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Our
Expansion Experiment
As Ron Paul asked the Fed Chair, how is it morally
justifiable to deliberately depreciate our currency?
by
Doug French
by Doug French
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Financial
pundits, led by CNBCs Larry Kudlow, were rooting for the Federal
Reserve to shock and awe the market with a 50 basis
point cut on the Federal Funds rate at the central banks September
meeting. Fed chair Ben Bernanke didnt disappoint, and investors
recognized further dollar devaluation and sent gold, stock and commodities
markets through the roof and the U.S. dollar to the basement.
The Fed has
been creating money at a phenomenal clip all year with the M-3 (that
government no longer reports, but economist John Williams does on
Shadowstats.com) growing at a 14-percent rate, a 34-year high.
But since the
meltdown of the sub-prime mortgage market, the Fed has really been
shaking its moneymaker. In a Sept. 6 alert to his subscribers, Williams
noted, M2 now has risen by $111.1 billion for the last two
weeks, rising at an annualized fortnight growth rate of 48.2 percent.
Even Countrywide
Mortgage CEO Angelo Mozilo is panicked. While he has publicly urged
the Fed to aggressively cut interest rates to help the housing industry,
he has been aggressively cutting the number of shares of his companys
stock that he owns, selling more than $200 million worth just since
the first of this year.
Mozilo isnt
going to miss any meals. Nor is Chairman Bernanke or the Wall Street
fat cats the Fed is bailing out. The middle class and the poor will
feel the pain. As Congressman (and Presidential candidate) Ron Paul
asked Bernanke during hearings on Capitol Hill, How is it
morally justifiable to deliberately depreciate our currency?
Bernankes
terse reply was, essentially, that the inflation rate is low, so
dont worry yourself.
Meanwhile,
on the other side of the globe, an ongoing monetary expansion experiment
has completely decimated one of Africas richest economies.
The country of Zimbabwe was once known as the bread basket
of Africa, exporting wheat, tobacco and corn to the rest of
the continent and beyond. Zimbabwes farmland is the most fertile
on the continent, and the country is also host to one of the seven
natural wonders of the world, Victoria Falls. The country is not
only rich in natural resources; the countrys literacy rate
is the highest in Africa at more than 90 percent.
Unfortunately,
Marxist guerrilla leader Robert Mugabes ZANU-PF party won
the 1980 general election and Mugabe has controlled the government,
the ballot box and the money printing press ever since. His disastrous
economic policy of out-of-control money creation inflation
has turned the country from breadbasket to basket case.
Although Mugabes
government says the inflation rate in Zimbabwe is 7,600 percent,
others estimate it to be 25,000 percent, and the Associated Press
reports that the International Monetary Fund believes that, by the
end of the year, the inflation rate will be 100,000 percent.
One Zimbabwean
businessman told the BBC: I dont even know if Ill
have a job at the end of the week, because there is so much uncertainty.
There are so many companies closing down. It is quite interesting
to see people going in banks with bags and sometimes even suitcases.
You know that there are large amounts of money in there which
unfortunately are not going to buy much.
So while there
is plenty of paper money floating around Zimbabwe, with many of
the bank notes having plenty of zeros, the food shortage has now
put family pets in harms way. People cant afford to
feed their animals, not to mention themselves, but most cant
bring themselves to butcher and roast Fido for dinner, so animal
shelters are full.
With the price
of food soaring in Zimbabwe dollars, the Mugabe government thought
it would solve the problem by ordering stores to cut prices. Of
course, this exacerbated the food shortage, placing a premium on
food scraps, and now aggressive rats are roaming beyond dumpsters
for sustenance.
But, people
do what they must to survive, and the black market is alive in Zimbabwe.
Pet meat sells for more than 10 times the governments fixed
price on the black market, according to the AP.
Inflation
is the fiscal complement of statism and arbitrary government,
economist Ludwig von Mises wrote. It is a cog in the complex
of policies and institutions which gradually lead toward totalitarianism.
Although
it appears for now the Bernanke Fed is way behind Mugabes
Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe in the inflation race, the man tracking
the numbers at Shadowstats, believes the onset of hyperinflation
[in America] remains most likely at least several years in the future,
an unappetizing prospect.
This
article originally appeared in Liberty
Watch Magazine.
October
18, 2007
Doug
French [send him mail]
is executive vice president of a Nevada bank and associate editor
for Liberty
Watch Magazine.
He received the Murray N. Rothbard Award from the Center for Libertarian
Studies.
Copyright
© 2007 Doug French
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