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Showing posts with label monetary policy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label monetary policy. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 10, 2015

Don't “Audit the Fed”, Abolish It


Antonius Aquinas

In recent remarks to the Senate Banking Committee, Federal Reserve Chairwoman Janet Yellen was her typical evasive and non committal self when the topic of interest rate hikes were broached. When the subject of potential oversight of the Fed came up, however, Ms. Yellen became quite forthright in her response.

When asked about a bill introduced by Kentucky Senator Rand Paul to “Audit the Fed,” Ms. Yellen declared: “I want to be completely clear: I strongly oppose ‘Audit the Fed.'”* Ms. Yellen defended her position on the grounds, which have been given by every previous Fed Chairman, that oversight would lead to politicized monetary decision making thus compromising the central bank’s “independence.”

Senate Banking Chairman, Richard Shelby (R., Ala.) countered the Chairwoman saying “there is an even greater need for additional oversight” of the Fed since the onset of the financial crisis in 2007.

Friday, July 5, 2013

Bit Apple: Savvy pros push Bitcoin currency

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Tuesday, May 3, 2011

5 Alternatives to the Federal Reserve

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Why the sun will still rise without the Federal Reserve system

Dees Illustration
Eric Blair
Activist Post

Now that Ron Paul is officially testing the 2012 presidential waters, a hot topic will surely be "Ending the Fed."  What used to be seen as a fringe issue may now result in intelligent discussions about how do we end the Fed.

Monetary reform is so vital that it may be precisely what propels Paul into the White House, assuming he gets in all the debates, on all of the ballots, and has an army of computer forensic experts to appeal shady voting machines -- which are inevitable challenges in our so-called democracy.

Joe Weisenthal recently pointed out that Ron Paul may actually have a great shot this time around:

At the time (Paul's 2008 bid), nobody in the GOP really cared about the Fed, and for the most part, Bush’s wars enjoyed broad support. 
Today they’re Obama’s wars, and the Fed is one of the most disliked institutions around, taking daily abuse even from mainstream outlets like CNBC.

Wednesday, March 9, 2011

Politicians Push Gold Standard: Have Americans Totally Lost Trust in Our Institutions?

The sudden public interest in reforming banking and money signals a loss of trust in our future.

Joshua Holland
AlterNet

People across the United States are losing trust in the dollar. Georgia, Virginia and 9 other states have considered so-called “Constitutional tender” laws that would require, in at least some cases, that state governments collect and make payments only in gold or silver. South Carolina and Virginia are considering creating their own currencies. Utah legislators just passed a bill allowing the use of gold and silver currency.

Animated by doomsday scenarios about crashing currencies and wild hyperinflation, speculators have sent the prices of gold, silver and other precious metals skyrocketing.

At the same time, a growing movement to establish state-chartered banks that could better serve the needs of their communities – and act as “mini-feds” to help stabilize local economies -- is also taking hold across the country.


But what explains this sudden fascination with radically reshaping the contours of a monetary system to which few people gave much thought just a few short years ago?

While the words “In God We Trust” appear on the back of every dollar in circulation, in reality it should read, “In Institutions We Trust.” Our money, after all, is what's known as “fiat currency,” meaning that it's created out of thin air, unmoored from any tangible good. The dollar has value because we believe it has value – we work for green pieces of paper only because we have confidence that we'll be able to exchange those slips for food and shelter and whatever else we need to get by.

That's the way modern economies work, which allows central bankers to respond to turns in the economy by adjusting the money supply. Yet, policy-makers are human, and can err, meaning that we not only have to have a belief in the value of a dollar for the system to work, but also in the competency and motivation of those central bankers. And while they're supposed to be detached technocrats calmly steering our ship through troubled waters, the reality is that the interests of bankers and workers are anything but overlapping.

Read Full Article

RELATED ARTICLES:
Monetary Reform Begins with Competing Currencies
The After-the-Fed Solutions Debate Begins



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Thursday, February 3, 2011

Fed's Bernanke to give rare press conference



© AFP/Getty Images/File Alex Wong
AFP/Activist Post

WASHINGTON - The head of the US Federal Reserve will take questions from the press Thursday, a step that experts say is just short of revolutionary for the normally reserved central bank.

Instead of delivering an ever-so-carefully manicured speech and then slipping off the dais to the echo of gentle applause, Chairman Ben Bernanke will, unusually, hang around for a few questions from the press before departing.

