Tag Archive for 'federal_reserve'

Links: Gimmie, Gimmie Bailout Money

Bailing out the Big 3

EndTheFed.us - Protests against the Federal Reserve Kick off this week

The fervour over Obama in Namibia

Taliban leader says: We have no faith in Obama

Mission Accomplished?

Iraq’s cabinet on Sunday overwhelmingly approved a proposed security agreement that calls for a full withdrawal of American forces from the country by the end of 2011. The cabinet’s decision brings a final date for the departure of American troops a significant step closer after more than five and a half years of war.

Perhaps the surge worked? Victory in Iraq Day.

All Apologies

I Sometimes find strangers’ manners so lacking that I have started engaging in an odd kind of activism. I call it reverse etiquette: I supply the apology that they should be giving me.

American doctors hate their work

What Happens If You’re on Gay Rights’ ‘Enemies List’

An animated map of religions over time. History of Religion

Links: Two-weeks links

Last week, we had so few links, and I was well wrapped up in my new life in the UK, that we did not get a weekly links posting! Hopefully we make up for it a little today.

A lot happened with the Ron Paul movement. Ron Paul’s Rally opposite the RNC went smashingly well.  Paul’s speech.

This week, Paul hosted a major press event to show that all four major third party candidates had agreement on four basic points:

Foreign Policy: The Iraq War must end as quickly as possible with removal of all our soldiers from the region. We must initiate the return of our soldiers from around the world, including Korea, Japan, Europe and the entire Middle East. We must cease the war propaganda, threats of a blockade and plans for attacks on Iran, nor should we re-ignite the cold war with Russia over Georgia. We must be willing to talk to all countries and offer friendship and trade and travel to all who are willing. We must take off the table the threat of a nuclear first strike against all nations.

Privacy: We must protect the privacy and civil liberties of all persons under US jurisdiction. We must repeal or radically change the Patriot Act, the Military Commissions Act, and the FISA legislation. We must reject the notion and practice of torture, eliminations of habeas corpus, secret tribunals, and secret prisons. We must deny immunity for corporations that spy willingly on the people for the benefit of the government. We must reject the unitary presidency, the illegal use of signing statements and excessive use of executive orders.

The National Debt: We believe that there should be no increase in the national debt. The burden of debt placed on the next generation is unjust and already threatening our economy and the value of our dollar. We must pay our bills as we go along and not unfairly place this burden on a future generation.

The Federal Reserve: We seek a thorough investigation, evaluation and audit of the Federal Reserve System and its cozy relationships with the banking, corporate, and other financial institutions. The arbitrary power to create money and credit out of thin air behind closed doors for the benefit of commercial interests must be ended. There should be no taxpayer bailouts of corporations and no corporate subsidies. Corporations should be aggressively prosecuted for their crimes and frauds.

Paul argues that “a majority” of people would agree to these points, but they are all completely ignored in the mainstream discussion of elections in favour of long-media circuses on crap like this.

More Links
Texas to teachers: Bible will be taught

Is Google Turning Into Big Brother?

Votes for Ron Paul not counted at Republican convention.

Ban on Political Endorsements by Pastors Targeted

Scientist Uncovers Miscalculation In Geological Undersea Record. A popular method of measuring historical carbon levels is not accurate as previously thought, due to a lack of correlation between atmospheric carbon isotope levels and carbon isotope levels in sediment records. The article doesn’t make this clear, but this is not the carbon-14 dating method that you’re probably thinking of, which is only good for up to 50,000 years ago. This is the carbon-13/carbon-12 ratio method, which is useful for hundreds of millions of years back. This is not a dating method; it is used as an indicator of historical plant activity on earth.

Attack of the Business Cycle: Why More Rate-Cutting is Killing the Economy

America is likely entering its next great recession and pottential depression.

Ben Bernanke has chosen to undergo some of the most reckless Fed policies of the modern era, as today the Fed cut interest rates by .75 points - demonstrating to the whole world that it is in panic mode about the short-term future. Yesterday world markets dropped drastically as the rest of the world, still heavily tied to our currency and government, realized their mistakes as well.

Most people presume these cycles are completely natural fluctuations in the market - isn’t that why we have the Fed in the first place? To speed up and slow down the economy so we all have an easy ride? Or, even more ignorantly, isn’t this all just a result of corporate greed and vice?

