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The Guilty Fed and Feds
by
Rep. Ron Paul,
MD
by Rep. Ron Paul, MD
Last
week the US Treasury department issued a warning to the Chinese
government with regard to its policy of pegging the value of the
Chinese yuan to the US dollar. In essence, the Treasury department
accuses China of artificially suppressing the value of its currency
by tying it to the dollar, thus making Chinese imports very cheap
and worsening our trade imbalance.
This
kind of bluster may serve political interests, but in reality we
have nobody to blame but ourselves for the sharp decline in the
US dollar. Congress and the Federal Reserve, not China, are the
real culprits in the erosion of your personal savings and buying
power. Congress relentlessly spends more than the Treasury collects
in taxes each year, which means the US government must either borrow
or print money to operate both of which cause the value of the
dollar to drop. When we borrow a billion dollars every day simply
to run the government, and when the Federal Reserve increases the
money supply by trillions of dollars in just 15 years, we hardly
can expect our dollars to increase in value.
If
anything, the US government should be embarrassed that another nation
has depressed its currency by tying it to the US dollar. An economically
sound nation would take pride in its currency, one that maintains
a stable value and provides incentive for savers. Yet here we are,
mad at China for our own sin of flooding the world with cheap dollars.
The
root of the problem is the Federal Reserve and our fiat monetary
system itself. Since US dollars and other major currencies are not
backed by gold, they have no inherent value. Their relative values
are subject to political events, and fluctuate constantly in highly
volatile currency markets. A fiat system means every dollar you
have can be eroded into nothing by the actions of politicians and
central bankers. In essence, paper currencies like the US dollar
operate as articles of faith faith in the policies of the
governments and central banks that issue them. When it comes to
a government as deeply indebted as our own, that faith is sorely
lacking among investors worldwide. Politicians often manage to fool
voters and the media, but they rarely fool financial markets over
time. The precipitous drop in the US dollar over the past few years
is proof that investors around the globe are very concerned about
American deficits and debt. When investors lack faith in the U.S.
dollar, they really lack faith in the economic policies of the U.S.
government.
Unlike
wealthy currency traders, most Americans are stuck with their U.S.
dollars. Average people, particularly those who depend on savings
or fixed incomes to fund their retirement years, cannot abide the
continued devaluation of our currency. A true strong-dollar policy
would not depend on the actions of China or any other nation. It
would, however, require a constriction of the money supply and higher
interest rates, both of which would cause some short-term pain for
the American economy. In the long run, however, such a correction
is the only alternative to the continued erosion of our dollars.
May
24, 2005
Dr. Ron
Paul is a Republican member of Congress from Texas.
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