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  by Rep. Ron Paul, MD
 US House of Representatives
 
			September 5, 2003 
			from
			
			AugustReview Website 
			All great republics throughout history cherished sound money. This 
			meant that the monetary unit was a commodity of honest weight and 
			purity. When money was sound, civilizations were found to be more 
			prosperous and freedom thrived. The less free a society becomes, the 
			greater the likelihood its money is being debased and the economic 
			well-being of its citizens diminished.
 
 Alan Greenspan, years before he became Federal Reserve Board 
			Chairman in charge of flagrantly debasing the U.S. dollar, wrote 
			about this connection between sound money, prosperity, and freedom. 
			In his article “Gold and Economic Freedom” (The Objectivist, July 
			1966), Greenspan starts by saying:
 
				
				“An almost hysterical antagonism 
				toward the gold standard is an issue that unites statists of all 
				persuasions. They seem to sense…that gold and economic freedom 
				are inseparable.”  
			Further he states that:  
				
				“Under the gold standard, a free 
				banking system stands as the protector of an economy’s stability 
				and balanced growth.”  
			Astoundingly, Mr. Greenspan’s analysis 
			of the 1929 market crash, and how the Fed precipitated the crisis, 
			directly parallels current conditions we are experiencing under his 
			management of the Fed.  
			  
			Greenspan explains:  
				
				“The excess credit which the Fed 
				pumped into the economy spilled over into the stock market – 
				triggering a fantastic speculative boom.” And, “…By 1929 the 
				speculative imbalances had become overwhelming and unmanageable 
				by the Fed.”  
			Greenspan concluded his article by 
			stating:  
				
				“In the absence of the gold 
				standard, there is no way to protect savings from confiscation 
				through inflation.”  
			He explains that the “shabby secret” of 
			the proponents of big government and paper money is that deficit 
			spending is simply nothing more than a “scheme for the hidden 
			confiscation of wealth.” Yet here we are today with a purely fiat 
			monetary system, managed almost exclusively by Alan Greenspan, who 
			once so correctly denounced the Fed’s role in the Depression while 
			recognizing the need for sound money. 
 The Founders of this country, and a large majority of the American 
			people up until the 1930s, disdained paper money, respected 
			commodity money, and disapproved of a central bank’s monopoly 
			control of money creation and interest rates. Ironically, it was the 
			abuse of the gold standard, the Fed’s credit-creating habits of the 
			1920s, and its subsequent mischief in the 1930s, that not only gave 
			us the Great Depression, but also prolonged it. Yet sound money was 
			blamed for all the suffering. That’s why people hardly objected when 
			Roosevelt and his statist friends confiscated gold and radically 
			debased the currency, ushering in the age of worldwide fiat 
			currencies with which the international economy struggles today.
 
 If honest money and freedom are inseparable, as Mr. Greenspan 
			argued, and paper money leads to tyranny, one must wonder why it’s 
			so popular with economists, the business community, bankers, and our 
			government officials. The simplest explanation is that it’s a human 
			trait to always seek the comforts of wealth with the least amount of 
			effort. This desire is quite positive when it inspires hard work and 
			innovation in a capitalist society. Productivity is improved and the 
			standard of living goes up for everyone. This process has permitted 
			the poorest in today’s capitalist countries to enjoy luxuries never 
			available to the royalty of old.
 
 But this human trait of seeking wealth and comfort with the least 
			amount of effort is often abused. It leads some to believe that by 
			certain monetary manipulations, wealth can be made more available to 
			everyone. Those who believe in fiat money often believe wealth can 
			be increased without a commensurate amount of hard work and 
			innovation. They also come to believe that savings and market 
			control of interest rates are not only unnecessary, but actually 
			hinder a productive growing economy.
 
			  
			Concern for liberty is replaced 
			by the illusion that material benefits can be more easily obtained 
			with fiat money than through hard work and ingenuity. The perceived 
			benefits soon become of greater concern for society than the 
			preservation of liberty. This does not mean proponents of fiat money 
			embark on a crusade to promote tyranny, though that is what it leads 
			to, but rather they hope they have found the philosopher’s stone and 
			a modern alternative to the challenge of turning lead into gold. 
 Our Founders thoroughly understood this issue, and warned us against 
			the temptation to seek wealth and fortune without the work and 
			savings that real prosperity requires.
 
				
				
				James Madison warned of “The 
			pestilent effects of paper money,” as the Founders had vivid 
			memories of the destructiveness of the Continental dollar. 
				
				
				George 
			Mason of Virginia said that he had a “Mortal hatred to paper money.” 
				
				
				Constitutional Convention delegate
				Oliver Ellsworth from Connecticut 
			thought the convention “A favorable moment to shut and bar the door 
			against paper money.”  
			This view of the evils of paper money 
			was shared by almost all the delegates to the convention, and was 
			the reason the Constitution limited congressional authority to deal 
			with the issue and mandated that only gold and silver could be legal 
			tender. Paper money was prohibited and no central bank was 
			authorized. Over and above the economic reasons for honest money, 
			however, Madison argued the moral case for such. Paper money, he 
			explained, destroyed,  
				
				“The necessary confidence between man and man, 
			on necessary confidence in public councils, on the industry and 
			morals of people and on the character of republican government.”
				 
