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The Maestro Changes His Tune
by
Rep. Ron Paul,
MD
by Rep. Ron Paul, MD
Nearly
40 years ago, Federal Reserve chair Alan Greenspan wrote persuasively
in favor of a gold monetary standard in an essay entitled Gold
and Economic Freedom. In that essay he neatly summarized
the fundamental problem with fiat currency in a few short sentences:
The abandonment of the gold standard made it possible for
the welfare statists to use the banking system as a means
to an unlimited expansion of credit
In the absence of the
gold standard, there is no way to protect savings from confiscation
through inflation. There is no safe store of value
Deficit
spending is simply a scheme for the hidden confiscation
of wealth. Gold stands in the way of this insidious process. It
stands as a protector of property rights. If one grasps this, one
has no difficulty in understanding the statists antagonism
toward the gold standard.
Today, however,
Mr. Greenspan has become one of those central planners he once denounced,
and his views on fiat currency have changed accordingly. As the
ultimate insider, he cannot or will not challenge the status quo,
no matter what the consequences to the American economy. To renounce
the fiat system now would mean renouncing the Fed itself, and his
entire public career with it. The only question is whether history
will properly reflect the destructive nature of Mr. Greenspans
tenure.
I had an opportunity
to ask him about his change of heart when he appeared before the
House Financial Services committee last week. Although Mr. Greenspan
is a master of evasion, he was surprisingly forthright in his responses
to me. In short, he claimed he was wrong about his predictions of
calamity for the fiat U.S. dollar, that the Federal Reserve does
a good job of essentially mimicking a gold standard, and that inflation
is well under control. He even made the preposterous assertion that
the Fed does not facilitate government expansion and deficit spending.
In other words, he utterly repudiated the arguments he made 40 years
ago. Yet this begs the question: If he was so wrong in the past,
why should we listen to him now?
First, the
Federal Reserve does not mimic a gold standard by any measure. The
clearest example of this lies in our current account deficit, which
our fiat currency encourages. Under a gold standard we would not
have exchange rate distortions between the Chinese renminbi and
the U.S. dollar, for example. True currency stability is impossible
when fiat dollars can be produced at will and foreign lenders bankroll
our deficits.
Second, inflation
is a much greater problem than the federal government admits. Health
care, housing, and energy are three areas where costs have risen
dramatically. The producer price index is rising at the fastest
rate in seven years. Bond prices are rising. To suggest that rapid
expansion of the money supply and artificially low interest rates
do not ultimately cause price inflation is absurd.
Third, Fed
policies do indeed have adverse political ramifications. Fiat currency
and big government go hand-in-hand. Without a gold standard, Congress
is free to spend recklessly and fall back on monetary expansion
to pay the bills. Politically, its easier to print new dollars
than raise taxes or borrow overseas. The Fed in essence creates
paper reserves that enable Congress to undertake spending measures
that far exceed tax revenues. The ill effects of this process are
not felt by the politicians, who can always find popular support
for new spending. Average Americans suffer, however, when their
dollars are confiscated through inflation, as Mr. Greenspan
termed it.
Its
not enough to question the wisdom of Mr. Greenspan. Americans should
question why we have a central bank at all, and whose interests
it serves. The laws of supply and demand work better than any central
banker to determine both the correct supply of money in the economy
and the interest rate at which capital is available without the
political favoritism and secrecy that characterize central banks.
Americans should not tolerate the manipulation of our economy and
the inflation of our currency by an unaccountable institution.
February
22, 2005
Dr. Ron
Paul is a Republican member of Congress from Texas.
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