Ron Paul Q&A: Audit the Fed, Then End It
by
Sudeep Reddy
Recently
by Ron Paul: The
Fed's Interesting Week
For three decades,
Rep. Ron Paul has waged a lonely battle in Congress to abolish the
Federal Reserve. But he has more foot soldiers across the nation
today, particularly after the financial crisis, who are leading
the drive for wider congressional audits of the central bank. (See
todays Journal story for more on their movement.)
In his new
book End
the Fed released today, Rep. Paul walks through his
critique of the central bank and lays out a strategy (briefly) for
eliminating it. We sat down with the congressman to hear his views
on a money system backed by gold, the Feds challenge of withdrawing
its stimulus and his legislation to audit the central bank. Excerpts
of the interview:
What would
a world without the Fed look like?
Youd
go back to the day that if you wanted to borrow money to build a
house, somebody wouldve had to save some money. You wouldnt
have zero savings and all the credit in the world. Thats just
a total distortion of capitalism. Capital comes from savings. The
part you dont use for everyday living which you have left
over, you reinvest and you save or you loan it out. We were living
with something absolutely bizarre that had nothing to do with capitalism.
We had no savings whatsoever yet there was all the credit in the
world.
So without
the Fed, there wouldnt be as much credit.
Yeah, it would
be different. If you were selling me a car and the car was worth
$10,000 and I didnt want to pay cash, you could take credit
from me. Youve got to have something to measure it by. What
is a dollar? We dont even know what a dollar is. Theres
no definition for a dollar. Theres never been a time in law
that said a Federal Reserve note is a dollar. Thats the basic
flaw. Theres no definition for money. Weve built a worldwide
economy on a measuring rod that varies every single day. Thats
why it was fragile, and thats why it collapsed. There was
no soundness to it. So thats why you have to have a stable
unit of account.
If you live
in a primitive society, youd trade goods. And if you wanted
to advance, then you would trade a universal good, which would be
a coin. But weve become sophisticated and smart and say, Oh,
you dont have to go through that. Well just print the
money. And well trust the government not to print too much,
and distribute it fairly. Thats often just a total farce.
People are realizing that it is.
Dont
you think the Fed has moderated the business cycle over the past
century?
Yes, I think
they did smooth things out. The markets always demanding the
correction of the malinvestment and the excessive debt.
Since
Bretton Woods broke down, I think every recession has been moderated
by the Fed. Thats why the trust kept being built. Thats
all a negative. You have to get rid of the mistakes. Moderating
it means that we have slowed up the correction. The fact that they
have been successful is probably the worst part about it. Theyre
moderating the rapidity of the crash and the correction by holding
the mistakes in place.
Read
the Rest of the Article
See
the Ron Paul File
September
17, 2009
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