			The Founders were well aware of the biblical admonitions against 
			dishonest weights and measures, debased silver, and watered-down 
			wine. The issue of sound money throughout history has been as much a 
			moral issue as an economic or political issue. 
 Even with this history and great concern expressed by the Founders, 
			the barriers to paper money have been torn asunder. The Constitution 
			has not been changed, but is no longer applied to the issue of 
			money. It was once explained to me, during the debate over going to 
			war in Iraq, that a declaration of war was not needed because to ask 
			for such a declaration was “frivolous” and that the portion of the 
			Constitution dealing with congressional war power was 
			“anachronistic.” So too, it seems that the power over money given to 
			Congress alone and limited to coinage and honest weights, is now 
			also “anachronistic.”
 
 If indeed our generation can make the case for paper money, issued 
			by an unauthorized central bank, it behooves us to at least have 
			enough respect for the Constitution to amend it in a proper fashion. 
			Ignoring the Constitution in order to perform a pernicious act is 
			detrimental in two ways. First, debasing the currency as a 
			deliberate policy is economically destructive beyond measure. 
			Second, doing it without consideration for the rule of law 
			undermines the entire fabric of our Constitutional republic.
 
 Though the need for sound money is currently not a pressing issue 
			for Congress, it’s something that cannot be ignored because serious 
			economic problems resulting from our paper money system are being 
			forced upon us. As a matter of fact, we deal with the consequences 
			on a daily basis, yet fail to see the connection between our 
			economic problems and the mischief orchestrated by the Federal 
			Reserve.
 
 All the great religions teach honesty in money, and the economic 
			shortcomings of paper money were well known when the Constitution 
			was written, so we must try to understand why an entire generation 
			of Americans have come to accept paper money without hesitation, 
			without question. Most Americans are oblivious to the entire issue 
			of the nature and importance of money. Many in authority, however, 
			have either been misled by false notions or see that the power to 
			create money is indeed a power they enjoy, as they promote their 
			agenda of welfarism at home and empire abroad.
 
 Money is a moral, economic, and political issue. Since the monetary 
			unit measures every economic transaction, from wages to prices, 
			taxes, and interest rates, it is vitally important that its value is 
			honestly established in the marketplace without bankers, government, 
			politicians, or 
			the Federal Reserve manipulating its value to serve 
			special interests.
 
 
			Money As 
			a Moral Issue
 
			The moral issue regarding money should be the easiest to understand, 
			but almost no one in Washington thinks of money in these terms. 
			Although there is a growing and deserved distrust in government per 
			se, trust in money and the Federal Reserve’s ability to manage it 
			remains strong. No one would welcome a counterfeiter to town, yet 
			this same authority is blindly given to our central bank without any 
			serious oversight by the Congress.
 
 When the government can replicate the monetary unit at will without 
			regard to cost, whether it’s paper currency or a computer entry, 
			it’s morally identical to the counterfeiter who illegally prints 
			currency. Both ways, it’s fraud.
 
 A fiat monetary system allows power and influence to fall into the 
			hands of those who control the creation of new money, and to those 
			who get to use the money or credit early in its circulation. The 
			insidious and eventual cost falls on unidentified victims who are 
			usually oblivious to the cause of their plight. This system of 
			legalized plunder (though not constitutional) allows one group to 
			benefit at the expense of another. An actual transfer of wealth goes 
			from the poor and the middle class to those in privileged financial 
			positions.
 
 In many societies the middle class has actually been wiped out by 
			monetary inflation, which always accompanies fiat money. The high 
			cost of living and loss of jobs hits one segment of society, while 
			in the early stages of inflation, the business class actually 
			benefits from the easy credit. An astute stock investor or home 
			builder can make millions in the boom phase of the business cycle, 
			while the poor and those dependent on fixed incomes can’t keep up 
			with the rising cost of living.
 
 Fiat money is also immoral because it allows government to finance 
			special interest legislation that otherwise would have to be paid 
			for by direct taxation or by productive enterprise. This transfer of 
			wealth occurs without directly taking the money out of someone’s 
			pocket. Every dollar created dilutes the value of existing dollars 
			in circulation. Those individuals who worked hard, paid their taxes, 
			and saved some money for a rainy day are hit the hardest, with their 
			dollars being depreciated in value while earning interest that is 
			kept artificially low by the Federal Reserve easy-credit policy. The 
			easy credit helps investors and consumers who have no qualms about 
			going into debt and even declaring bankruptcy.
 
 If one sees the welfare state and foreign militarism as improper and 
			immoral, one understands how the license to print money permits 
			these policies to go forward far more easily than if they had to be 
			paid for immediately by direct taxation.
 
 Printing money, which is literally inflation, is nothing more than a 
			sinister and evil form of hidden taxation. It’s unfair and 
			deceptive, and accordingly strongly opposed by the authors of the 
			Constitution. That is why there is no authority for Congress, the 
			Federal Reserve, or the executive branch to operate the current 
			system of money we have today.
 
 
			Money As 
			a Political Issue
 
			Although the money issue today is of little political interest to 
			the parties and politicians, it should not be ignored. Policy makers 
			must contend with the consequences of the business cycle, which 
			result from the fiat monetary system under which we operate. They 
			may not understand the connection now, but eventually they must.
 
