Central Economic Planning at its Worst
by
Ron Paul
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Last week,
the Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission (FCIC) presented its results
to the Financial Services Committee. As with most other politically-appointed
commissions, the results of the FCIC's investigation were easy to
predict. Established by the same congress that gave us national
healthcare and with a majority of its members appointed by those
who seek to solve every problem with more government intervention,
it was no surprise that the commission's findings would favor increased
government intervention in the economy. Minority members were not
substantively involved in the commission's operations, and the commission
attempted to exclude their dissenting views by granting them very
limited space to do so.
However, even
the minority members of the commission failed to consider the most
important cause of the financial crisis, namely the Federal Reserves
loose monetary policy. Almost a century ago, in 1912, Ludwig von
Mises published his great work The Theory of Money and Credit. This
was the first systematic description of Austrian Business Cycle
Theory (ABCT), which explains the origins of the business cycle
in monetary expansion. This theory explains why so many businessmen
make so many of the same errors at the same time. Yet not a single
member of the commission undertook an analysis of the financial
crisis from an Austrian economic viewpoint.
Instead, blame
was placed on failures in financial regulation and corporate governance,
excessive borrowing and risky investments, and expansion of subprime
lending, among other factors. But none of these explanations can
answer why this crisis occurred. Why was there excessive borrowing?
Why was there an explosion of subprime lending? Why were there failures
in corporate governance? Why did virtually no one except Austrian
economists see this coming?
Without the
Federal Reserve's massive expansion of credit throughout the 1990s
and early 2000s, there could have been no excessive borrowing or
explosion of subprime lending. Through easy credit, the Fed initiated
the economic boom that created the dot-com bubble. When that bubble
burst the Fed pumped additional liquidity into the system, which
led to a new boom that created the housing bubble. And now the Fed's
additional trillions of dollars in monetary pumping is creating
yet another bubble. This is the exact opposite of stability in the
marketplace and has nothing to do with free markets. It is central
economic planning at its worst.
It is imperative
that the historic record accurately reflect what actually happened.
In the popular press we see columnists attempting to blame the financial
crisis on the small-government, free-market
policies of President Bush. Hundreds of billions of dollars in stimulus
payments, a $700 billion bailout program, and trillions of dollars
of Federal Reserve credit facilities hardly represent small-government
and free-market principles in action! On the contrary, these government
interventions by both major parties demonstrate quite clearly our
nations acceptance of crony capitalism.
Schoolchildren
today are taught the myth that Herbert Hoover was a small-government
President who did nothing to stop the Depression, while the truth
is exactly the opposite. Fed Chairman Bernanke failed to understand
the true cause of the Great Depression, so his policy prescriptions
to combat the current crisis are understandably flawed. Unless we
confront and correct false economic rhetoric, truly understand the
causes of the economic crisis, and do away with our loose monetary
policy, we will find ourselves in ever more vicious business cycles.
See
the Ron Paul File
February
22, 2011
Dr. Ron
Paul is a Republican member of Congress from Texas.
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