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Federal Reserve Policy Destroys the Value of Your Savings
by
Ron Paul
by Ron Paul
For years officials
at the Federal Reserve Bank, including Chairman Bernanke himself,
have assured us that inflation is under control and not a problem
even as the price of housing, energy, medical care, school tuition,
gold, and other commodities skyrockets.
The Treasury
department parrots the Fed line that consumer prices, as measured
by the consumer price index (CPI), are under control. But even many
mainstream economists now admit that CPI grossly understates true
inflation. The most glaring problem is that CPI excludes housing
prices, instead tracking rents. Everyone knows the cost of purchasing
a home has increased dramatically in the last ten years; in many
regions housing prices have more than doubled in just five years.
So price inflation certainly is alive and well when to comes to
the largest purchase most Americans make.
When the Federal
Reserve increases the supply of dollars in circulation, both paper
and electronic, prices must rise eventually. What other result is
possible? The supply of dollars has risen much faster than the supply
of goods and services being chased by those dollars. Fed policy
makers have more than doubled the money supply in less than ten
years. While Treasury printing presses can print unlimited dollars,
there are natural limits to economic growth. This flood of newly
minted US currency can only increase consumer prices in the long
term.
Mr. Bernanke
has stated quite candidly that he will use government printing presses
to stimulate the economy as necessary. He is famous for joking that
he would endorse dropping money from helicopters if needed to prevent
an economic slowdown. This is nothing short of an express policy
to destroy our money by inflation. Every new dollar erodes the value
of existing dollars based on simple supply and demand. Does anyone
really believe the Treasury can make us rich simply by printing
more money?
The coming
dollar crisis is not likely to be fixed by politicians
who are unwilling to make hard choices, admit mistakes, and spend
less money. Demographic trends will place even greater demands on
Congress to maintain benefits for millions of older Americans who
are dependent on the federal government.
Faced with
uncomfortable financial realities, Congress will seek to avoid the
day of reckoning by the most expedient means available and the
Federal Reserve undoubtedly will accommodate Washington by printing
more dollars to pay the bills. The Fed is the enabler for the spending
addicts in Congress, who would rather spend new fiat money than
face the political consequences of raising taxes or borrowing more
abroad.
The
irony is that many of the Feds biggest cheerleaders are the
same supposed capitalists who denounced centralized economic planning
when practiced by the former Soviet Union. Large banks and Wall
Street firms love the Feds easy money policy, because they
profit at the front end from the resulting loan boom and artificially
high equity prices. Its the little guy who loses when the
inflated dollars finally trickle down to him and erode his buying
power. Someday Americans will understand that Federal Reserve bankers
have no magic ability and certainly no legal or moral right
to decide how much money should exist and what the cost of borrowing
money should be.
July
11, 2006
Dr. Ron
Paul is a Republican member of Congress from Texas.
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