 In the past, money and gold have been dominant issues in several 
			major political campaigns. We find that when the people have had a 
			voice in the matter, they inevitably chose gold over paper. To the 
			common man, it just makes sense. As a matter of fact, a large number 
			of Americans, perhaps a majority, still believe our dollar is backed 
			by huge hoards of gold in Fort Knox.
 
 The monetary issue, along with the desire to have free trade among 
			the states, prompted those at the Constitutional Convention to seek 
			solutions to problems that plagued the post-revolutionary war 
			economy. This post-war recession was greatly aggravated by the 
			collapse of the unsound fiat Continental dollar. The people, through 
			their representatives, spoke loudly and clearly for gold and silver 
			over paper.
 
 Andrew Jackson, a strong proponent of gold and opponent of central 
			banking (the Second Bank of the United States,) was a hero to the 
			working class and was twice elected president. This issue was fully 
			debated in his presidential campaigns. The people voted for gold 
			over paper.
 
 In the 1870s, the people once again spoke out clearly against the 
			greenback inflation of Lincoln. Notoriously, governments go to paper 
			money while rejecting gold to promote unpopular and unaffordable 
			wars. The return to gold in 1879 went smoothly and was welcomed by 
			the people, putting behind them the disastrous Civil War 
			inflationary period.
 
 Grover Cleveland, elected twice to the presidency, was also a strong 
			advocate of the gold standard.
 
 Again, in the presidential race of 1896, William McKinley argued the 
			case for gold. In spite of the great orations by William Jennings 
			Bryant, who supported monetary inflation and made a mocking “Cross 
			of Gold” speech, the people rallied behind McKinley’s bland but 
			correct arguments for sound money.
 
 The 20th Century was much less sympathetic to gold. Since 1913 
			central banking has been accepted in the United States without much 
			debate, despite the many economic and political horrors caused or 
			worsened by the Federal Reserve since its establishment. The ups and 
			downs of the economy have all come as a consequence of Fed policies, 
			from the Great Depression to the horrendous stagflation of the ’70s, 
			as well as the current ongoing economic crisis.
 
 A central bank and fiat money enable government to maintain an easy 
			war policy that under strict monetary rules would not be achievable. 
			In other words, countries with sound monetary policies would rarely 
			go to war because they could not afford to, especially if they were 
			not attacked. The people could not be taxed enough to support wars 
			without destroying the economy. But by printing money, the cost can 
			be delayed and hidden, sometimes for years if not decades. To be 
			truly opposed to preemptive and unnecessary wars one must advocate 
			sound money to prevent the promoters of war from financing their 
			imperialism.
 
 Look at how the military budget is exploding, deficits are 
			exploding, and tax revenues are going down. No problem; the Fed is 
			there and will print whatever is needed to meet our military 
			commitments, whether it’s wise to do so or not.
 
 The money issue should indeed be a gigantic political issue. Fiat 
			money hurts the economy, finances wars, and allows for excessive welfarism. When these connections are realized and understood, it 
			will once again become a major political issue, since paper money 
			never lasts. Ultimately politicians will not have a choice of 
			whether to address or take a position on the money issue. The people 
			and circumstances will demand it.
 
 We do hear some talk about monetary policy and criticism directed 
			toward the Federal Reserve, but it falls far short of what I’m 
			talking about. Big-spending welfarists constantly complain about Fed 
			policy, usually demanding lower interest rates even when rates are 
			at historic lows. Big-government conservatives promoting grand 
			worldwide military operations, while arguing that “deficits don’t 
			matter” as long as marginal tax rates are lowered, also constantly 
			criticize the Fed for high interest rates and lack of liquidity. 
			Coming from both the left and the right, these demands would not 
			occur if money could not be created out of thin air at will. Both 
			sides are asking for the same thing from the Fed for different 
			reasons. They want the printing presses to run faster and create 
			more credit, so that the economy will be healed like magic – or so 
			they believe.
 
 This is not the kind of interest in the Fed that we need. I’m 
			anticipating that we should and one day will be forced to deal with 
			the definition of the dollar and what money should consist of. The 
			current superficial discussion about money merely shows a desire to 
			tinker with the current system in hopes of improving the 
			deteriorating economy. There will be a point, though, when the 
			tinkering will no longer be of any benefit and even the best advice 
			will be of no value. We have just gone through two-and-a-half years 
			of tinkering with 13 rate cuts, and recovery has not yet been 
			achieved. It’s just possible that we’re much closer than anyone 
			realizes to that day when it will become absolutely necessary to 
			deal with the monetary issue – both philosophically and 
			strategically – and forget about the band-aid approach to the 
			current system.
 
 
			Money As 
			an Economic Issue
 
			For a time, the economic consequences of paper money may seem benign 
			and even helpful, but are always disruptive to economic growth and 
			prosperity.
 
 Economic planners of the Keynesian-socialist type have always 
			relished control over money creation in their efforts to regulate 
			and plan the economy. They have no qualms with using this power to 
			pursue their egalitarian dreams of wealth redistribution. That force 
			and fraud are used to make the economic system supposedly fairer is 
			of little concern to them.
 
 There are also many conservatives who do not endorse central 
			economic planning as those on the left do, but nevertheless concede 
			this authority to the Federal Reserve to manipulate the economy 
			through monetary policy. Only a small group of constitutionalists, 
			libertarians, and Austrian free-market economists reject the notion 
			that central planning, through interest-rate and money-supply 
			manipulation, is a productive endeavor.
 
