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Government Failure Is Endemic
by
Ron Paul
by Ron Paul
DIGG THIS
Before the
Joint Economic Committee, April 2, 2008: Hearing on "The Economic
Outlook"
Mr. Chairman,
I have never been opposed to regulation, although my idea of regulation
differs from that of many people in Washington. The free market
and its forces of supply and demand are the most effective regulator
of the private sector, and have never been known to fail absent
government intervention. But piling more public sector regulation
on the private sector will have a detrimental effect on the health
of our financial system and sow the seeds for the next financial
meltdown.
What we in
Washington should be discussing is increased regulation and scrutiny
of public sector regulatory and oversight agencies such as the Federal
Reserve Board, the SEC, and others. The Federal Reserve's actions
got us into at least one depression in the last century, and have
led to continued cyclical difficulties, including the current economic
slowdown.
Back in the
1970s, government-caused inflation reached levels high enough that
the Nixon administration decided to implement wage and price controls.
Placing blame on greedy speculators, unscrupulous mortgage originators,
or panicky investors, is a common reaction on the part of government.
The solution
called for, despite the numerous documented failures of government
regulation, is always more regulation, more government involvement
in and control over the economy, and less free enterprise. Never
is the blame placed squarely where it belongs, which is on the shoulders
of legislators and regulators whose actions distort the market,
prohibiting legitimate market activities and encouraging the development
of labyrinthine and opaque financial schemes.
The latest
regulatory plan from the Treasury Department, with the potential
to turn the Federal Reserve into a super-regulator overseeing state-chartered
banks and bank holding companies, and acting as a guarantor of market
stability, is another in a long line of half-baked government responses
to financial difficulty. Recession after recession has not impressed
upon government leaders the reality that the Federal Reserve's monetary
policy activities are what lead to market instability.
The business
cycle, contrary to what Secretary Paulson and others seem to believe,
is not endemic to the free market. It is always and everywhere the
result of monetary inflation and subsequent malinvestment, which
when it is discovered must of necessity be liquidated in order for
a true recovery to occur. Delaying the liquidation will only prolong
the crisis and ensure that the next crisis will be more severe.
Every government
intervention will result in a distortion of the market and a subsequent
shock somewhere down the line in the future. It is about time that
we recognize the failure of government intervention, get our hands
out of the private sector, and for once allow the market to function.
See
the Ron Paul File
April
5, 2008
Dr. Ron
Paul is a Republican member of Congress from Texas.
Copyright
© 2008 LewRockwell.com
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