It's a seemingly small step, but Bernanke knows any unscripted response he utters will be parsed, reported on and put to work by investors, with billions if not trillions of dollars at stake.

While Fed chairmen have occasionally given interviews and spoken to journalists off the record, formal press conferences by a sitting chairman are a rarity.


During the financial crisis Bernanke appeared with then-Treasury secretary Hank Paulson to explain how they proposed to rescue the US banking system, but by-and-large the Fed has stuck to carefully crafted speeches and meeting statements to get its point across.

But with the economy still shaky and most of the Fed's policy ammunition expended -- interest rates could not be lower and billions of dollars are being spent on stimulus -- Bernanke hopes to mold the economy in another way, wielding his influence through the press.

It is a radical change for an institution that just decades ago did not even inform the public about its interest rate decisions -- any central bank's main policy tool.

While a press conference is not the Fed's first choice, it is a necessary one, according to James Hamilton, an economics professor at the University of California and former Federal Reserve visiting scholar.

"It used to be that the Fed's main policy tool was to set interest rates. In that situation communication amounted to what that rate was going to be," he said.

But today, he added, "expectations of what the Fed is going to do next are a critical component of its policy and its ability to affect things."

"They are facing a new challenge with an old problem."

By simply adjusting expectations about future policies, growth, inflation, unemployment the Fed will hope to influence how the economy behaves in the future and how markets react.

As a top Fed policy panel recently put it, a "greater public understanding of the committee's interpretation of its statutory objectives could contribute to better macroeconomic outcomes."

Bernanke will also hope to avoid a repeat of the recent reaction to his $600-billion plan to prime the economy, which was condemned by some as unnecessary even as the Fed struggled to convey that it thought growth and inflation were too low.

A press conference is needed to improve the Fed's standing after anger at bank bailouts, according to Mark Calabria, a former Senate staffer now with the Cato Institute, a libertarian think thank.

"A lot of this is geared at trying to rebuild the public perception of the Fed," he said, citing the damage done by the Fed's recent involvement in hot button political issues.

But for Bernanke, the pitfalls are many and varied.

For years he has watched -- perhaps with just the slightest hint of schadenfreude -- as his Japanese and European counterparts struggled to navigate regular press conferences without prompting a market meltdown.

"There is a risk that you say things a little spontaneously, and that is never what you want from the central bank," said Hamilton.

If history is anything to go by, Bernanke could just as easily trip up by misjudging the sporting affiliations of the press pack as answering the question of an attractive Wall Street journalist in too direct a way.

His European Central Bank counterpart Jean-Claude Trichet was once heckled at a press conference in Germany for mentioning the national team's soccer World Cup defeat at the hands of Spain the night before.

Bernanke himself once admitted to a "lapse in judgement" after commenting very directly about interest rates after a female newsreader's dinner question.

He will be hoping for no similar lapses of judgement on Thursday, or risk damaging the Fed's credibility.

"The Fed, under the enlightened leadership of Ben Bernanke, is rapidly losing its credibility," warned Ed Yardeni of Yardeni Research.
© AFP



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Saturday, December 18, 2010

Ron Paul: End the Fed by Allowing Competing Currencies (VIDEO)

Youtube - RonPaulRevolution
Will Ron Paul use his new position as Chairman of the Domestic Monetary Policy Subcommittee to deliver the coup de grâce to an embattled Federal Reserve by auditing its gold reserves and pushing for the legalization of competing currencies?


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Friday, December 10, 2010

Is anti-Fed feeling going mainstream?

Zachary Roth
Yahoo News

We've told you about the war on the Federal Reserve launched lately by conservatives. And now comes evidence that it could be gaining some traction in the court of public opinion.

Fifty-five percent of Americans say the central bank should either be reined in or abolished entirely, according to a new Bloomberg poll. Thirty-seven percent say it should be left as is.

Since the Fed last month announced plans to buy $600 billion in Treasury bonds in an effort to jolt the slumbering economy, small-government conservatives have gone ballistic. Former Fed Chairman Alan Greenspan has said the move could weaken the dollar, and Sarah Palin -- not usually cited as an authority on monetary policy -- haswarned that the move will lead to rising prices, going so far as to invoke the hyper-inflation of 1920s Germany.

The attacks have been so intense that Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke has launched a counter-offensive, going on "60 Minutes" to defend the asset purchases as a source of much-needed economic stimulus.

