Central banks are enemies of a free and
prosperous society. Let me count the ways.
1. Like the military, central banks are
creatures of the state. Suggestions of them being independent are pure fantasy.
2. There is a symbiotic relationship
between central banks and the state. Central banks are created by legislatures
with the full understanding that they will finance the state's spending,
primarily war and welfare.
3. Since the main threat to freedom
comes not from foreigners but from the state itself, central banks are willing
accomplices in the state's attack on freedom.
4. Central banks are the source of fiat
money expansion in society. In other words, central banks create money out of
thin air. We commoners call this counterfeiting. Well, so does the state if
done by anyone except the central bank.
5. As the source of money expansion in
society, central banks are responsible for the boom-bust credit cycle. Main
stream media falsely calls a central bank induced credit cycle as a business
cycle, implying that it is business or free market capitalism that is to blame.
Alasdair Macleod has explained in many essays why central banks and only central banks
are to blame.
6. Central banks are responsible for
excessive state debt. In a sound money environment, state spending is limited
by two factors, both of which are natural. One, the state can raise taxes to
pay for new spending, but the public's tolerance of increased taxes has a
natural limit. Two, the state can borrow to pay for new spending, but it must
compete for funds in the bond market to do so. Either it must outbid other
borrowers and/or induce a shift in public sentiment from spending to savings.
Either tactic causes the interest rate to rise. Spending falls and the cost of
capital increases, causing a reduction in investment in the future prosperity
of the nation. (Note that this scenario is opposite of the one touted by
Keynesian economists, who view government spending as beneficial, especially
when an economy goes into recession due to previous money and credit expansion
by the central bank.)
7. The central bank funds an almost
unlimited confiscation of resources by the state. Whether to finance war or
welfare, in a sound money environment the people will begin to question the
options to excessive government spending. Not so when the central bank creates
money out of thin air. The consequences of central bank monetization of
government debt are delayed and poorly understood. When these consequences can
no longer be ignored--price inflation, unemployment, never-ending war, an
expanding dependent class--the state will blame others. Furthermore, it is likely to recommend even
more of the same poison that caused the crisis in the first place--increase
government spending to continue war beyond the public's tolerance, to save
politically connected industries like banking, or to continue to buy votes
through welfare expansion.
8. A corollary to number seven above is
the corruption of public understanding and need for limited government.
Unlimited money via the central bank makes it appear that the state can fund
anything, especially in the short run. Of course, all spending programs then
become short run necessities, as if the lack of government funded, free
healthcare was an existential threat; whereas, healthcare is one of many
economic products for which the public must make individual, rational spending
choices. After all, there is no magic limit to how much is appropriate spending
on healthcare. It is a subjective personal choice of each individual in
society.
In conclusion, central banking is not
compatible with a politically free and economically prosperous society. Through
money printing the central bank empowers the state to confiscate resources
beyond what the people would accept if the true state of affairs were known, as
in a sound money economy. This is NOT self-government or limited government.
Furthermore, central bank credit expansion causes capital decumulation.
Spending becomes the goal, not savings. Individuals understand intuitively the
harmful effects of excessive spending. When our personal finances are strained,
we would not entertain the idea that the way to restore them would be to take
long, expensive trips, buy expensive cars, etc. Of course not. We reduce our
spending to well within our income. The excess of earnings over spending is
savings, which is the lifeblood of any economy. So simple for the individual to
understand, yet the lesson is sneered at by Keynesian economists when applied
to government spending. Time for getting back to basics and away from Keynesian
fantasy.
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