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The Fed Turned 100 In December. How Has It Done?

by Flyovercountry ( 94 Comments › )
Filed under Academia, Economy, History at March 20th, 2014 - 7:00 am

 Dilbert for Mar 12, 2014

As you ponder the initial question posited with the headline, bear in mind please that the Fed was established on Dec. 23, 1913 for one purpose, and one purpose only. It was established expressly to put an end to bank failures in this nation. All other duties that the Federal Reserve Bank now takes on are duties that it has awarded itself, with the exception of one. We’ll get to that one after the video. I would also like you to bear in mind that with its primary charge, the Federal Reserve System can only be viewed objectively as a complete and utter failure, as the number of bank failures increased dramatically after its establishment as compared with any period prior.

One of the additional duties taken on by the Fed has proven itself to be extremely dangerous to our national economy. It is a duty which according to our Constitution, belongs expressly to our Legislative Branch. That would be the management of our currency. Currency is a severely misunderstood thing. At one time in our Nation’s history, three states used tobacco as currency, while other states used gold, and some issued paper script. Some of our original 13 states used gold as a currency for its citizens, and issued paper certificates to pay debts owed to people in other states. Currency is nothing more than a medium of exchange which a populace accepts to facilitate payment for the transfer of goods and services in deference to barter. It allows economic growth, in that it facilitates trade amongst people who might not have the exact mix of goods and services desired by possible trading partners. That’s all a currency is.

Since the dawn of civilization however, along with a recognized value in societies having a form of currency, governments have figured out ways to use currency to rob the value of wealth directly from the citizenry without being terribly overt about it. Simply minting more currency for its own spending is one way of accomplishing this, quantitative easing is another. This method of stealth taxation is commonly referred to as fiat money.

On the exact opposite end of the massive scale of bad ideas is the tying of an economy to a tangible asset or commodity. The most common of these would be the Gold Standard. If you want to see a picture of what happens when an economy is hamstrung by a constipated system for capital allocation, just take a peek into the ancient date of 1929, pretty much anywhere in the world.

Yes, I agree that we should at least audit the Federal Reserve System, and possibly even end it entirely, as it has quite literally failed as miserably in its mission as any measure of failure could be eloquently stated. No, I do not believe that we should shackle our economy by placing ourselves back on a form of currency that by definition severely restricts capital, thereby limiting economic growth, even as our population may grow. Somewhere between these two idiotic ideas, a reasonable solution exists.

In reading the Federalist Papers, more specifically Federalist Number 10, I discovered that the problems with currency that we are facing today were indeed something that our founding fathers had in fact contended with. So I got to thinking, did they have the foresight to address these problems in the Constitution that they drafted and then ratified? As it turns out, the answer is yes.

From Article I, Section 8:

The Congress shall have power………To coin Money, regulate the Value thereof, and of foreign Coin, and fix the Standard of Weights and Measures;

To provide for the Punishment of counterfeiting the Securities and current Coin of the United States;

The good news here is that this vital duty of the Legislative Branch was delegated by a Congressional act that was signed into law by a former President. It was not abrogated by Constitutional Amendment. So getting the damage undone is possible via the same means. The bad news is that it’s on nobody’s radar yet, which is something that can be remedied.

For those of you who are economic wonks, here’s a link to a Cato Institute Symposium on the Federal Reserve. It’s about 6 hours or so of panel discussions, all of it worth your while. Don’t watch it all at once, I’d hate to see anyone go crazy, or crazier than they may already be.

Cross Posted from Musings of a Mad Conservative.

Federal Reserve to continue pumping money

by Phantom Ace ( 129 Comments › )
Filed under Bailouts, Economy at September 18th, 2013 - 5:00 pm

In order to keep their Wall Street Friends happy, The Federal Reserve will continue printing 80 billion a year. Let’s not forget that Ben Bernanke worked at Goldman Sachs. He is determining Fed policy not on what is good for the economy or living standards, but just a few fat cats living good.

An economy still stumbling toward recovery was not enough to sway the Federal Reserve, which defied market expectations Wednesday and said it will not begin pulling back on its monthly asset-purchasing program.

Stocks on the Dow industrials and S&P 500 averages surged to record highs on the news and bond yields moved sharply lower, with the benchmark 10-year note most recently at 2.76 percent.

“This is incredibly wimpy,” David Kelly, chief global strategist at JPMorgan Funds, told CNBC.

[….]

aders cheered the developments, despite their somewhat dour implications for the state of the economy, with the belief that more QE would keep fueling the stock rally.

“The idea that the economy is still too weak to taper and market goes up has its limits,” Leon Cooperman, manager of the Omega Advisors hedge fund, told CNBC. “If we keep going we are taking away from future returns.”

Bernanke further insisted that market demands would not dictate Fed action.

This is not free market capitalism, this is corporate socialism. Wall Street maybe doing good, but the average America’s living standards continue to decline. The Federal Reserve and Ben Bernanke are not putting the interest of the nation in their decision, they just want to enrich their friends at our expense.

