This
week, President Obama and Vice President Biden held a hastily arranged secret
meeting with Federal Reserve Chairman Janet Yellen. According to the one
paragraph statement released by the White House following the meeting, Yellen,
Obama, and Biden simply “exchanged notes” about the economy and the progress of
financial reform. Because the meeting was held behind closed doors, the
American people have no way of knowing what else the three might have
discussed.
Yellen’s secret meeting at the White
House followed an emergency secret Federal Reserve Board meeting. The Fed then
held another secret meeting to discuss bank reform. These secret meetings come
on the heels of the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta’s estimate that first
quarter GDP growth was .01 percent, dangerously close to the official
definition of recession.
Thus the real reason for all these
secret meetings could be a panic that the Fed’s eight year explosion of money
creation has not just failed to revive the economy, but is about to cause
another major market meltdown.
Establishment politicians and
economists find the Fed’s failures puzzling. According to the Keynesian
paradigm that still dominates the thinking of most policymakers, the Fed’s
money creation should have produced such robust growth that today the Fed would
be raising interest rates to prevent the economy from “overheating.”
The Fed’s response to its failures
is to find new ways to pump money into the economy. Hence the Fed is actually
considering implementing “negative interest rates.” Negative interest rates are
a hidden tax on savings. Negative interest rates may create the short-term
illusion of growth, but, by discouraging savings, they will cause tremendous
long-term economic damage.
Even as Yellen admits that the Fed
“has not taken negative interest rates off the table,” she and other Fed
officials are still promising to raise rates this year. The Federal Reserve
needs to promise future rate increases in order to stop nervous investors from
fleeing US markets and challenging the dollar’s reserve currency status.
The Fed can only keep the wolves at
bay with promises of future rate increases for so long before its polices cause
a major dollar crisis. However, raising rates could also cause major economic
problems. Higher interest rates will hurt the millions of Americans struggling
with student loan, credit card, and other forms of debt. Already over 40
percent of Americans who owe student loan debt are defaulting on their
payments. If Federal Reserve policies increase the burden of student loan debt,
the number of defaults will dramatically increase leading to a bursting of the
student loan bubble.
By increasing the federal
government’s cost of borrowing, an interest rate increase will also make it
harder for the federal government to manage its debt. Increased costs of debt
financing will place increased burden on the American people and could be the
last straw that finally pushes the federal government into a Greek-style
financial crisis.
The no-win situation the Fed finds
itself in is a sign that we are reaching the inevitable collapse of the fiat
currency system. Unless immediate steps are taken to manage the transition,
this collapse could usher in an economic catastrophe dwarfing the Great
Depression. Therefore, those of us who know the truth must redouble our efforts
to spread the ideas of liberty.
If we are successful we may be able
to force Congress to properly manage the transition by cutting spending in all
areas and auditing, then ending, the Federal Reserve. We may also be able to
ensure the current crisis ends not just the Fed but the entire welfare-warfare
state.
This article was published by RonPaul Institute.
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