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Monetary Inflation Is the Problem
by
Ron Paul
by Ron Paul
DIGG THIS
The financial
press reported last week that the value of the U.S. dollar plummeted
to a 14-year low against the British pound, and weakened against
the Euro and Yen. Many financial analysts predict continued rough
times for the dollar in 2007, given reduced expectations for economic
growth at home and less enthusiasm among foreign central banks for
holding U.S. debt.
This decline
in the value of the dollar is simple to explain. The dollar loses
value as the direct result of the Federal Reserve and U.S. Treasury
increasing the money supply. Inflation, as the late Milton Friedman
explained, is always a monetary phenomenon. The federal government
consistently wants to spend more than it can tax and borrow, so
Congress turns to the Fed for help in covering the difference. The
result is more dollars, both real and electronic which means the
value of every existing dollar goes down.
Federal Reserve
Chairman Ben Bernanke faces two basic ongoing choices: raise interest
rates to prop up the dollar, but risk pushing the economy into a
recession; or lower interest rates to stimulate the economy, but
risk further declines in the dollar. This unfortunate dilemma is
inherent with a fiat currency, however.
Of course Mr.
Bernanke inherited this tightrope act from his predecessor Alan
Greenspan. The Federal Reserve did two things to artificially expand
the economy during the Greenspan era. First, it relentlessly lowered
interest rates whenever growth slowed. Interest rates should be
set by the free market, with the availability of savings determining
the cost of borrowing money. In a healthy market economy, more savings
equals lower interest rates. When savings rates are low, capital
dries up and the cost of borrowing increases.
However, when
the Fed sets interest rates artificially low, the cost of borrowing
becomes cheap. Individuals incur greater amounts of debt, while
businesses overextend themselves and grow without real gains in
productivity. The bubble bursts quickly once the credit dries up
and the bills cannot be paid.
Second, the
Fed steadily increased the monetary supply throughout the 1990s
by printing money. Recent Fed numbers show double-digit annual increases
in the M2 money supply. These new dollars may make Americans feel
richer, but the net result of monetary inflation has to be the devaluation
of savings and purchasing power.
The
precipitous drop in the dollar shows how investors around the globe
are very concerned about American deficits and debt. When government
policies in a fiat system are the sole measure of a currencys
worth, the currency markets act as a reliable barometer of how those
policies are viewed around the world. Politicians often manage to
fool voters and the media, but they rarely fool the financial markets
over time. When investors lack faith in the U.S. dollar, they really
lack faith in the economic policies of the U.S. government.
December
5, 2006
Dr. Ron
Paul is a Republican member of Congress from Texas.
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