It may be surprising, but the second one is partially right.

The Anatomy of a Crisis
The Federal Reserve has virtual monopoly control over interest rates and currency creation. When interest rates are low, more people can get their hands on large sums of money and use it to invest and consume, stimulating the economy. However, because the money is so easy to obtain, many people in all classes and professions (whom the market would never have permitted to acquire it) malinvest. Poor people buy houses they cannot afford, middle class people buy properties and start businesses and wealthy people invest in new (and riskier) ventures. And consumer spending skyrockets, making it all seem justified. It creates a massive economic party that everyone is invited to.

But the money was too easy, and those who obtained it for little cost went and did dumb things with it. The poorer people who extended themselves to their maximum debt to buy a house, are the quickest to topple. They lose their house, or have to make massive lifestyle reductions and can no longer spend gobs of money on the junk that the middle-classes were peddling to them. The middle-class businesses that the wealthy invested in fail, and massive amounts of money disappear into dust and ruin.

While these groups were obviously responsible for their bad decisions, it was the easy money that was initially created by the fed that is ultimately to blame.

Analogies to the Crisis
Like any party - the drinking, sex and revelry all feel good in the moment, but in the morning it brings sickness and regret at best, and at worst, you wake up next to the biggest mistake of your life. So too does the Fed, by the very practices which are intended to bring growth, actually sow the seeds of recession, depression and financial crisis.

Milton Friedman once wisely compared the easy money of Fed creation to a drug addict. To avoid becoming sober and dealing with the physical, emotional and psychological consequences of abuse, the user continues to get high - desperate to avoid reality and live in a fantasy world. The addict knows that when he goes off the drugs, he will have to face the accumulated consequences of his lifestyle. They may last years, even be permanent, but he will be better off in the end by sobering up.

If the market determined interest rates, then as soon as investments began to sour, the rate would be increased by private banks to ensure that they were not losing money. Corrections would be small, localized and manageable. With one institution, and one oligarchical board controlling the essential mechanism of the economy, we are merely passing time until a major collapse. Interest rates and currency management, like all goods, services and prices, cannot be controlled by even the wisest of men and must be left to the market to determine to avoid the poor driving of the Fed.

Here Come the Effects of Inflation
The Fed Rate cut has other drastic effects which hasten the coming of the bust period. Part of the mechanics of lowering the rate, is to liquidate debt. That is to move virtual dollars into physical ones. More dollars chasing the same amount of goods and services causes prices to rise and brings inflation. During the initial boom, this is great - everyone has more money to throw around. But soon the market realizes this and prices shoot up, causing a decrease in living standards and economic activity.

In other words, the inflation is not about to commence, but was started after 9/11, after the dot com bust and after the housing bust. Its effect has merely been staved off by even further inflation.

These most recent rate cuts are only going to heap more negative consequences on the economy. We’ve dealt with the last three busts (dot com, 9/11 and housing) by behaving this way - by taking another swig from the inflation bottle and toasting to our health. The consequences are compounding, growing and will soon bring this country to it’s knees. Do we have the courage to stop now, deal with the consequences, and return to a normal and prosperous economy?

Inflation Surges Correlate with War

After every major US war, there is a general surge in inflation. Presidential Candidate Ron Paul and several libertarian economists have theorized that this is because spending on wars is largely financed by fiat printing via the federal reserve. According to Paul:

If every American taxpayer had to submit an extra five or ten thousand dollars to the IRS this April to pay for the war, I’m quite certain it would end very quickly. The problem is that government finances war by borrowing and printing money, rather than presenting a bill directly in the form of higher taxes.

Just taking a cursory look at an inflation graph will prove this point rather easily. Here is one, with periods of war highlighted in red.

The year after World War I saw the CPI go up 14.9% and 15.8% in 1919 and 1920 respectively. After World War II, the next three years were 8.5%, 14.4% and 7.8%. There was a negligible surge after the Korean War. But after the long, costly war in Vietnam, rates rose 11% the first year and stayed relatively high for several years.

Obviously it is tough to correlate these figures exactly. Overall production has a large effect on these figures – either augmenting or taming inflation. Whatever the cause, it should be clear that there is a historical president that may see repeating at the end of the current war.


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