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Focus
on the Fed
It's
a myth that the Federal Reserve is independent of politics. It's
a lie so brazen, in fact, that it's fit only for Fed press releases.
Every administration, to take just one example, tries to get the
Fed chairman to time monetary policy so as to insure its reelection.
Fed
chairmen will play along, provided that's consistent with the interests
of the largest bankers, but not always with success. As economist
Roger Garrison pointed out at the Mises
Institute's conference on "The Case Against the Fed," presidents
know they must seek the Fed's favor. And Clinton has sought it with
a passion, meeting Alan Greenspan every Tuesday morning for breakfast.
Not all presidents are as savvy, however.
Three
presidents in the post-war period did not play the Fed game properly.
Carter's loose-money policies came too soon before the election,
and ignited a fierce inflation. Bush's came too late, failing to
boom the economy in time for the election. Ford didn't know he was
supposed to badger the Fed for lower interest rates, and so didn't
do anything. All three cases have this in common: the incumbent
lost.
Rarely
has the Fed's timing been better than in this election season. Early
in Clinton's term, Greenspan allowed Clinton to take credit for
the economic recovery of late 1992. Then Greenspan rested on his
laurels, and played a few reckless monetary games such as
engineering the bailout of Mexico, and the bailout of the bailout
of Mexico and even allowed the economy to slump in 1994.
This
year, Greenspan has been Clinton's most valuable friend. On the
eve of Greenspan's reappointment in January 1996, Clinton urged
him to lower interest rates. Greenspan complied, got reappointed,
and kept them low for ten months. The result was a flurry of "good"
economic news in the three months prior to the election. I use quote
marks because it's not real, but only a printing press recovery,
and cannot be sustained.
Greenspan
complied over the protests of eight of the twelve regional Fed banks,
which are not necessarily staffed and managed by Democrats. In late
September, it appears, these people became alarmed that Greenspan
had become such a willing tool of the Clinton administration. They
protested, and demanded an increase in rates to quell a developing
inflation threat.
Someone
from the Fed regional banks leaked the fact of their protest to
the press, the most serious leak in anyone's memory. Greenspan not
only called in the FBI to investigate it, and threatened the source
with prosecution, he defied the protest by refusing to raise rates
in the next meeting of the open market committee. The New York
Times praised Greenspan fog asserting his independence from
the regional banks. But what about independence from government?
Truly
hilarious are the various excuses given for Greenspan's behavior.
Turning the point on its head, National Public Radio said it showed
that Greenspan was refusing to intervene in the elections. The Times,
famous for its reactionary attachment to Keynesian theory, said
Greenspan was convinced that growth was not strong enough to start
inflation.
These
excuses merely cover the fact that Clinton owes his reelection to
the central bank, which was probably in the cards as far back as
1992. At Clinton's first state of the union address, Greenspan took
a seat between Hillary Clinton and Tipper Gore, and they chatted
like old friends. He was signaling to those in the know that he
was a team player.
It's
mind-boggling. The Fed chairman is the most powerful manipulator
of American political life, far more powerful than voters or even
the financial benefactors of the two parties. It is he who directs
the short-term state of the economy at election time, and thereby
what issues are discussed, how the president is perceived by the
voters, therefore who is going to rule us for the next four years.
What
Greenspan has done this year is an awesome political accomplishment.
He caused the same people who tell pollsters of their hatred of
government to vote for a man who tried to finish socializing medicine,
who raised their taxes, who stepped up regulation of the economy,
and who expanded the domestic spy apparatus.
The
Fed's actions are a frightening exercise of power, totally inconsistent
with the free market and a republican form of government. The whims
of the king of the central bank carry more weight than the letter
of the U.S. Constitution. The Fed chairman is only formally accountable
to Congress. What's more, he is unaccountable to the voters and
even to the heads of his own regional banks.
When
the Democrats complain, it's because he's not inflating enough (the
Fed loves posing as an inflation fighter), while Republicans avoid
talking about the issue at all. And, sadly, the conservative movement
has nearly dropped the issue. The Mises
Institute is almost alone on this one. We don't mind. But isn't
it time for Republicans and their intellectual backers to realize,
at the least, that silence is not in their political self-interest?
Steve
Forbes is one of the few men in public fife to have addressed the
issue. In a series of speeches in the primary season, he decried
the arbitrary power that fiat money gives the government and, by
implication, the central bank. He called on Congress to institute
a gold standard that would make money sound, add some predictability
to monetary policy, and restrain the growth of government.
Jack
Kemp also once advocated a gold standard. But as soon as he was
chosen as the vice presidential candidate, all talk of that came
to an end. Perhaps he has begun to realize that a gold standard
is incompatible with the big-government and loose money programs
('access to credit') that he also backs.
If,
on the other hand, we want to restore economic liberty and limit
government, we need to restrict the Fed's ability to manipulate
politics, bankroll bailouts, water down the dollar's value, depress
middle-class living standards, and wreck havoc on international
markets.
That
means the dollar must be redefined in terms of gold, just as it
was throughout most of this century and last. With a dollar as good
as gold, there would be no reason for the Fed to exist at all. This
would be the ideal, of course, but any change to restrain the Fed,
put it on a more predictable course, or end its precious secrecy
would be a step in the right direction.
Thank
goodness, for example, the Fed underwent a partial audit earlier
this year, which exposed a previously unknown multi-billion dollar
slush fund, a fleet of private jets, and exorbitant salaries. Because
of the negative attention, the Fed cancelled its plans to buy and
develop more prime Washington, D.C., real estate for its overpaid
employees.
Of
course, Fed corruption is much more significant for the country
than its palatial headquarters and subsidized happy hours. In its
eighty-three years of existence, it has enacted a social revolution,
happily funding every war, every expansion of state power, every
redistributionary scheme, and every central planning project. Fed
inflation has made us poorer and less free, tossed mothers with
young children into the workforce, saddled the country with an unserviceable
debt, public and private, and made the welfare state possible, creating
a permanent and violent underclass. It is big government's biggest
benefactor, and our greatest enemy.
If
that's not enough to convince conservatives that it's time to focus
on the Fed, consider this: the central bank conspired to reelect
Clinton. For that alone, it deserves to be hung out to dry.
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