THE FALLACY OF MONEY MANIA
The Federal Reserve needs to say no to the demand for more money creation
BY LEW ROCKWELL
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Lew Rockwell is a paleolibertarian political commentator and economist in the United States. Rockwell is the founder and President of the Ludwig von Mises Institute in Auburn, Alabama and Vice President of the Center for Libertarian Studies. Other stories by Lew Rockwell
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It’s been a grueling Fall 2007, with the continued shocks from the housing
mess, the market sell-off, oil still sky high, the dollar hitting new lows, and
the rising gold price giving that ever-ominous sign of trouble ahead. Business
conditions have deteriorated dramatically.
And the gold price reflects a general trend: The consumer and producer price
indexes are continuing an uptrend that compares to the steep levels of the mid-
and late-1970s. And if you really want to wince, take a look at federal spending
and debt. It’s unreal: $8.2 trillion in debt, with nearly $5 trillion of it
held by the public as an investment?
Ah, but wait! One day in November, the stock market soars and traders are wild
with glee. The storm clouds are gone and the sun is out. What happened? No
fundamentals changed. No new reports came in. No numbers were revised. What
happened was but a few words from the vice chairman of the Federal Reserve,
spoken at a roundtable at the Council on Foreign Relations.
He said the Fed would follow “flexible and pragmatic policy making” and
“act as needed.”
Whoo-hoo! You see, to markets that are worried about the future, this was
interpreted as a pledge to lower interest rates and flood the economy with more
credit.
Let’s ask ourselves: Why would this make anyone optimistic? Let’s say that
you are playing the game Monopoly and one player proposes to double the money
stock for everyone. The problem would be obvious to everyone. If the prices on
the board could change, they would double. Since they can’t, the game will
only last twice as long as before. Meanwhile, players would become more reckless
with their investments in houses and hotels. It wouldn’t really make the
players more wealthy; it would only create an illusion that would be temporary.
The analogy isn’t exact, but the point should be clear. Paper money is not the
same thing as wealth. Wealth comes from trade, investment and capital
accumulation. Money is merely a tool that facilitates the creation of wealth; it
is not identical to it.
So what good does the new money do? From the perspective of Wall Street, it
forestalls a recession. But what if a recession is needed? That is to say, what
if a business downturn is what the economic fundamentals call for? In that case,
new money injections do positive harm by preventing a correction and only add to
the eventual problems that we all must face. It is no favor to the drug addict
to keep him high until he is a corpse, and it is not good economic management to
keep an economy drugged up until it hits the wall.
But shouldn’t we do something to address the credit crunch? Yes, and that is
the following: Let it happen. After all, a credit crunch is not an act of
nature. It is a response to an economic expansion that is not justified by
fundamentals. How do these occur? It is not part of the structural dynamic of
the market economy that an economy suddenly embarks on irrational exuberance for
no good reason. Misdirected investment in some projects at the expense of others
is brought about by credit expansion beyond which it is justified.
Sure enough, we can look at the money supply figures and see the big run-up to
the current crisis. The trouble begins in 2001, with a sudden and really
shocking rate of money creation. Between 2001 and 2006, nearly $2 trillion in
artificial (phony) money was injected by the Fed into the economy, via the
credit markets, much of which landed in real estate and other sectors. This
created a false prosperity.
So why is Wall Street cheering? Is the investor class merely looking for another
credit subsidy? The sad truth is yes, that is precisely what the financial
markets want. This should not surprise us. A drunken son might be ruining his
life, but the last thing he desires is to be denied access to his parents’
credit cards.
If the Federal Reserve were responsible and wise, it would say no to the demand
for more money creation. And yet that would run contrary to its institutional
reason for existence. It was founded by the federal government to create new
money to fund World War I and immunize the banks from the risks associated with
excess lending. The government loves this approach because it means not having
to tax people. Taxing makes people angry. Money expansion destroys wealth in
more sinister and coy ways. It reduces people’s purchasing power and sneakily
robs them of their savings, even as it creates a false sense of rising
prosperity.
So we can see, then, that money expansion is a big lie, and the Fed is what
makes this lie possible. Indeed, it was founded precisely so that it could do
so. Similarly, the popular notion survives out there that the Fed’s main job
is to keep inflation low and the economy stable. And yet the Fed is the very
cause of inflation and instability — standing ready to open the flood gates
when the political pressure builds, when the banks get in trouble, when the
state needs funds, or when the biggest corporate players demand more credit.
Here’s what I would like to see: the whole of Wall Street rising up against
the Fed and demanding that it turn off the spigots and let the economy get back
on an even keel. Let the correction happen and let profits and wages fall in the
overblown sectors. Then we could even disgorge the Fed of its powers and
establish a free-market monetary system.