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A recent internal
memo obtained from the Canadian Ministry of Finance under the Access to
Information Act revealed that the Ministry may be about to advise the Governor
of the Bank of Canada against a further interest rate hike. The economy, claimed
one of the minister's deputies, has ample room to grow before inflation becomes
a concern, the subtext, of course, being that a hike would be "politically
unpopular." The only newsworthy item, of course, was the surprise expressed
by the reporter that government should consider interfering with monetary
policy.
Less in the realm of
subterfuge is the news that there are two new candidates under consideration for
position of head honcho at the Bank of Canada. The ostensible lack of public
interest in the candidates prompted one financial op-ed commentator to liken the
toss-up to one between two types of tofu. I'll add a qualification: However you
slice it, and whichever of two slivers of slimy tofu your palate can tolerate,
the mere endorsement of a Central Bank must give pause. Think of it: whether it
is raising or lowering interest rates, this pecuniary plutocracy is directing
the lifeblood of the economy. Has central planning not proven deadly to
economies? Why then is this any less true of the reign over the money of Federal
Reserve Bank chairman Alan Greenspan or his Canadian counterparts who trail with
their own raft of abuses, not least the manipulation of growth rates and
unemployment rates.
With its origins in
the Bank of England of the 1690s, central, cartelized banking is now
commonplace. The blatant printing of money, one object of which is to finance
government deficits, however, has since been refined into "fractional
reserve banking." Fractional-reserve banking, explain economists John P.
Cochran, Steven T. Call, and Fred R. Glahe, is a credit creation process, which
involves the banks in granting credit through issuing "notes and bank
balances that are not covered by money." Economist Murray Rothbard vividly
illustrates the process: The Federal Reserve Bank permits the commercial banks
to pyramid checkbook money on top of their own reserves by a multiple of
approximately 6:1, so that if bank reserves at the Fed increase by $1 billion,
the banks can and do pyramid their deposits by $6 billion.
If the Fed wants to
expand the money supply, it no longer blatantly prints money, it will simply
increase the reserves it gives to banks say by $1 billion, and leave it up to
the banks to max their respective lending to the tune of $6 billion of checkbook
money. Whether through serving as a reserve for essentially fraudulent banks, or
purchasing assets, usually government securities, on the free market, the Fed is
involved in increasing the money supply. As economists Hans H. Hoppe, Jorg G.
Hulsmann and Walter Block point out, this money substitute, created out of thin
air, represents no more than an additional supply of property titles, while the
supply of property remains constant. The 'money' very plainly does not exist,
making the issuance of such paper notes--called fiduciary media--tantamount to
fraud.
Amidst pronouncements
of plenty, crucial to understand is that, unlike other goods, the excess of
which benefit consumers, excess money originating in this government-directed
counterfeit creates inflation and diminishes purchasing power. Having cautioned
that "paper money cannot replace production," Economist Frank Shostak
confirmed that the yearly rate of Fed-directed growth of the money base has been
climbing consistently since 1996, this "large increase in the money
supply" being the essence of inflation.
In an unhampered
market, the natural rate of interest would properly reflect the net choices of
all lenders and borrowers to consume or postpone consumption. The expansion of
credit by the Central and commercial banks distorts this rate, causing interest
rates to fall below the natural rate, hence an artificial stimulation of
economic activity. To reduce fake growth, the Fed must raise interest rates and
tightens credit. But by this time, misdirected investment has already occurred.
Incidentally, the
policies of the two Canadian candidates are fissured along the same lines that
distinguish Alan Greenspan from his opponents. Greenspan, more of an
"inflation dove", believes that 4 percent unemployment is compatible
with stable inflation. 'Hard-line' Fed governor Laurence Meyer insists growth
must further be slowed to combat inflation at the risk of a rise in
unemployment.
My bet hedges on the
anti-interest-hike, inflation-tolerant advocate. As the late indefatigable
scholar of central banking, Murray Rothbard, observed, the first to get the new
money are the counterfeiters themselves. By the time it has percolated down to
the economically marginal, monetary inflation has reduced its value. Some
coincidence it is then that those who perch atop the cartel's pecking order,
like Alan Greespan and the Canadian fecund fellows, are also "inflation
doves".
©2000 By Ilana
Mercer
The Calgary Herald
August 31
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