After 100 Years Of
Failure, It’s Time To End The Fed!
By Ron Paul
A week from now, the Federal Reserve System will celebrate
the 100th anniversary of its founding. Resulting from secret negotiations between
bankers and politicians at Jekyll Island, the Fed’s creation established a
banking cartel and a board of government overseers that has grown ever stronger
through the years. One would think this anniversary would elicit some
sort of public recognition of the Fed’s growth from a quasi-agent of the
Treasury Department intended to provide an elastic currency, to a de facto
independent institution that has taken complete control of the economy through
its central monetary planning. But just like the Fed’s creation, its
100th anniversary may come and go with only a few passing mentions.
Like many other horrible and unconstitutional pieces of
legislation, the bill which created the Fed, the Federal Reserve Act, was
passed under great pressure on December 23, 1913, in the waning moments
before Congress recessed for Christmas with many Members already absent from
those final votes. This underhanded method of pressuring Congress with such a
deadline to pass the Federal Reserve Act would provide a foreshadowing of the Fed’s
insidious effects on the US economy—with actions performed without
transparency.
Ostensibly formed with the goal of preventing financial
crises such as the Panic of 1907, the Fed has become increasingly powerful over
the years. Rather than preventing financial crises, however, the Fed has
constantly caused new ones. Barely a few years after its inception, the
Fed’s inflationary monetary policy to help fund World War I led to the
Depression of 1920. After the economy bounced back from that episode, a
further injection of easy money and credit by the Fed led to the Roaring
Twenties and to the Great Depression, the worst economic crisis in American
history.
But
even though the Fed continued to make the same mistakes over and over again, no
one in Washington ever questioned the wisdom of having a central bank. Instead,
after each episode the Fed was given more and more power over the economy.
Even though the Fed had brought about the stagflation of the 1970s, Congress decided to
formally task the Federal Reserve in 1978 with maintaining full employment and stable
prices, combined with constantly adding horrendously harmful regulations. Talk
about putting the inmates in charge of the asylum!
Now we are reaping the noxious effects of a century of loose
monetary policy, as our economy remains mired in mediocrity and utterly
dependent on a stream of easy money from the central bank.
A century ago, politicians failed to understand that the financial panics of
the 19th century were caused by collusion between government and the banking
sector. The government’s growing monopoly on money creation, high
barriers to entry into banking to protect politically favored incumbents, and
favored treatment for government debt combined to create a rickety, panic-prone
banking system. Had legislators known then what we know now, we could hope that they
never would have established the Federal Reserve System.
Today, however, we do know better.
We know that the Federal Reserve continues to strengthen the collusion between
banks and politicians. We know that the Fed’s inflationary
monetary policy continues to reap profits for Wall Street while
impoverishing Main Street. And we know that the current monetary
regime is teetering on a precipice. One hundred years is long enough. End the
Fed.
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