
This is nothing new at all. It’s just that it is now
on full display for all the world to see. And this is one reason that the Fed
is now under fire as never before. The digital age has pulled back the curtain.
Instead of the mighty Oz, we find a few people pulling levers with smoke and mirrors.
Before 1989, the world was strewn with such central
planning agencies. They were all over Eastern Europe and the old empire called
the Soviet Union. Then one day, the whole thing melted away and the absurdity
and arrogance of the central planners were revealed to the world. The Fed is no
different in structure from these institutions. The whole thing is based on a
lie that it takes government power to have a good monetary system.
In what sense is it good? The depreciation of the
dollar since 1913 has been catastrophic for prosperity. The dollar is now worth
less than a nickel. Savings have been expropriated. The Fed’s interest rate
policy has negated any real advantage of saving money. Business cycles have
become national, international and extended, rather than local and short-lived
as they were in the 19th century. The moral hazard that the Fed has built into
the system is that financial systems no longer take proper account of risk.
In the digital age, the opportunity costs of the money
monopoly have been huge. We might have had a competitive money system emerge by
now. It could have been based on gold, silver or any other commodity. But the
market has not been allowed to work. The Fed, working with the government that
created and sustains it, has cracked down hard on every attempt by the market
to make something better than the Fed-managed dollar. People now languish in
jail for the crime of trying to restore money and banking back to the market.
What is the worst cost of the Fed? It has made the federal
government, no matter how big it gets, beyond failure. This is the ultimate
moral hazard. It has puffed up the leviathan state beyond anything that should
ever exist in the world. It’s not taxes that have done this. It is the Fed. In
this way, it has made itself the ultimate enemy of freedom itself. And as
goes freedom, so goes human rights.
The whole catastrophe is no longer possible to ignore.
Ron Paul has made it a political issue. Newt Gingrich has jumped on the
bandwagon to scrap the Fed. The former CEO of BB&T gave an interview in
which he said, “As long as the Fed exists, Congress can effectively print
money. And it doesn’t matter whether they are Democrats or Republicans, they
would rather print money than tax people. They want to spend because that
effectively buys votes, and they don’t want to tax people because that loses
votes.”
The problem of ending the Fed is not a technical one.
It is not much of an intellectual one, either. It takes only a few minutes to
figure out that the whole thing is rooted in myth. The problem of ending the
Fed is entirely political. The government is dependent on its powers. So yes,
it makes some sense that the political class and its friends — let’s call them
the 1%, for short — think the Fed should exist. The rest of us should
know better by now.
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