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Sports See other Sports Articles Title: The Federal Reserve: Public Enemy Number One The following article was written by Peter Schmidt. Any views expressed are his own and do not necessarily reflect the views of Peter Schiff or SchiffGold. When currency was backed by gold, a central banks main function was to maintain the value of the issued currency in terms of gold. For example, if a central bank created too much money against the gold reserves in the banking system, an increasing number of people would begin to exchange their currency for gold. To combat this, a central bank would be forced to raise interest rates and decrease the money supply. The higher interest rates would incentivize people to exchange gold for larger savings on deposit that earn interest. Banking reserves gold would return to the banking system and the economy would return to balance. The prime reason for insisting on defining currency in terms of a precious metal was to provide a self-correcting braking mechanism to the creation of money. As expressed by the great Wilhelm Röpke: If in the production of goods the most important pedal is the accelerator, in the production of money it is the brake. To insure that this brake works automatically and independently of the whims of government and the pressure of parties and groups seeking easy money has been one of the main functions of the gold standard. That the liberal should prefer the automatic brake of gold to the whims of government in its role of trustee of a managed currency is understandable.[1] The US dollar was backed by gold as recently as 1971. Any central bank in the world could present the Federal Reserve $35 and receive 1-ounce of gold in exchange. However, on August 15, 1971 blaming it on the gnomes of Zurich President Nixon temporarily broke the dollars last link with gold. Nixon closed the gold window and reneged on the promise to exchange an ounce of gold for $35. Since then, the system of credit in the US has been under the Feds complete control. End The Fed Ron Paul Best Price: $1.55 Buy New $9.10 (as of 04:20 EDT - Details) Unsurprisingly, without the natural braking action provided by gold, the value of the dollar has collapsed and the ensuing 45 years are the most crisis-ridden period in American economic history. The case against todays Fed can be made in a number of ways. A method which enjoys the advantage of hoisting Ben Bernanke on his own mathematical petard is to use economic statistics from two eras 1967 and 2015. One of the reasons Ben Bernanke is such a big fan of baseball is his fondness of statistics. In baseball, like few other sports, players from one era can be compared to players from other eras because the game has changed so little. Because of his fondness for baseball statistics and their constancy over time, Bernanke should be sympathetic to the data presented here even if it exposes the enormous damage he and the Fed have visited on hundreds of millions of hard-working Americans. The chart below speaks volumes about the disastrous impact of Fed policies since 1971. The chart also reveals how the credit inflation the Fed has created, actually masks the disastrous impact of the Feds policies. Specifically, the Fed-induced inflation makes it difficult for the average worker to realize that even though their salaries have soared in dollar terms, these salaries now purchase much less than they used to. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread
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