Read Full Article

RELATED ARTICLE:
The After-the-Fed Debate Begins: Greenbackers vs. Goldbugs


The Worst Year Ever


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Saturday, November 13, 2010

QE2: It's the Federal Debt, Stupid!

Ellen H. Brown
Truth-Out

Unlike QE1, QE2 is not about saving the banks. It's about saving the country from Greek-like austerity measures necessitated by a burgeoning federal debt. The debt is never paid, but is just rolled over from year to year; but the interest is paid, and it is here that QE2 relieves the pressure, since the Fed rebates its interest to the Treasury.

The inflation hawks are circling, warning of the dire consequences of the Fed's new QE2 scheme. "Quantitative easing" (QE) is Fedspeak for creating money out of nothing with a computer keystroke. The hawks say QE is massively inflationary; that it is responsible for soaring commodity prices here and abroad; that QE2 won't work any better than an earlier scheme called QE1, which was less about stimulating the economy than about saving the banks; and that QE has caused the devaluation of the dollar, which is hurting foreign currencies and driving up prices abroad.


It might be argued, however - and will be argued here - that QE2 not only will NOT produce these dire effects, but that it is NOT actually about saving the banks, OR devaluing the dollar, OR saving the housing market. It is about saving the government from having to raise taxes or cut programs, and saving Americans from the austerity measures crippling the Irish and the Greeks; and for that, it could well be an effective tool. What is increasing commodity and currency prices abroad is not QE, but the US dollar carry trade; and the carry trade is the result of pressure to keep interest rates artificially low to avoid a crippling interest tab on the federal debt. QE2 can relieve that pressure by funding the debt interest free.

The debt has increased by more than 50 percent since 2006, due to a collapsed economy and the decision to bail out the banks. By the end of 2009, the debt was up to $12.3 trillion; but the interestpaid on it ($383 billion) was actually less than in 2006 ($406 billion), because interest rates had been pushed to extremely low levels. Interest now eats up nearly half the government's income tax receipts, which are estimated at $899 billion for FY 2010. Of this, $414 billion will go to interest on the federal debt. Raising interest rates just by a couple of percentage points would make income taxes prohibitive.

Read Full Article

RELATED ARTICLES:
The After-the-Fed Debate Begins: Greenbackers Vs. Goldbugs
7 Mega-Cartels that Kill Free Markets and Our Sovereignty


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Tuesday, November 9, 2010

China says G20 should monitor US Fed

Editor's Note: China wants the G20 to have the authority to "monitor" the Fed.  Since the Fed has battled an audit by our own Congress it's doubtful it will happen, but it will be interesting to see if they concede any ground to accommodate global monetary cooperation.


AFP

China's state media has issued a new broadside at the US Federal Reserve's move to prime the US economy, suggesting the Group of 20 should monitor policy shifts by the US central bank.

The Xinhua news agency said in a commentary the Fed was "risking the global recovery by following its own track for economic revival" by spending an extra $US600 billion ($A593.65 billion) buying Treasury bonds to stimulate the US economy.

The comments were published just days ahead of two key summits this week - the G20 meeting in Seoul and the Asia-Pacific Economic Co-operation forum in Yokohama, Japan - that are expected to focus on rebalancing global trade.

"There is an urgent need for the G20 ... to set up a new mechanism that effectively monitors the issuer of the international reserve currency, especially when it is not able to carry out responsible currency policies," Xinhua said.

Read Full Article

RELATED ARTICLE:
The After-the-Fed Debate Begins: Greenbackers Vs. Goldbugs

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Wednesday, November 3, 2010

On Inflation, Saving, and the Nature of Money

Anthony Migchels
Activist Post - Contributing Writer

I've noticed lately that one of the primary reasons for people to cling on to usury, even if they are all for a non-interest-bearing money supply, is to encourage saving.  However, one cannot make money by saving interest-bearing money.

I want to discuss a more advanced appreciation of money and credit.  If you need to get up-to-speed on the current issues facing our monetary system, you'll find Ellen Brown's recent article on money as credit quite useful.

The below is far from complete, but my goal is to invite new thinking which we badly need in our search for an equitable, efficient, and effective monetary system.

The Problem
Money is generally said to have three functions: unit of account, medium of exchange, and store of wealth.  We'll forget about the unit of account function, although reform is also needed here. However, it is the most innocent function of money; the true conflict is with the other two designations.

