Going for the Heart
by
Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.
by Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.
DIGG THIS
The heart of
the modern state is the central bank. By heart I mean the very thing
that makes it work, and without which the modern state would quickly
wither and die. It is the thing that makes the money. As such, it
purports to be our stabilizer, our source of employment, the fuel
behind the economic growth that brings us technology.
In truth, it
does none of these things. What it does do effectively is prop up
the leviathan state and all its pomps. You would never know this
from the textbook, of course. The subject is rarely mentioned in
political science. Historians treat the establishment of the Fed
as an event far less important than the creation of the Department
of Labor.
It is interesting
how rarely its existence is ever questioned, much less condemned.
Instead, the head of the central bank is fawned over and courted
by all sides of the political spectrum. He enjoys a level of immunity
from criticism that no one else in politics has. Again, this is
proof of the extent to which we do not believe in authentic freedom,
since it is the central bank that is the true source of the decline
of our freedom.
Why do we have
such a hard time imagining a world without a central bank? In the
United States, the central bank was a 20th-century invention.
No central bank of the current sort existed anywhere in the world
before the 19th century. Somehow we got along just fine
because the monetary system was self-managing. It was rooted in
real commodities that provided the stable link to real economic
activity. Banks were treated as regular enterprises that had profits
and losses, and could succeed and fail. What guaranteed their stability,
even with the evil of fractional reserves, was the competitive system.
All that came
to an end, gradually, with the advent of the central bank. Money
lost its connection to anything real beyond the linen paper on which
it is printed. Banks became protected from failure. Most important,
the central bank started to guarantee government debt. With what
did it guarantee that debt? More linen paper, stuff which can be
printed up without limit.
With this innovation,
the fiscal restraint on the state came to an end. All the talk about
congressional authorization of spending and the constitutional restraint
on the state became white noise or a tissue of lies. The people
got out of the habit of asking: "How precisely do you expect to
pay for this?" We all just assume that there is some magic money
machine out there that will achieve our every dream.
The lack of
criticism of the Fed tells you all you need to know. It is the one
sacrosanct institution because it is the most necessary institution
to modern statecraft. Without it, we wouldn't fund both welfare
and warfare. We wouldn't dream of a world empire and debate policy
the way we debate art, as merely a matter of preference. There would
be strict, physical limits on what the state could and could not
do.
Most all our
debates about politics would come to an end. The point of the legislature
and the executive would be to administer and oversee the state that
exists, not dream up ever more far-flung excuses for attempting
the impossible. No politician would plausibly claim the capacity
to "lead us into the future" because their power to do much at all
would be so limited. Instead of Bush, Clinton, Reagan, Johnson,
Truman, and FDR, our president would be more like Cleveland, Harrison,
Arthur, Garfield, and Hayes.
You say that
you don't know anything about those guys? That's the point. Deny
the dictator the capacity to make all the money he needs at a whim,
and his status shrinks dramatically.
The central
bank is sacrosanct because its absence would force all sides to
give up their fantasies of power. The right would have to give up
its crazed belief that it can do "heroic" things by seizing control
of the state, things such as defend or overthrow any government
in the world, or things such as make everyone in the country obey
their own view of what constitutes the virtuous life.
The left would
have to surrender their vision of a state that uses coercion to
achieve perfect equality, fairness, and distributive justice throughout
the world.
Without a central
bank, the political section of the bookstore would have to be reclassified
as science fiction.
This is why
you hardly ever hear a fundamental question on the right of the
Fed to exist. This is why the political culture frowns on anyone
who attacks the heart of the state. This is why it is so "unrespectable"
to mention the case against the Fed, and why serious critics are
treated to a kind of shunning, and why, if you want to go places
in Washington, you must never entertain the idea that the central
bank ought to be abolished. Indeed, you should fête and publish
the head of the Fed.
There
is a great intellectual cost associated with the central bank. People
today imagine that not having one would be the equivalent of anarchy.
It would be as if we had a state that nationalized the shoe industry
and after a time no one could even imagine how private enterprise
could make shoes. Anyone who would suggest that the state dispense
with the role would be treated like a crazy person.
But how crazy
is it? The central bank has failed in its overt mission for nearly
100 years. It has destroyed our money, funded unjust wars, given
rise to a ghastly bureaucratic state, and pumped up more credit
bubbles than we can count. And yet we are supposed to chalk up all
of this to miscues and mistakes along the way, and then believe
the head of the Fed when he promises to do better next time. What's
more, the Fed has never actually accepted real responsibility for
any of its misdeeds.
Just who is
crazy here? If we really believed in authentic science – not the
pseudo-science of public policy – we could conclude that this failed
central bank has got to go. Its creation is not a footnote, but
a main step in making possible all modern tyranny. Its abolition
is a key to freedom itself.
August
12, 2008
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
© 2008 LewRockwell.com
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