Easy
Money, Easy Lies
by
Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.
by Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.
DIGG THIS
Strange how
campaign season leads to the usual political drama over taxes. Republicans
have learned the hard way that they should never raise them, at
least not in ways that are noticeable. They accuse Democrats of
plotting secret increases. The Democrats deny it but draw attention
to mounting debt and hint that solving the problem will require
serious measures. These serious measures might involve sacrifice.
The voters are suspicious. And so the battle lines are drawn.
This observation
is prompted by the disgusting fact that President Bush is running
around the country saying that he will never raise taxes. Meanwhile,
he is one of the greatest spenders in history. When it comes to
his war, he will spend into oblivion. He has been the same on domestic
spending too, but for a few high-profile cases of opposing programs
that benefit his political enemies.
If this were
the 19th century, the debate and drama would make sense.
Some politicians believe that the public's money is up for grabs.
Others think that the people ought to keep their own. So it was.
What appears
to be a battle over fundamental ideology and political philosophy
is, however, a complete illusion in our time.
There is one
reason: the central bank. This is what has changed everything. No
longer are taxes the main way the federal government guarantees
its liquidity and funds its empire. If the state had to tax us for
everything it spent, the country would be obviously and fiscally
bankrupt instead of being covertly and financially bankrupt as it
is in fact.
This has been
partially true for nearly a hundred years, but the restrictions
on the Fed's ability to print all the money the government needs
have been systematically eliminated, ever more each year. The more
money the state needs, the more it has turned to the Fed to pull
its financial trickery.
So today there
are two ways the state can extract money from the population: stealing
or counterfeiting. The political class favors the latter to the
former. What's best for the country and the economy, taxes or credit
expansion? That's a tough call. Republicans are right that new taxes
can cause recession. Democrats are right that government just can't
keep accumulating debt forever without regard to the eventual results.
Arguably, monetary
expansion is worse because it breeds the political lie that the
state can spend and spend all it wants and never collect. That's
the big lie that central banking makes possible. The smaller lies
come in the form of promises not to raise taxes. Bush is the overlord
of a Fed that keeps driving down interest rates even in the face
of the aftereffects of previous credit expansions, such as that
in the housing market.
In fact, inflationary
credit does have a cost. It diminishes the purchasing power of the
dollar. We are being robbed year by year, and it makes no moral
difference that we've all somehow gotten used to it. There are also
the tremendous economic distortions that come with the practice.
Inflationary credit has the effect of subsidizing some sectors beyond
sustainable levels and generates waves of entrepreneurial (and consumer)
errors. The business cycle itself can be laid squarely at the door
of the money temple.
So the real
question to ask is who wants to do something to restrain the power
of the Fed? The answer is no one but Ron Paul. The Republicans and
Democrats love the Fed for its magical capacity to generate resources
out of thin air. It is the Fed that guarantees the bonds that the
government floats to raise its revenue. It is the Fed that makes
it possible for these bonds to not bear any kind of risk premium
since, unlike the debt of private corporations and local governments,
they are guaranteed against failure.
Ron Paul brings
up this issue at every campaign stop. This alone is proof that he
is not telling voters only what they want to hear. Who wants to
hear about monetary policy? Hardly anyone until he made it an issue.
Now we have
a generation of young people who are suddenly aware that there is
something profoundly wrong with a system that gives the political
classes and the bureaucratic machine a blank check to do whatever
they want, while still allowing Republicans to pretend to be fiscal
conservatives. His book The
Case for Gold is garnering ever-new attention, and rightly
so because he presents a rationale and plan for restoring honest
money that the people and not the government controls.
What is the
strongest case for gold? That it would end inflation and the business
cycle? Those are benefits but not the main one. The gold standard
would dramatically restrain the state, which is the essence of freedom.
It would force the political class to come to us and ask for tax
increases whenever it wanted to expand, and thereupon the population
would likely say no. This is the reason politicians hate gold.
Remember this
when the tax debate gets fired up again. It's true that new taxes
would be terrible. It would also be great to cut taxes more. But
it is pointless to talk only about this one form of raising revenue
when the other form continues to be the great unmentionable subject
in American political life. So long as the state spends and piles
up the debt, the bill will be paid by someone at some point.
So long as
the issue is only about taxes, however, the political class is trying
to pull the wool over your eyes. Keep them open and follow the money
to the source.
December
18, 2007
Llewellyn
H. Rockwell, Jr. [send him
mail] is founder and president of the Ludwig
von Mises Institute in Auburn, Alabama, editor of LewRockwell.com,
and author of Speaking
of Liberty.
Copyright
© 2007 LewRockwell.com
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