Statement
on the Financial Services committee's "Views and Estimates for
Fiscal Year 2003"
Supporters
of limited, constitutional government and free markets will find
little, if anything, to view favorably in the Financial Services
committee's "Views and Estimates for Fiscal Year 2003." Almost
every policy endorsed in this document is unconstitutional and
a threat to the liberty and prosperity of the American people.
For example,
this document gives an unqualified endorsement to increased taxpayer
support for the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FINCEN).
According to the committee, these increased funds are justified
by FINCEN's new authority under the PATRIOT Act. However, FINCEN's
powers to snoop into the private financial affairs of American
citizens raise serious constitutional issues. Whether the expansion
of FINCEN's power threatens civil liberties is ignored in this
document; instead, the report claims the only problem with the
PATRIOT Act is that the federal financial police state does not
have enough power and taxpayer money to invade the privacy of
United States citizens!
The committee
also expresses unqualified support for programs such as the Export-Import
Bank (EX-IM) which use taxpayer dollars to subsidize large, multinational
corporations. Ex-Im exists to subsidize large corporations that
are quite capable of paying the costs of their own export programs!
Ex-Im also provides taxpayer funding for export programs that
would never obtain funding in the private market. As Austrian
economists Ludwig von Mises and F.A. Hayek demonstrated, one of
the purposes of the market is to determine the highest value of
resources. Thus, the failure of a project to receive funding through
the free market means the resources that could have gone to that
project have a higher-valued use. Government programs that take
funds from the private sector and use them to fund projects that
cannot get market funding reduce economic efficiency and lower
living standards. Yet Ex-Im actually brags about its support for
projects rejected by the market!
Finally,
the committee's views support expanding the domestic welfare state,
particularly in the area of housing. This despite the fact that
federal housing subsidies distort the housing market by taking
capital that could be better used elsewhere, and applying it to
housing at the direction of politicians and bureaucrats. Housing
subsidies also violate the constitutional prohibitions against
redistributionism. The federal government has no constitutional
authority to abuse its taxing power to fund programs that reshape
the housing market to the liking of politicians and bureaucrats.
Rather than
embracing an agenda of expanded statism, I hope my colleagues
will work to reduce government interference in the market that
only benefits the politically powerful. For example, the committee
could take a major step toward ending corporate welfare by holding
hearings and a mark-up on my legislation to withdrawal the United
States from the Bretton Woods Agreement and end taxpayer support
for the International Monetary Fund (IMF). The Financial Services
committee can also take a step toward restoring Congress' constitutional
role in monetary policy by acting on my Monetary Freedom and Accountability
Act (HR 3732), which requires Congressional approval before the
federal government buys or sells gold.
This committee
should also examine seriously the need for reform of the system
of fiat currency which is responsible for the cycle of booms and
busts which have plagued the American economy. Many members of
the committee have expressed outrage over the behavior of the
corporate executives of Enron. However, Enron was created by federal
policies of easy credit and corporate welfare. Until this committee
addresses those issues, I am afraid the American economy may suffer
many more Enron-like disasters in the future.
In
conclusion, the "Views and Estimates" presented by the Financial
Services committee endorses increasing the power of the federal
police state, as well as increasing both international and corporate
welfare, while ignoring the economic problems created by federal
intervention into the economy. I therefore urge my colleagues
to reject this document and instead embrace an agenda of ending
federal corporate welfare, protecting financial privacy, and reforming
the fiat money system which is the root cause of America's economic
instability.