 Many sincere politicians, bureaucrats, and bankers endorse the 
			current system, not out of malice or greed, but because it’s the 
			only system they have known. The principles of sound money and 
			free 
			market banking are not taught in our universities. The overwhelming 
			consensus in Washington, as well as around the world, is that 
			commodity money without a central bank is no longer practical or 
			necessary. Be assured, though, that certain individuals who greatly 
			benefit from a paper money system know exactly why the restraints 
			that a commodities standard would have are unacceptable.
 
 Though the economic consequences of paper money in the early stage 
			affect lower-income and middle-class citizens, history shows that 
			when the destruction of monetary value becomes rampant, nearly 
			everyone suffers and the economic and political structure becomes 
			unstable. There’s good reason for all of us to be concerned about 
			our monetary system and the future of the dollar.
 
 Nations that live beyond their means must always pay for their 
			extravagance. It’s easy to understand why future generations inherit 
			a burden when the national debt piles up. This requires others to 
			pay the interest and debts when they come due. The victims are never 
			the recipients of the borrowed funds. But this is not exactly what 
			happens when a country pays off its debt. The debt, in nominal 
			terms, always goes up, and since it is still accepted by mainstream 
			economists that just borrowing endlessly is not the road to 
			permanent prosperity, real debt must be reduced. Depreciating the 
			value of the dollar does that. If the dollar loses 10% of its value, 
			the national debt of $6.5 trillion is reduced in real terms by $650 
			billion. That’s a pretty neat trick and quite helpful – to the 
			government.
 
 That’s why the Fed screams about a coming deflation, so it can 
			continue the devaluation of the dollar unabated. The politicians 
			don’t mind, the bankers welcome the business activity, and the 
			recipients of the funds passed out by Congress never complain. The 
			greater the debt, the greater the need to inflate the currency, 
			since debt cannot be the source of long-term wealth. Individuals and 
			corporations who borrow too much eventually must cut back and pay 
			off debt and start anew, but governments rarely do.
 
 But where’s the hitch? This process, which seems to be a creative 
			way of paying off debt, eventually undermines the capitalist 
			structure of the economy, thus making it difficult to produce 
			wealth, and that’s when the whole process comes to an end. This 
			system causes many economic problems, but most of them stem from the 
			Fed’s interference with the market rate of interest that it achieves 
			through credit creation and printing money.
 
 Nearly 100 years ago, Austrian economist Ludwig von Mises explained 
			and predicted the failure of socialism. Without a pricing mechanism, 
			the delicate balance between consumers and producers would be 
			destroyed. Freely fluctuating prices provide vital information to 
			the entrepreneur who is making key decisions on production. Without 
			this information, major mistakes are made. A central planning 
			bureaucrat cannot be a substitute for the law of supply and demand.
 
 Though generally accepted by most modern economists and politicians, 
			there is little hesitancy in accepting the omnipotent wisdom of the 
			Federal Reserve to know the “price” of money – the interest rate – 
			and its proper supply. For decades, and especially during the 1990s 
			– when Chairman Greenspan was held in such high esteem, and no one 
			dared question his judgment or the wisdom of the system – this 
			process was allowed to run unimpeded by political or market 
			restraints. Just as we must eventually pay for our perpetual 
			deficits, continuous manipulation of interest and credit will also 
			extract a payment.
 
 Artificially low interest rates deceive investors into believing 
			that rates are low because savings are high and represent funds not 
			spent on consumption. When the Fed creates bank deposits out of thin 
			air making loans available at below-market rates, mal-investment and 
			overcapacity results, setting the stage for the next recession or 
			depression. The easy credit policy is welcomed by many: stock-market 
			investors, home builders, home buyers, congressional spendthrifts, 
			bankers, and many other consumers who enjoy borrowing at low rates 
			and not worrying about repayment.
 
			  
			However, perpetual good times cannot 
			come from a printing press or easy credit created by a Federal 
			Reserve computer. The piper will demand payment, and the downturn in 
			the business cycle will see to it. The downturn is locked into place 
			by the artificial boom that everyone enjoys, despite the dreams that 
			we have ushered in a “new economic era.” Let there be no doubt: the 
			business cycle, the stagflation, the recessions, the depressions, 
			and the inflations are not a result of capitalism and sound money, 
			but rather are a direct result of paper money and a central bank 
			that is incapable of managing it. 
 Our current monetary system makes it tempting for all parties, 
			individuals, corporations, and government to go into debt. It 
			encourages consumption over investment and production. Incentives to 
			save are diminished by the Fed’s making new credit available to 
			everyone and keeping interest rates on saving so low that few find 
			it advisable to save for a rainy day. This is made worse by taxing 
			interest earned on savings. It plays havoc with those who do save 
			and want to live off their interest. The artificial rates may be 4, 
			5, or even 6% below the market rate, and the savers – many who are 
			elderly and on fixed incomes – suffer unfairly at the hands of Alan 
			Greenspan, who believes that resorting to money creation will solve 
			our problems and give us perpetual prosperity.
 
 Lowering interest rates at times, especially early in the stages of 
			monetary debasement, will produce the desired effects and stimulate 
			another boom-bust cycle. But eventually the distortions and 
			imbalances between consumption and production, and the excessive 
			debt, prevent the monetary stimulus from doing very much to boost 
			the economy. Just look at what’s been happening in Japan for the 
			last 12 years. When conditions get bad enough the only recourse will 
			be to have major monetary reform to restore confidence in the 
			system.
 
