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August
23, 2007
High-Risk
Credit
by Rep. Ron Paul, MD
As
markets went on a rollercoaster ride last week, our
economy is coming close to a day of reckoning for
loose credit policies being followed by the Federal
Reserve Bank. Simply, foreign banks we have been
relying on to buy our debt are waking up to the
reality of much higher default rates than
predicted, and many mortgage-backed securities have
been reduced to "junk" ratings. Wall Street fears
the possibility of tightening credit and the
tightening of America's belts. Why, they say, "if
Americans spend only what they can afford, think of
the ripple effects throughout the economy!" This is
the cry, as the call comes for the fed to cut rates
and bail out companies in trouble.
More inflation is, however, never the answer to
inflation.
The truth is that business involves risk, and
businesses that miscalculate risk should be
liquidated, so their assets can be reallocated to
businesses that correctly judge risk and make
profits. Instead, the Fed has injected $64 billion
into the jittery markets, effectively amounting to
a bailout that keeps these malinvestments afloat,
but eventually they will become the undoing of our
economy.
In addition to the negative reactions in
financial markets, many Americans have taken on too
much personal debt owing to exotic mortgage
products and artificially low interest rates.
Unfortunately, these families are now in the
position of losing their homes in unprecedented
numbers as the teaser rates expire and the real
bills are coming due.
The real answers are, and always have been,
found in the principles of the free market. Let the
market set the interest rates. If we had been
functioning under a true and transparent free
market system, we would not be in the mess we are
in today. Government, like the American household,
needs to live within its means to get back on
stable fiscal ground.
We've been headed in the wrong direction since
1971. This week marks the 36th anniversary of
Nixon's decision to close the gold window, which
convinced me to seek public office to call
attention to the runaway money train that would
come in the aftermath of that decision. The
temptation to print and spend money with impunity,
like the temptation to max out lines of credit, is
too strong to for government to resist. While Nixon
brokered exclusivity deals with OPEC to prop up
demand for the tidal wave of green pieces of paper
the Fed pumped into the markets, the world is
tiring of marching to the beat of our drum in order
to secure their energy needs. The house of cards
Nixon built is now on the verge of collapsing on
our heads, and on our children's heads.
As the dollar weakens, it becomes ever clearer
that we need a return to sound, commodity-based
money for a secure future. Money based on real
value, not empty promises and secretive backroom
machinations, is the way to get out of the current
calamity without causing even bigger problems.
Paul
Archive
Dr. Ron Paul is a Republican
member of Congress from Texas.
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