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Articles: Finance - Ron
Paul Answers the President
Dear
Friends:
The
financial meltdown the economists of the Austrian School predicted
has arrived.
We
are in this crisis because of an excess of artificially created
credit at the hands of the Federal Reserve System. The solution
being proposed? More artificial credit by the Federal Reserve. No
liquidation of bad debt and malinvestment is to be allowed. By doing
more of the same, we will only continue and intensify the
distortions in our economy - all the capital misallocation, all the
malinvestment - and prevent the market's attempt to re-establish
rational pricing of houses and other assets.
Last
night the president addressed the nation about the financial crisis.
There is no point in going through his remarks line by line, since
I'd only be repeating what I've been saying over and over - not just
for the past several days, but for years and even
decades.
Still,
at least a few observations are necessary.
The
president assures us that his administration "is working with
Congress to address the root cause behind much of the instability in
our markets." Care to take a guess at whether the Federal Reserve
and its money creation spree were even mentioned?
We
are told that "low interest rates" led to excessive borrowing, but
we are not told how these low interest rates came about. They were a
deliberate policy of the Federal Reserve. As always, artificially
low interest rates distort the market. Entrepreneurs engage in
malinvestments - investments that do not make sense in light of
current resource availability, that occur in more temporally remote
stages of the capital structure than the pattern of consumer demand
can support, and that would not have been made at all if the
interest rate had been permitted to tell the truth instead of being
toyed with by the Fed.
Not
a word about any of that, of course, because Americans might then
discover how the great wise men in Washington caused this great
debacle. Better to keep scapegoating the mortgage industry or
"wildcat capitalism" (as if we actually have a pure free
market!).
Speaking
about Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the president said: "Because these
companies were chartered by Congress, many believed they were
guaranteed by the federal government. This allowed them to borrow
enormous sums of money, fuel the market for questionable
investments, and put our financial system at risk."
Doesn't
that prove the foolishness of chartering Fannie and Freddie in the
first place? Doesn't that suggest that maybe, just maybe, government
may have contributed to this mess? And of course, by bailing out
Fannie and Freddie, hasn't the federal government shown that the
"many" who "believed they were guaranteed by the federal government"
were in fact correct?
Then
come the scare tactics. If we don't give dictatorial powers to the
Treasury Secretary "the stock market would drop even more, which
would reduce the value of your retirement account. The value of your
home could plummet." Left unsaid, naturally, is that with the
bailout and all the money and credit that must be produced out of
thin air to fund it, the value of your retirement account will drop
anyway, because the value of the dollar will suffer a precipitous
decline. As for home prices, they are obviously much too high, and
supply and demand cannot equilibrate if government insists on
propping them up.
It's
the same destructive strategy that government tried during the Great
Depression: prop up prices at all costs. The Depression went on for
over a decade. On the other hand, when liquidation was allowed to
occur in the equally devastating downturn of 1921, the economy
recovered within less than a year.
The
president also tells us that Senators McCain and Obama will join him
at the White House today in order to figure out how to get the
bipartisan bailout passed. The two senators would do their country
much more good if they stayed on the campaign trail debating who the
bigger celebrity is, or whatever it is that occupies their attention
these days.
F.A.
Hayek won the Nobel Prize for showing how central banks'
manipulation of interest rates creates the boom-bust cycle with
which we are sadly familiar. In 1932, in the depths of the Great
Depression, he described the foolish policies being pursued in his
day - and which are being proposed, just as destructively, in our
own:
Instead
of furthering the inevitable liquidation of the maladjustments
brought about by the boom during the last three years, all
conceivable means have been used to prevent that readjustment from
taking place; and one of these means, which has been repeatedly
tried though without success, from the earliest to the most recent
stages of depression, has been this deliberate policy of credit
expansion.
To
combat the depression by a forced credit expansion is to attempt to
cure the evil by the very means which brought it about; because we
are suffering from a misdirection of production, we want to create
further misdirection - a procedure that can only lead to a much more
severe crisis as soon as the credit expansion comes to an end... It
is probably to this experiment, together with the attempts to
prevent liquidation once the crisis had come, that we owe the
exceptional severity and duration of the depression.
The
only thing we learn from history, I am afraid, is that we do not
learn from history.
The
very people who have spent the past several years assuring us that
the economy is fundamentally sound, and who themselves foolishly
cheered the extension of all these novel kinds of mortgages, are the
ones who now claim to be the experts who will restore prosperity!
Just how spectacularly wrong, how utterly without a clue, does
someone have to be before his expert status is called into
question?
Oh,
and did you notice that the bailout is now being called a "rescue
plan"? I guess "bailout" wasn't sitting too well with the American
people.
The
very people who with somber faces tell us of their deep concern for
the spread of democracy around the world are the ones most insistent
on forcing a bill through Congress that the American people
overwhelmingly oppose. The very fact that some of you seem to think
you're supposed to have a voice in all this actually seems to annoy
them.
I
continue to urge you to contact your representatives and give them a
piece of your mind. I myself am doing everything I can to promote
the correct point of view on the crisis. Be sure also to educate
yourselves on these subjects - the Campaign for Liberty blog is an
excellent place to start. Read the posts, ask questions in the
comment section, and learn.
H.G.
Wells once said that civilization was in a race between education
and catastrophe. Let us learn the truth and spread it as far and
wide as our circumstances allow. For the truth is the greatest
weapon we have.
In
liberty,
Ron
Paul
Email
forwarded by The Committee to Re-elect Ron Paul http://ronpaulforcongress.com/
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