 The two conditions that result from fiat money that are more likely 
			to concern the people are inflation of prices and unemployment. 
			Unfortunately, few realize these problems are directly related to 
			our monetary system. Instead of demanding reforms, the chorus from 
			both the right and left is for the Fed to do more of the same – only 
			faster. If our problem stems from easy credit and interest-rate 
			manipulation by the Fed, demanding more will not do much to help. 
			Sadly, it will only make our problems worse.
 
 Ironically, the more successful the money managers are at restoring 
			growth or prolonging the boom with their monetary machinations, the 
			greater are the distortions and imbalances in the economy. This 
			means that when corrections are eventually forced upon us, they are 
			much more painful and more people suffer with the correction lasting 
			longer.
 
 
			Today’s 
			Conditions
 
			Today’s economic conditions reflect a fiat monetary system held 
			together by many tricks and luck over the past 30 years. The world 
			has been awash in paper money since removal of the last vestige of 
			the gold standard by Richard Nixon when he buried the Bretton Woods 
			agreement – the gold exchange standard – on August 15, 1971. Since 
			then we’ve been on a worldwide paper dollar standard. Quite possibly 
			we are seeing the beginning of the end of that system. If so, tough 
			times are ahead for the United States and the world economy.
 
 A paper monetary standard means there are no restraints on the 
			printing press or on federal deficits. In 1971, M3 was $776 billion; 
			today it stands at $8.9 trillion, an 1100% increase. Our national 
			debt in 1971 was $408 billion; today it stands at $6.8 trillion, a 
			1600% increase. Since that time, our dollar has lost almost 80% of 
			its purchasing power. Common sense tells us that this process is not 
			sustainable and something has to give. So far, no one in Washington 
			seems interested.
 
 Although dollar creation is ultimately the key to its value, many 
			other factors play a part in its perceived value, such as: the 
			strength of our economy, our political stability, our military 
			power, the benefit of the dollar being the key reserve currency of 
			the world, and the relative weakness of other nation’s economies and 
			their currencies. For these reasons, the dollar has enjoyed a 
			special place in the world economy. Increases in productivity have 
			also helped to bestow undeserved trust in our economy with consumer 
			prices, to some degree, being held in check and fooling the people, 
			at the urging of the Fed, that “inflation” is not a problem. Trust 
			is an important factor in how the dollar is perceived. Sound money 
			encourages trust, but trust can come from these other sources as 
			well. But when this trust is lost, which always occurs with paper 
			money, the delayed adjustments can hit with a vengeance.
 
 Following the breakdown of the Bretton Woods agreement, the world 
			essentially accepted the dollar as a replacement for gold, to be 
			held in reserve upon which even more monetary expansion could occur. 
			It was a great arrangement that up until now seemed to make everyone 
			happy.
 
 We own the printing press and create as many dollars as we please. 
			These dollars are used to buy federal debt. This allows our debt to 
			be monetized and the spendthrift Congress, of course, finds this a 
			delightful convenience and never complains. As the dollars circulate 
			through our fractional reserve banking system, they expand many 
			times over. With our excess dollars at home, our trading partners 
			are only too happy to accept these dollars in order to sell us their 
			products.
 
			  
			Because our dollar is relatively strong compared to other 
			currencies, we can buy foreign products at a discounted price. In 
			other words, we get to create the world’s reserve currency at no 
			cost, spend it overseas, and receive manufactured goods in return. 
			Our excess dollars go abroad and other countries – especially Japan 
			and China – are only too happy to loan them right back to us by 
			buying our government and GSE debt. Up until now both sides have 
			been happy with this arrangement. 
 But all good things must come to an end and this arrangement is 
			ending. The process put us into a position of being a huge debtor 
			nation, with our current account deficit of more than $600 billion 
			per year now exceeding 5% of our GDP. We now owe foreigners more 
			than any other nation ever owed in all of history, over $3 trillion.
 
 A debt of this sort always ends by the currency of the debtor nation 
			decreasing in value. And that’s what has started to happen with the 
			dollar, although it still has a long way to go. Our free lunch 
			cannot last. Printing money, buying foreign products, and selling 
			foreign holders of dollars our debt ends when the foreign holders of 
			this debt become concerned with the dollar’s future value.
 
 Once this process starts, interest rates will rise. And in recent 
			weeks, despite the frenetic effort of the Fed to keep interest rates 
			low, they are actually rising instead. The official explanation is 
			that this is due to an economic rebound with an increase in demand 
			for loans. Yet a decrease in demand for our debt and reluctance to 
			hold our dollars is a more likely cause. Only time will tell whether 
			the economy rebounds to any significant degree, but one must be 
			aware that rising interest rates and serious price inflation can 
			also reflect a weak dollar and a weak economy.
 