We instinctively tend to give the store of wealth function of money quite a lot of status, hence our dislike of inflation and the enduring attraction of the Austrian School.  However, this notion might be mistaken.  The most extreme opposition to it was delivered by Silvio Gesell who totally destroyed the store of wealth function in his currencies by his demurrage, negative interest. Holding money costs you between 6 and 20%  per year, vastly increasing the velocity of circulation. Its most  legendary implementation was  in Wörgl, Austria, 1934.  I  don't like quoting Wiki, but in this case they are concise and accurate.   Demurrage is also used in dozens of the German Regional Currencies.
The quintessential function of money is that of a medium of exchange, not that of "store of value."  In fact, my definition of money is this:  Money is anything that is generally accepted by agreement as a medium of exchange.  It so happens, that this is basically and fundamentally opposed to the function of store of wealth.  After all, medium of exchange implies circulation; store of wealth implies non-circulation.
How can these two opposites be reconciled? The fact of the matter is: they cannot. Not, at any rate, as one unit.  Here's a little thought experiment to further the point.
What is saving?
We are accustomed to think saving means saving money. To my mind, however, saving means abstaining from consumption now, preserving it for future use. For instance: we want to retire, so we don't use our entire income now for consumption, but store wealth for the days we won't have income from our labor.  We don't need to save money for this goal. We can use our current income to buy durable goods, or invest in projects that will provide us future income or lower costs for services we need.

When I suggest investing in businesses, I am not thinking about shares in BP or Goldman Sachs, but serious businesses; the ones that are run by people we know and trust.  We could buy a house with an interest-free mortgage, and "eat it" during our last years. We could even buy some silver. There are many things we could do.  In these ways we would store wealth without owning a penny.

This leaves the question of how to finance production, and obtain the interest-free mortgages we want. We are used to thinking of savers providing us with the capital. But even today this is not the case.  Most of the money that is lent out is created at the moment the loan is agreed upon.

The banks have learned that it is quite feasible to create working capital by pushing a few buttons -- at almost no cost.  They use this technology to expropriate our assets through usury and inflation-deflation cycles. A rational system would provide the needed liquidity at just a little more than cost price.
So we don't seem to need savers in a rational monetary system.
We should abstain from the desire of getting return on our money. Wealth is created by labor, not capital. This is easy to do, when we realize what price we pay for our current system through interest. By far the majority of people lose much more through interest, even when they are not in debt, than they ever will receive on their savings.
Saving should morph from saving money, to asset collection. This also would automatically end the danger the middle class is now facing: their paper "assets" are being wiped out. They would not have experienced any problems had they not hoarded cash and other paper "assets."
In fact, it is often not well understood that usually it is primarily the middle class that suffers during inflation. Inflation also has winners: debtors, people with their wealth in assets, and landowners with mortgaged properties. The poor usually do not win or lose through inflation, because they own nothing. Their wages are compensated. At the height of the Weimar inflation, for instance, workers and employers had wage negotiations several times per day.
I'm not saying this to condone inflation, but to minimize its relevance.
If  we invest in real production, we can expect a return in some way, but there is no use for savers. There is no reason to give them a return just for hoarding cash. We don't need their liquidity, and their hoarding  is hindering the free flow of money and actually making it more scarce, requiring more people to go into debt to provide the commonwealth with the liquidity it needs
This is the "price" we pay for (almost) free money. We can't have interest-free money if we want savers to receive interest. It would be illogical and unnecessary.
In an economy such as this, all of the economic actors would quit eyeballing cash and start focusing on the real world: assets. Cash would be plentiful and readily available when needed. At least for those with solid asset positions. Its only use would be to exchange real stuff between many players, facilitating specialization and higher achievement in the interest of all involved.
Banks know about the difference between money and assets. They know exactly what is what. They prefer to see you go bust, because they like your house better than they like being repaid.
We need a money system that would liberate everybody from the scarcity of cash, so that we can get a truly level playing field.
This can be achieved only when we give up the notion of making money with money.

Anthony Migchels is an Interest-Free Currency activist and founder of the Gelre, the first Regional Currency in the Netherlands. You can read all of his articles on his blog Real Currencies.

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Tuesday, November 2, 2010

The Television Commercial About The National Debt That Is Being Banned By Major Networks (VIDEO)

The American Dream

A new television ad about the U.S. national debt produced by Citizens Against Government Waste has been deemed "too controversial" by major networks including ABC, A&E and The History Channel and will not be shown on those channels. The commercial is a homage to a 1986 ad that was entitled "The Deficit Trials" that was also banned by the major networks.  Apparently telling the truth about the national debt is a little too "hot" for the major networks to handle.  But perhaps it is time to tell the American people the truth.  In 1986, the U.S. national debt was around 2 trillion dollars.  Today, it is rapidly approaching 14 trillion dollars. The American Dream is being ripped apart right in front of our eyes, but apparently some of the major networks don't want the American people to really understand what is going on.


