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May
20, 2009
Audit the
Fed, Then End It!
by Rep. Ron Paul, MD
I
have been very pleased with the progress of my
legislation, HR 1207, which calls for a complete
audit of the Federal Reserve and removes many
significant barriers towards transparency of our
monetary system. This bill now has nearly 170
cosponsors, with support from both Republicans and
Democrats. Senator Bernie Sanders has introduced a
companion bill in the Senate S 604, which will
hopefully begin to gain momentum as well. I am very
encouraged to see so many of my colleagues in
Congress stand with me for greater transparency in
government.
Some have begun to push back against this bill,
and I am very happy to address their concerns.
The main argument seems to be that Congressional
oversight over the Fed is government interference
in the free market. This argument shows a
misunderstanding of what a free market really is.
Fundamentally, you cannot defend the Federal
Reserve and the free market at the same time. The
Fed negates the very foundation of a free market by
artificially manipulating the price and supply of
money -- the lifeblood of the economy. In a free
market, interest rates, like the price of any other
consumer good, are decentralized and set by the
market. The only legitimate, Constitutional role of
government in monetary policy is to protect the
integrity of the monetary unit and defend against
counterfeiters.
Instead, Congress has abdicated this
responsibility to a cabal of elite,
quasi-governmental banks who, instead of
stabilizing the economy, have destabilized it. It
took less than two decades for the Federal Reserve
to bring on the Great Depression of the 1930's. It
has also inflated away the value of our currency by
over 96 percent since its inception. It has
invisibly stolen from the poor and given to the
rich through this controlled inflation, and now
openly stolen through recent bank bailouts. It has
predictably exacerbated the very problems it was
meant to solve.
Detractors have also argued that the Fed must
remain immune from the political process, and that
that more congressional oversight would distort
their very important decisions. On the contrary,
the Federal Reserve is already heavily entrenched
in the political process, as the Fed chairman is a
political appointee. High-level officials routinely
make the rounds between positions at the Fed,
member banks, Treasury and back again, taking care
of friends and each other along the way.
As far as the foolishness of placing complex
monetary policy decisions in the hands of
politicians -- I couldn't agree more. No politician
or central banker, no matter how brilliant, is
smart enough to know more than the market itself.
The failure of central economic planning has been
witnessed over and over. It is frankly beyond me
why we ever agreed to try it again.
To understand how unwise it is to have the
Federal Reserve, one must first understand the
magnitude of the privileges they have. They have
been given the power to create money, by the
trillions, and to give it to their friends, under
any terms they wish, with little or no meaningful
oversight or accountability. Thus the loudest
arguments against greater transparency are likely
to come from those friends, and understandably
so.
However, it is the responsibility of every
member of Congress to represent the interests of
the people that sent them to Washington and find
out what has been happening with our money. As the
branch of government with the power of the purse,
we really have no other reasonable choice when the
economy is in the shape it is in.
Paul
Archive
Dr. Ron Paul is a Republican
member of Congress from Texas.
Because
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