Ron Paul's Texas Straight Talk 5/6//13: Federal Reserve Blows More Bubbles
Federal Reserve Blows More Bubbles
by Ron Paul
Last week at
its regular policy-setting meeting, the Federal Reserve announced it
would double down on the policies that have failed to produce anything
but a stagnant economy. It was a disappointing, but not surprising,
move.
The Fed affirmed that it is prepared to increase its
monthly purchases of Treasuries and mortgage-backed securities if things
don't start looking up. But actually the Fed has already been buying
more than the announced $85 billion per month. Between February and
March, the Fed's securities holdings increased $95 billion. From March
to April, they increased $100 billion. In all, the Fed has pumped more
than a half trillion dollars into the economy since announcing its
latest round of "quantitative easing" (QE3) in September 2012.
Although
many were up in arms when the Fed said it would buy $600 billion in
government debt outright for the previous round, QE2, all seems quiet
about the magnitude of QE3 because it doesn't come with huge up-front
total price tag. But by year's end the Fed's balance sheet could hit $4
trillion.
With no recovery in sight, where's all this money
going? It is creating bubbles. Bubbles in the housing sector, the stock
market, and government debt. The national debt is fast approaching $17
trillion, with the Fed monetizing most of the newly issued debt. The
stock market has been hitting record highs for the past two months as
investors seek to capitalize on the Fed's easy money. After all, as long
as the Fed keeps the spigot open, nominal profits are there for the
taking. But this is a house of cards. Eventually, just like in
2008-2009, the market will discipline the bad actions of the Fed and
seek to find the real normal.
In the meantime, real families are
suffering. While Wall Street and the government take advantage of access
to the Fed's new "free" money, the Fed claims there is no inflation.
But who hasn't paid higher prices at the grocery store, the gas pump,
for tuition, for insurance? It's bad enough that household incomes have
stagnated, but real purchasing power has declined so much that one in
seven Americans, 47.3 million people, are on food stamps. Five million
are collecting unemployment insurance with 21.5 million afflicted by
unemployment according to the government's own figures. That's 13.9
percent -- close to double the 7.5 percent unemployment number reported
last week.
We are certainly not in a recovery. We don't see the
long unemployment and soup kitchen lines like in the Great Depression,
but that's just because the lines are electronic now.
It is not
surprising the Fed has decided to hand the American people more of the
same failed policies. But it is disappointing. We know what the real
solution is: allow the marketplace to work. Allow entrepreneurs the
chance to create instead of stifling innovation with arbitrary
regulations. Allow interest rates to rise to equal the risks in the
economy. Allow bad debts to be liquidated so we can build on a firm
foundation. Stop printing money to benefit the government and big banks.
Restore sound money to the economy and the American people. Sound money
is the bedrock for prosperity and the best check on big government and
crony capitalism.
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