The truth is that the ad does not even have anything in it that should be offensive. The commercial is set in the year 2030, and the main character is a Chinese professor that is seen lecturing his students on the fall of great empires. As images of the United States are shown on a screen behind him, the Chinese professor tells his students the following about the behavior of great empires: "They all make the same mistakes. Turning their backs on the principles that made them great. America tried to spend and tax itself out of a great recession. Enormous so-called "stimulus" spending, massive changes to health care, government takeover of private industries, and crushing debt."

Perhaps it is what the Chinese Professor says next that is alarming the big television networks: "Of course, we owned most of their debt, so now they work for us".

So is this television commercial offensive? Watch it below and decide for yourself....


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Monday, November 1, 2010

Politics of the Fed's easy money

Dees Illustration
Emily Kaiser
Reuters

While voters cast ballots on Tuesday in an election expected to shift Congress to the right, the Federal Reserve convenes what could be its most pivotal meeting since the height of the financial crisis.

The central bank was designed to be above political influence. But its policy decisions are not completely immune to the political environment.

A more conservative Congress would reduce the already slim chance that more fiscal support will come, putting the burden squarely on the Fed's shoulders to shore up a limp economy.

Douglas Holtz-Eakin, an economist who advised John McCain during his unsuccessful 2008 presidential campaign, said normally the Fed keeps quiet around elections to avoid any semblance of political involvement.

This time, the central bank sent a clear signal that it intended to take action, and investors are convinced the move will come this week in the form of relaunching asset purchases. This week's policy-setting meeting lasts two days, so the Fed's announcement will come on Wednesday, just after the election.


"It looks to me a bit desperate," Holtz-Eakin said, adding that he was not convinced another round of money printing would do much to stimulate the economy.

"I would have liked to see them hold on to their ammunition in case we really need it."

President Barack Obama's Democratic party is expected to lose its majority in the House of Representatives, while the Democrat-controlled Senate may move closer to a 50-50 split.

Republicans have made opposition to last year's $814 billion stimulus package a central plank of their election campaign, tapping into voter dissatisfaction with the slow pace of recovery and weak job market.

The White House, recognizing there is probably not enough political backing, has said little about additional stimulus. However, two former Obama administration officials -- ex-Budget Director Peter Orszag and former Economic Adviser Christina Romer -- have pressed hard for more help.

Read Full Article


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Why the Fed Will Be Dissolved Within Five Years

Dees illustration
Seeking Alpha

How’s that for a game changer?

In case you missed it, the #1 news story for this week (and the year) was the Fed’s decision to ask its Primary Dealers (PDs) for suggestions on how large and how long QE 2 should run.

The implications of this are vast. But the biggest ones are:

1) The PDs OWN the Fed (not the other way round)

2) QE 2 is a definite, not a “maybe”

3) The Fed doesn’t know what it’s doing

4) The Fed will be dismantled within five years

I’ve long asserted that the US’s money system was in fact controlled by the Big Banks, not the Federal Reserve. The Fed’s decision to ask THEM for suggestions reveals confirms this. It tells us in plain terms WHO decides monetary policy in this country and WHO is responsible for financial markets being where they are.


This statement alone should send chills down everyone’s spines. Think about it, the folks in charge of maintaining our currency policy and consequently the quality of living standards in the US take their orders FROM the banks: the same group responsible for destroying our financial system.

What’s even scarier is the fact that the Fed DOESN’T know what it’s doing. Of course, I’ve been saying this ever since the Financial Crisis erupted in 2008. After all, the Fed never actually took any action in advance, it merely waited for something to go wrong and then desperately applied a band-aid of backstopping or money printing.

However, to see the Fed actually state, PUBLICLY, that it is uncertain of what to do and NEEDS advice from others is simply astonishing. Remember, this is the same group that has resisted any and ALL attempts at transparency and less power. The Fed has literally fought tooth and nail to maintain its privileges. In fact, it’s actually pushed to have MORE power.

Read Full Article

RELATED ARTICLE:
The After-the-Fed Debate Begins: Greenbackers Vs. Goldbugs


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