			  
			The stagflation of the 1970s baffled 
			many conventional economists, but not the Austrian economists. Many 
			other countries have in the past suffered from the extremes of 
			inflation in an inflationary depression, and we are not immune from 
			that happening here. Our monetary and fiscal policies are actually 
			conducive to such a scenario. 
 In the short run, the current system gives us a free ride, our paper 
			buys cheap goods from overseas, and foreigners risk all by financing 
			our extravagance. But in the long run, we will surely pay for living 
			beyond our means. Debt will be paid for one way or another. An 
			inflated currency always comes back to haunt those who enjoyed the 
			“benefits” of inflation. Although this process is extremely 
			dangerous, many economists and politicians do not see it as a 
			currency problem and are only too willing to find a villain to 
			attack. Surprisingly the villain is often the foreigner who 
			foolishly takes our paper for useful goods and accommodates us by 
			loaning the proceeds back to us. It’s true that the system 
			encourages exportation of jobs as we buy more and more foreign 
			goods.
 
			  
			But nobody understands the Fed role in 
			this, so the cries go out to punish the competition with tariffs. 
			Protectionism is a predictable consequence of paper-money inflation, 
			just as is the impoverishment of an entire middle class. It should 
			surprise no one that even in the boom phase of the 1990s, there were 
			still many people who became poorer. Yet all we hear are calls for 
			more government mischief to correct the problems with tariffs, 
			increased welfare for the poor, increased unemployment benefits, 
			deficit spending, and special interest tax reduction, none of which 
			can solve the problems ingrained in a system that operates with 
			paper money and a central bank. 
 If inflation were equitable and treated all classes the same, it 
			would be less socially divisive. But while some see their incomes 
			going up above the rate of inflation (movie stars, CEOs, stock 
			brokers, speculators, professional athletes), others see their 
			incomes stagnate like lower-middle-income workers, retired people, 
			and farmers. Likewise, the rise in the cost of living hurts the poor 
			and middle class more than the wealthy. Because inflation treats 
			certain groups unfairly, anger and envy are directed toward those 
			who have benefited.
 
 The long-term philosophic problem with this is that the central bank 
			and the fiat monetary system are not blamed; instead free market 
			capitalism is. This is what happened in the 1930s. The Keynesians, 
			who grew to dominate economic thinking at the time, erroneously 
			blamed the gold standard, balanced budgets, and capitalism instead 
			of tax increases, tariffs, and Fed policy. This country cannot 
			afford another attack on economic liberty similar to what followed 
			the 1929 crash that ushered in the economic interventionism and 
			inflationism which we have been saddled with ever since. These 
			policies have brought us to the brink of another colossal economic 
			downturn and we need to be prepared.
 
 Big business and banking deserve our harsh criticism, but not 
			because they are big or because they make a lot of money. Our 
			criticism should come because of the special benefits they receive 
			from a monetary system designed to assist the business class at the 
			expense of the working class. Labor leader Samuel Gompers understood 
			this and feared paper money and a central bank while arguing the 
			case for gold. Since the monetary system is used to finance deficits 
			that come from war expenditures, the military industrial complex is 
			a strong supporter of the current monetary system.
 
 Liberals foolishly believe that they can control the process and 
			curtail the benefits going to corporations and banks by increasing 
			the spending for welfare for the poor. But this never happens. 
			Powerful financial special interests control the government spending 
			process and throw only crumbs to the poor. The fallacy with this 
			approach is that the advocates fail to see the harm done to the 
			poor, with cost of living increases and job losses that are a 
			natural consequence of monetary debasement. Therefore, even more 
			liberal control over the spending process can never compensate for 
			the great harm done to the economy and the poor by the Federal 
			Reserve’s effort to manage an unmanageable fiat monetary system.
 
 Economic intervention, financed by inflation, is high-stakes 
			government. It provides the incentive for the big money to “invest” 
			in gaining government control. The big money comes from those who 
			have it – corporations and banking interests. That’s why literally 
			billions of dollars are spent on elections and lobbying. The only 
			way to restore equity is to change the primary function of 
			government from economic planning and militarism to protecting 
			liberty. Without money, the poor and middle class are 
			disenfranchised since access for the most part requires money. 
			Obviously, this is not a partisan issue since both major parties are 
			controlled by wealthy special interests. Only the rhetoric is 
			different.
 
 Our current economic problems are directly related to the monetary 
			excesses of three decades and the more recent efforts by the Federal 
			Reserve to thwart the correction that the market is forcing upon us. 
			Since 1998, there has been a sustained attack on corporate profits. 
			Before that, profits and earnings were inflated and fictitious, with 
			WorldCom and Enron being prime examples. In spite of the 13 rate 
			cuts since 2001, economic growth has not been restored.
 
 Paper money encourages speculation, excessive debt, and misdirected 
			investments. The market, however, always moves in the direction of 
			eliminating bad investments, liquidating debt, and reducing 
			speculative excesses. What we have seen, especially since the stock 
			market peak of early 2000, is a knock-down, drag-out battle between 
			the Fed’s effort to avoid a recession, limit the recession, and 
			stimulate growth with its only tool, money creation, while the 
			market demands the elimination of bad investments and excess debt.
 
