Advice to Geithner
by
Ron Paul
Recently
by Ron Paul: Demolishing
Due Process
Before
the United States House of Representatives, Committee on Financial
Services, Hearing to Receive the Annual Testimony of the Secretary
of the Treasury on the State of the International Financial System,
March 20, 2012
Mr. Chairman,
I thank you for holding this hearing on the state of the international
financial system. The Treasury Secretary has neglected to appear
to testify on this topic for several years, so I hope the committee
will treat this topic with the importance it deserves during this
Congress. It is especially important because of the work the G20
has undertaken on global currency reform since 2008. What role US
representatives have played in these negotiations is unknown to
Congress, nor do we know what global currency reform initiatives
are being discussed. I fear that the G20 negotiations will result
in a fait accompli that will be forced upon the American
people with no opportunity for input or debate.
Ever since
the closing of the gold window by President Nixon in 1971, the unbacked
US dollar has served as the world's reserve currency. No longer
constrained by being required to exchange dollars for gold, the
US government has been able to fund its fiscal profligacy with trillions
of dollars of new money created out of thin air. The only constraint
on government spending is the willingness of investors to continue
to purchase the Treasury debt issued to fund the government's massive
fiscal deficits.
The federal
government's fiscal profligacy has caused the national debt to skyrocket
to well over $15 trillion. Even with nearly a trillion dollars of
daylight under the current debt ceiling, it is highly likely that
the federal government will reach this limit before the November
elections. Foreign nations, especially our major creditors such
as China, are watching keenly to see if Congress is serious about
getting spending under control. Foreign creditors hold $5 trillion
of Treasury debt, debt which is becoming increasingly devalued as
the federal government runs trillion-dollar deficits and the Federal
Reserve continues its trillion-dollar quantitative easing programs.
Another increase in the debt ceiling would signal that Congress
is not serious about reining in spending and would foreshadow a
further decrease in the value of the dollar.
Unhappiness
at this current state of affairs has led to calls to replace the
current global dollar standard with a new global currency system.
Many of the proposals work from the assumption that national governments
cannot be trusted to manage currencies in a responsible manner,
and that only an international organization such as the International
Monetary Fund (IMF) can provide a stable global reserve currency.
These proposals dig back to the roots of the discredited Bretton
Woods system, only instead of resurrecting the flawed gold-exchange
standard they propose a version John Maynard Keynes' "bancor",
an international fiat currency based on the IMF's current special
drawing rights (SDR).
Rooted in discredited
economic thinking and a complete disregard for fundamental constitutional
principles, the IMF over the years has forced American taxpayers
to subsidize large, multinational corporations and underwrite economic
destruction around the globe. IMF policies are based on a flawed
philosophy that says the best means of creating economic prosperity
is through government-to-government transfers. Such programs cannot
produce growth because they take capital out of private hands, where
it can be allocated to its most productive use as determined by
the choices of consumers in the market, and place it in the hands
of politicians. Placing economic resources in the hands of politicians
and bureaucrats inevitably results in inefficiencies, shortages,
and economic crises, as even the best intentioned politicians cannot
know the most efficient use of resources. IMF assistance to foreign
countries also has a history of funding graft and corruption among
repressive regimes that leave their countries with massive debt
to Western banks, with no economic progress having been achieved.
As bad as the Federal Reserve has been in managing the dollar, I
cannot imagine how much worse our monetary system would be with
a single global currency issued and managed by the IMF.
Monetary problems
come about because of the government monopoly on money issuance.
Like any monopolist, government abuses its position and debases
the currency it issues. Even inflating the currency supply by a
seemingly paltry 2% a year results in a systematic debasement which
severely penalizes savers and benefits debtors, including the greatest
debtor of them all, the United States government. The ability to
issue the currency in which its debt is denominated, combined with
the ability to debase that currency so that the debt can be paid
off with increasingly worthless money, gives rise to a temptation
which no government official can resist.
To
return to sound money, we need to return to the monetary system
our founders intended. Gold and silver were to be the only types
of currency which the states could declare to be legal tender, the
government was not given a monopoly on currency issuance, and foreign
coin could circulate just as freely as American coin. Rather than
further centralizing currency issuance in an unaccountable international
organization such as the IMF, currency issuance needs to be decentralized.
The free market can provide currency just as it provides every other
good. All that is needed is for government to remove the restrictions
on private mints. Gold is gold no matter who mints it, and unlike
paper money it cannot be created out of thin air. Gold-backed currency
serves as the ultimate check on government spending and debt creation.
Only by returning to commodity-backed currency can we return to
fiscal and monetary sanity and break the cycle of booms and busts
brought upon us by the Fed.
In conclusion,
Mr. Chairman, this Committee has a great role to play in the future
of our monetary system. We need to keep watch over the administration's
negotiations with the G20 and vigorously oppose any efforts to force
the United States into a new global currency, while simultaneously
laying the groundwork for a return to sound money in this country.
See
the Ron Paul File

March
23, 2012
Dr. Ron
Paul is a Republican member of Congress from Texas.
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