Why A Safe Landing Is The Most Important Aspect Of Any Flight.

by Flyovercountry ( 86 Comments › )
Filed under Bailouts, Economy at September 3rd, 2013 - 12:00 pm

Every time I fly with my good friend Dora, just as the plane begins its takeoff, she’ll lean over to me and inform me, one more time, that the takeoff is the most dangerous part of the flight. Then, just for good measure and my peace of mind, she’ll tell me, immediately upon the descent beginning, that landings are every bit as dangerous as the takeoff. My personal belief is that she enjoys seeing my knuckles resembling the same shade of white one sees in the proverbial Bing Crosby White Christmas. (I have to have my little laugh here, so please indulge me for just a second. It gives me great pleasure that the greatest selling Christmas Song in recording history, “White Christmas,” was written by a Jewish guy, Irving Berlin, and recorded by another Jewish guy, Bing Crosby. I now return you to your voluntary reading.)

You may ask yourselves why I would relate this fear I have of flying with Dora, not her real name by the way, and it is a good question. Tomorrow, our Federal Reserve Board will once again release the minutes to their monthly meeting, and will do so late in the day, so as to not affect Wednesday’s trading, like those reactions won’t happen on Thursday instead. There is some conjecture in the investing community as to whether or not Ben Bernanke will announce an end to the drunken revelry known as Quantitative Easing, otherwise known as a flat out robbery of the value of your savings by the Federal Reserve and the Obama Administration.

The last time, if your memory is capable of recalling the third week of June, that Chairman Bernanke hinted at ending this silliness, the capital markets saw a three day loss of 5% of the value in America’s equity holdings. On day number three of the sell off, Big Ben said, “just kidding,” and once again all was well with the Dow Jones Index, climbing once again to record highs. The more astute of you may have noticed some slight turbulence once again in this flight, and that turbulence is once again due to people trying to guess when this five year long drunk will be shut down. Even the most advanced airliner after all must one day land, thus ending its flight. Just like real air travel, a safe landing is more important to the passengers than how spectacularly smooth the flight felt.

Peter Schiff will explain it better than I ever could.

I don’t really care if the market sets record highs if the end result will be an unsafe landing at the end. Now that we’ve gotten ourselves on the Jetson’s famous malfunctioning dog walking treadmill, the question is, how do we stop this crazy thing. Bernanke knows, thanks to his test of our ability to pay attention in June, that once the stopper is placed back on Granny’s whiskey jug, investors will abandon the capital markets with the same artificially inflated vigor that they used to drive prices up to begin with. Bernanke does not want that to be his legacy, leaving with an even scarier crash that heralded the beginning of the Obamanomics economy based on misdirection and snake oil. So my guess is that the Fed Minutes will put the inevitable off until his term ends in December at least. Who ever replaces him though, that person will have some hard decisions to make, like when to deal with the massive hangover that follows any foolish excess in imbibing hard spirits.

Like all great parties in which we drink way more than we can handle, a price must eventually be paid. Hangovers will be felt, and someone will have to clean up the mess. Ben Bernanke has no clue as to how to alleviate the harsh landing that awaits us all, and the dirty little secret is that there is no way to accomplish this. Economic discomfort is as important a part of the price system, otherwise known as capitalism, as economic reward, perhaps more important. Discomfort tells us when we are making mistakes, producing more inefficiency than useful goods and services. The only result of government interference for the purpose of trying to alleviate that discomfort, ignoring important market signals or attempting to subvert them, has been to create much greater pain at a later date. Welcome to the granddaddy of all such market interventions, and the inevitable attempt to stave off that pain. The Keynesian Theory has been proven wrong in its practice each and every time its been applied, and this will be no different. Ben Bernanke and Barack Obama don’t really care though. They’ll be gone, and we’ll be the ones cleaning up the mess.

Cross Posted from Musings of a Mad Conservative.

The Obama Boom: The low wage recovery

by Phantom Ace ( 4 Comments › )
Filed under Economy, Headlines, unemployment at March 22nd, 2013 - 11:59 am

Going by the media, you would think America is an a economic golden age. A Federal Reserve Governor throws cold water on this alleged economic golden age. She points out most of the job growth has been in low wage or temp jobs.

Too much of the recent growth in employment has been concentrated in low-wage and temporary jobs, leaving the recovery on shaky ground, a top Federal Reserve official said Friday.

Sarah Raskin, a member of the Fed’s board of governors, said monetary policymakers are doing all they can to promote stronger economic growth and beef up hiring, and cited improving labor market conditions. But she added interest rates are a blunt tool that cannot help direct the types of jobs that are created, noting one-quarter of U.S. workers are now considered low-wage.

Pointing to a sharp post-recession rise in poverty, a subject not often the focus of speeches by Fed officials, Raskin also argued the rise of temporary employment, which she said is approaching a record, was further widening an already large gap between rich and poor Americans.

“Our country cannot achieve prosperity without addressing the powerful undertow created by flat wages and tenuous financial security for so many millions of Americans,” Raskin said in prepared remarks to the National Community Reinvestment Coalition’s annual conference.

Raskins’ commenst will not get much attention. The media narrative is that Obama is leading America to unprecednted propserity. Can’t let the truth get in the way of a good lie!