			  
			The Fed was also motivated to save the 
			stock market from collapsing, which in some ways they have been able 
			to do. The market, in contrast, will insist on liquidation of 
			unsustainable debt, removal of investment mistakes made over several 
			decades, and a dramatic revaluation of the stock market. In this 
			go-around, the Fed has pulled out all the stops and is more 
			determined than ever, yet the market is saying that new and healthy 
			growth cannot occur until a major cleansing of the system occurs. 
			Does anyone think that tariffs and interest rates of 1% will 
			encourage the rebuilding of our steel and textile industries anytime 
			soon? Obviously, something more is needed. 
 The world central bankers are concerned with the lack of response to 
			low interest rates and they have joined in a concerted effort to 
			rescue the world economy through a policy of protecting the dollar’s 
			role in the world economy, denying that inflation exists, and 
			justifying unlimited expansion of the dollar money supply. To 
			maintain confidence in the dollar, gold prices must be held in 
			check. In the 1960s our government didn’t want a vote of no 
			confidence in the dollar, and for a couple of decades, the price of 
			gold was artificially held at $35 per ounce. That, of course, did 
			not last.
 
 In recent years, there has been a coordinated effort by the world 
			central bankers to keep the gold price in check by dumping part of 
			their large horde of gold into the market. This has worked to a 
			degree, but just as it could not be sustained in the 1960s, until 
			Nixon declared the Bretton Woods agreement dead in 1971, this effort 
			will fail as well.
 
 The market price of gold is important because it reflects the 
			ultimate confidence in the dollar. An artificially low price for 
			gold contributes to false confidence and when this is lost, more 
			chaos ensues as the market adjusts for the delay.
 
 Monetary policy today is designed to demonetize gold and guarantee 
			for the first time that paper can serve as an adequate substitute in 
			the hands of wise central bankers. Trust, then, has to be 
			transferred from gold to the politicians and bureaucrats who are in 
			charge of our monetary system. This fails to recognize the obvious 
			reason that market participants throughout history have always 
			preferred to deal with real assets, real money, rather than 
			government paper. This contest between paper and honest money is of 
			much greater significance than many realize. We should know the 
			outcome of this struggle within the next decade.
 
 Alan Greenspan, although once a strong advocate for the gold 
			standard, now believes he knows what the outcome of this battle will 
			be. Is it just wishful thinking on his part? In an answer to a 
			question I asked before the Financial Services Committee in February 
			2003, Chairman Greenspan made an effort to convince me that paper 
			money now works as well as gold:
 
				
				“I have been quite surprised, and I 
				must say pleased, by the fact that central banks have been able 
				to effectively simulate many of the characteristics of the gold 
				standard by constraining the degree of finance in a manner which 
				effectively brought down the general price levels.”  
			Earlier, in December 2002, Mr. Greenspan 
			spoke before the Economic Club of New York and addressed the same 
			subject:  
				
				“The record of the past 20 years 
				appears to underscore the observation that, although pressures 
				for excess issuance of fiat money are chronic, a prudent 
				monetary policy maintained over a protracted period of time can 
				contain the forces of inflation.”  
			There are several problems with this 
			optimistic assessment.  
				
				
				First, efficient central bankers will never 
			replace the invisible hand of a commodity monetary standard. 
				
				
				Second, 
			using government price indexes to measure the success of a managed 
			fiat currency should not be reassuring. These indexes can be 
			arbitrarily altered to imply a successful monetary policy. 
				
				
				Also, 
			price increases of consumer goods are not a litmus test for 
			measuring the harm done by the money managers at the Fed. The 
			development of overcapacity, excessive debt, and speculation still 
			occur, even when prices happen to remain reasonably stable due to 
			increases in productivity and technology.  
			Chairman Greenspan makes his argument 
			because he hopes he’s right that sound money is no longer necessary, 
			and also because it’s an excuse to keep the inflation of the money 
			supply going for as long as possible, hoping a miracle will restore 
			sound growth to the economy. But that’s only a dream. 
 We are now faced with an economy that is far from robust and may get 
			a lot worse before rebounding. If not now, the time will soon come 
			when the conventional wisdom of the last 90 years, since the Fed was 
			created, will have to be challenged. If the conditions have changed 
			and the routine of fiscal and monetary stimulation don’t work, we 
			better prepare ourselves for the aftermath of a failed dollar 
			system, which will not be limited to the United States.
 
 An interesting headline appeared in the New York Times on July 31, 
			2003,
 
				
					
					“Commodity Costs Soar, But Factories Don’t Bustle.” 
					 
			What is 
			observed here is a sea change in attitude by investors shifting 
			their investment funds and speculation into things of real value and 
			out of financial areas, such as stocks and bonds. This shift shows 
			that in spite of the most aggressive Fed policy in history in the 
			past three years, the economy remains sluggish and interest rates 
			are actually rising. What can the Fed do? If this trend continues, 
			there’s little they can do. Not only do I believe this trend will 
			continue, I believe it’s likely to accelerate. This policy plays 
			havoc with our economy; it reduces revenues, prompts increases in 
			federal spending, increases in deficits and debt occur, and interest 
			costs rise, compounding our budgetary woes. 
 The set of circumstances we face today are unique and quite 
			different from all the other recessions the Federal Reserve has had 
			to deal with. Generally, interest rates are raised to slow the 
			economy and dampen price inflation. At the bottom of the cycle 
			interest rates are lowered to stimulate the economy. But this time 
			around, the recession came in spite of huge and significant interest 
			rate reductions by the Fed. This aggressive policy did not prevent 
			the recession as was hoped; so far it has not produced the desired 
			recovery. Now we’re at the bottom of the cycle and interest rates 
			not only can’t be lowered, they are rising. This is a unique and 
			dangerous combination of events. This set of circumstances can only 
			occur with fiat money and indicates that further manipulation of the 
			money supply and interest rates by the Fed will have little if any 
			effect.
 
