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History
Is Clear
More fiat money won’t solve this crisis; a return
to sounder money will
by
Doug French
by Doug French
DIGG THIS
It is often
said there are no atheists in a foxhole. The other week,
as world financial markets melted down, CNBC go-to wise man Art
Cashen put a market spin on that familiar line drolly saying, there
are no libertarians in a market crash.
The crusty
Cashen is certainly right for the most part. Plenty of financial
talking heads who argue for free markets and smaller government
on a daily basis suddenly screamed that government must intervene
to save capitalism. Of course, the idea that government
must print multiple blizzards worth of money to save a system where
individuals and businesses trade with each other unfettered makes
as much sense as presidents who claim that war must be waged to
protect the peace.
The fact is
that what weve been enjoying since the Federal Reserve was
created is anything but free-market capitalism. The value of the
dollar has been pushed down 99 percent and the economy has been
a series of booms, followed by busts, ad nausea since J.P. Morgan
partner Harry Davidson and other big bank chieftains secretly took
a train to go duck hunting on Jekyll Island in 1910. Of course,
the ducks were safe, but Americans since have paid the price for
the Federal Reserve System idea that was hatched that weekend. As
historian Gabriel Kolko wrote: The entire banking reform movement,
at all crucial stages, was centralized in the hands of a few men
who for years were linked, ideologically and personally, with one
another ... the major function, inspiration and direction of the
measure [the Federal Reserve Act] was to serve the banking community
in general, and large bankers specifically.
The TV pragmatists
probably forget that Karl Marx and Frederick Engels wrote in The
Communist Manifesto that creating a centralization of
credit in the hands of the state, by means of a national bank with
state capital and an exclusive monopoly should be near the
top of any communists agenda.
Is it any wonder
that Treasury Secretary Henry Paulsons plan has morphed into
the federal government taking equity stakes in banks, mortgage companies
and at least one insurance company? As Oscar B. Johannsen wrote:
A socialized banking system is the precursor of socialism
in all business. (By the time you read this, airlines and
car manufacturers may be partially owned by the government).
But the level
of economic knowledge displayed in main street print or on TV has
dropped lower than the Dow Jones Industrial Average. Economist and
historian Tom DiLorenzo got an earful on MSNBCs Morning
Joe program recently from former Republican presidential candidate
Pat Buchanan who admonished DiLorenzo: How could you criticize
Hamilton? Hes the architect of the American economy!
DiLorenzos new book Hamiltons Curse shows us that Buchanan
and other Alexander Hamilton apologists have it all wrong. Hamilton
was an enemy of free-market capitalism and early Americas
foremost proponent of mercantilism, the system of government-granted
monopolies, corporate welfare, protectionist tariffs and other policies
that generally benefited politically connected businesses at the
expense of the rest of society, DiLorenzo explains.
As
Lew Rockwell points out, the real cause of the current financial
crisis can be summed up with two words: fiat money. The word fiat
means, out of nothing. And since 1971, when Nixon proclaimed, We
are all Keynesians now and severed the last link that tied
the dollar to gold, the amount of dollars created by the Fed out
of nothing has grown over 10 times as measured by M-2 (from $685
billion in August 1971 to $7.7 trillion in August 2008).
As if all this
past monetary expansion wasnt enough, the Fed is now working
overtime, in concert with the worlds other central banks,
to create what investor Jim Rogers told a foreign CNBC audience
will be a monetary holocaust.
Rogers didnt
make any friends with others on Wall Street with those comments.
As Rockwell points out: The best way to fall out of favor
with the regime or its pseudo-libertarian and neocon supporters
is to question its central bankers.
But, history
is clear, more fiat money wont solve this crisis; a return
to sounder money will.
November
13, 2008
Doug
French [send him mail]
is executive vice president of the Ludwig
von Mises Institute and associate editor for Liberty
Watch Magazine.
He received the Murray N. Rothbard Award from the Center for Libertarian
Studies.
Copyright
© 2008 Doug French
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French Archives
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