The
Malicious Myth of the 'Libertarian' Fed
by
Thomas J. DiLorenzo
by Thomas J. DiLorenzo
In the history
of American politics the statists have always been advocates of
a central bank, whereas the defenders of liberty – libertarians
– have opposed it. Legalized governmental counterfeiting has always
been every totalitarian’s dream and every right-minded libertarian’s
nightmare.
A Federal Reserve
publication entitled "A History of Central Banking in America"
correctly calls Alexander Hamilton "the founding father of
central banking in America." His nemesis, Thomas Jefferson,
strongly opposed Hamilton’s Bank of the United States as a mortal
threat to liberty and economic stability. So did Jefferson’s political
heir, Andrew Jackson, who vetoed the re-chartering of Hamilton’s
Bank of the United States. By that time (the late 1830s) the face
of the Hamiltonian/statist cabal in American politics was the face
of the Whig Party, and no one was a more strident advocate of a
central bank than the young Whig Abraham Lincoln. After being snuffed
out by the 1840s, central banking was revived by Lincoln’s National
Currency Acts in the 1860s, and then finally cemented into place
fifty years later with the creation of the Fed.
The great libertarian
Austrian School economists Mises, Rothbard and Hayek (among others)
all opposed central banking, whereas the "mainstream"
of the economics profession has always played the part of court
historian, assuring the public in their publications that the Fed
– a secret organization that is responsible to no one and which
has never been audited – always acts purely in "the
public interest" by "stabilizing" the economy. Read
any edition of Paul Samuelson’s famous textbook, Economics,
if you’re skeptical of this claim. Or read any "mainstream"
introductory economics textbook for that matter.
So it is curious,
if not outright bizarre, that several commentators are now blaming
the current economic crisis on the "libertarian" Fed!
Business historian John Steele Gordon absurdly argued in the Wall
Street Journal several months ago that the cause of the current
crisis is "the baleful influence of Thomas Jefferson"
and his anti-central bank philosophy, which lives on to this day.
The Fed is "too libertarian," in other words, and not
enough of a central planning institution according to Gordon. That
would certainly be news to the most famous libertarian political
figure in the world, Congressman Ron Paul.
Stockbroker
Henry Kaufman of Henry Kaufman and Company recently wrote in the
Financial Times that "libertarian dogma led the Fed
astray." This absurd claim is being repeated by other Wall
Street establishment mouthpieces, even including the disgraced former
governor of New York, Eliot Spitzer. Spitzer recently went on MSNBC
to argue that because Alan Greenspan associated with "Ann Rand"
fifty years ago, the Fed is a "libertarian" institution.
All of these commentators conclude that what is needed, therefore,
is even more central planning and regulation by the central
bank.
All the layman
has to do to recognize what a big fat lie the "libertarian
Fed" story is, is to go online and Google a Fed publication
entitled "The Federal Reserve System: Purposes and Functions."
In addition to recklessly manipulating the money supply and causing
boom-and-bust cycles for more than ninety years (including the Great
Depression and the current one), the Fed "has supervisory and
regulatory authority over a wide range of financial institutions
and activities." That’s an understatement if ever there was
one. Among the Fed’s "functions" are the regulation
of:
Bank
holding companies
- State-chartered
banks
- Foreign
branches of member banks
- Edge and
agreement corporations
- U.S. state-licensed
branches, agencies, and representative offices of foreign banks
- Nonbanking
activities of foreign banks
- National
banks
- Savings
banks
- Nonbank
subsidiaries of bank holding companies
- Thrift holding
companies
- Financial
reporting procedures
- Accounting
policies of banks
- Business
"continuity" in case of economic emergencies
- Consumer
protection laws
- Securities
dealings of banks
- Information
technology used by banks
- Foreign
investment by banks
- Foreign
lending by banks
- Branch banking
- Bank mergers
and acquisitions
- Who may
own a bank
- Capital
"adequacy standards"
- Extensions
of credit for the purchase of securities
- Equal opportunity
lending
- Mortgage
disclosure information
- Reserve
requirements
- Electronic
funds transfers
- Interbank
liabilities
- Community
Reinvestment Act sub-prime lending demands
- All international
banking operations
- Consumer
leasing
- Privacy
of consumer financial information
- Payments
on demand deposits
- "Fair
Credit" reporting
- Transactions
between member banks and their affiliates
- Truth in
lending
- Truth in
savings
All of this
financial market regulation and regimentation was in full
force during the Greenspan era. None of it could conceivably
be considered to be "libertarian" or "free market"
in any way. The Fed is a government central planning agency, period.
As such, it is as far away from being a libertarian institution
as one can imagine. That’s why the Barney Franks of the political
world are staunch Fed defenders whereas "Mr. Libertarian,"
Congressman Ron Paul, is its fiercest critic.
May
8, 2009
Thomas
J. DiLorenzo [send him mail]
is professor of economics at Loyola College in Maryland and the
author of The
Real Lincoln; Lincoln
Unmasked: What You’re Not Supposed To Know about Dishonest Abe
and How
Capitalism Saved America. His latest book is Hamilton’s
Curse: How Jefferson’s Archenemy Betrayed the American Revolution
– And What It Means for America Today.
Copyright
© 2009 by LewRockwell.com. Permission to reprint in whole or in
part is gladly granted, provided full credit is given.
Thomas
DiLorenzo Archives at LRC
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DiLorenzo Archives at Mises.org
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