 The odds aren’t very good that the Fed will adopt a policy of not 
			inflating the money supply because of some very painful consequences 
			that would result. Also there would be a need to remove the pressure 
			on the Fed to accommodate the big spenders in Congress. Since there 
			are essentially only two groups that have any influence on spending 
			levels, big-government liberals and big-government conservatives, 
			that’s not about to happen. Poverty is going to worsen due to our 
			monetary and fiscal policies, so spending on the war on poverty will 
			accelerate.
 
			  
			Our obsession with policing the world, 
			nation building, and pre-emptive war are not likely to soon go away, 
			since both Republican and Democratic leaders endorse them. Instead, 
			the cost of defending the American empire is going to accelerate. A 
			country that is getting poorer cannot pay these bills with higher 
			taxation nor can they find enough excess funds for the people to 
			loan to the government. The only recourse is for the Federal Reserve 
			to accommodate and monetize the federal debt, and that, of course, 
			is inflation. 
 It’s now admitted that the deficit is out of control, with next 
			year’s deficit reaching over one-half trillion dollars, not counting 
			the billions borrowed from “trust funds” like Social Security. I’m 
			sticking to my prediction that within a few years the national debt 
			will increase over $1 trillion in one fiscal year. So far, so good, 
			no big market reactions, the dollar is holding its own and the 
			administration and congressional leaders are not alarmed. But they 
			ought to be.
 
 I agree, it would be politically tough to bite the bullet and deal 
			with our extravagance, both fiscal and monetary, but the 
			repercussions here at home from a loss of confidence in the dollar 
			throughout the world will not be a pretty sight to behold. I don’t 
			see any way we are going to avoid the crisis.
 
 We do have some options to minimize the suffering. If we decided to, 
			we could permit some alternatives to the current system of money and 
			banking we have today.
 
				
				
				Already, we took a big step in this 
				direction. Gold was illegal to own between 1933 and 1976. Today 
				millions of Americans do own some gold. 
				
				Gold contracts are legal, but a 
				settlement of any dispute is always in Federal Reserve notes. 
				This makes gold contracts of limited value. 
				
				For gold to be an alternative to 
				Federal Reserve notes, taxes on any transactions in gold must be 
				removed, both sales and capital gains. 
				
				Holding gold should be permitted in 
				any pension fund, just as dollars are permitted in a checking 
				account of these funds. 
				
				Repeal of all legal tender laws is a 
				must. Sound money never requires the force of legal tender laws. 
				Only paper money requires such laws.  
			These proposals, even if put in place 
			tomorrow, would not solve all the problems we face. It would though, 
			legalize freedom of choice in money, and many who worry about having 
			their savings wiped out by a depreciating dollar would at least have 
			another option. This option would ease some of the difficulties that 
			are surely to come from runaway deficits in a weakening economy with 
			skyrocketing inflation. 
 Curbing the scope of government and limiting its size to that 
			prescribed in the Constitution is the goal that we should seek. But 
			political reality makes this option available to us only after a 
			national bankruptcy has occurred. We need not face that catastrophe. 
			What we need to do is to strictly limit the power of government to 
			meddle in our economy and our personal affairs, and stay out of the 
			internal affairs of other nations.
 
 
			Conclusion
 
			It’s no coincidence that during the period following the 
			establishment of the Federal Reserve and the elimination of the gold 
			standard, a huge growth in the size of the federal government and 
			its debt occurred. Believers in big government, whether on the left 
			or right, vociferously reject the constraints on government growth 
			that gold demands. Liberty is virtually impossible to protect when 
			the people allow their government to print money at will. 
			Inevitably, the left will demand more economic interventionism, the 
			right more militarism and empire building.
 
			  
			Both sides, either inadvertently or 
			deliberately, will foster corporatism. Those whose greatest interest 
			is in liberty and self-reliance are lost in the shuffle. Though left 
			and right have different goals and serve different special-interest 
			groups, they are only too willing to compromise and support each 
			other’s programs. 
 If unchecked, the economic and political chaos that comes from 
			currency destruction inevitably leads to tyranny – a consequence of 
			which the Founders were well aware. For 90 years we have lived with 
			a central bank, with the last 32 years absent of any restraint on 
			money creation. The longer the process lasts, the faster the 
			printing presses have to run in an effort to maintain stability. 
			They are currently running at record rate. It was predictable and is 
			understandable that our national debt is now expanding at a record 
			rate.
 
 The panicky effort of the Fed to stimulate economic growth does 
			produce what it considers favorable economic reports, recently 
			citing second quarter growth this year at 3.1%. But in the 
			footnotes, we find that military spending – almost all of which is 
			overseas – was up an astounding 46%. This, of course, represents 
			deficit spending financed by the Federal Reserve’s printing press. 
			In the same quarter, after-tax corporate profits fell 3.4%. This is 
			hardly a reassuring report on the health of our economy and merely 
			reflects the bankruptcy of current economic policy.
 
 Real economic growth won’t return until confidence in the entire 
			system is restored. And that is impossible as long as it depends on 
			the politicians not spending too much money and the Federal Reserve 
			limiting its propensity to inflate our way to prosperity. Only sound 
			money and limited government can do that.
 
 Dr. Ron Paul is a Republican member of Congress from Texas.
 
 
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