One of the most enduring myths in the United States is that this country has a free market, when in reality, the market is merely the structural shell of formerly free institutions. Government pulls the strings behind the scenes. No better illustration of this can be found than in the Federal Reserve's manipulation of interest rates.
The Fed has interfered with the proper function
of interest rates for decades, but perhaps never as boldly as it has in the past
few years through its policies of quantitative easing. In Chairman Bernanke's
most recent press conference he stated that the Fed wishes not only to drive
down rates on Treasury debt, but also rates on mortgages, corporate bonds, and
other important interest rates. Markets greeted this statement enthusiastically,
as this means trillions more newly-created dollars flowing directly to Wall
Street.
Because the interest rate is the price of
money, manipulation of interest rates has the same effect in the market for
loanable funds as price controls have in markets for goods and services. Since
demand for funds has increased, but the supply is not being increased, the only
way to match the shortfall is to continue to create new credit. But this process
cannot continue indefinitely. At some point the capital projects funded by the
new credit are completed. Houses must be sold, mines must begin to produce ore,
factories must begin to operate and produce consumer goods.
But because consumption patterns have either
remained unchanged or have become more present-oriented, by the time these new
capital projects are finished and begin to produce, the producers find no market
for their goods. Because the coordination between savings and consumption was
severed through the artificial lowering of the interest rate, both savers and
borrowers have been signaled into unsustainable patterns of economic activity.
Resources that would have been used in productive endeavors under a regime of
market-determined interest rates are instead shuttled into endeavors that only
after the fact are determined to be unprofitable. In order to return to a
functioning economy, those resources which have been malinvested need to be liquidated and shifted into sectors
in which they can be put to productive use.
Another effect of the injections of credit into
the system is that prices rise. More money chasing the same amount of goods
results in a rise in prices. Wall Street and the banking system gain the use of
the new credit before prices rise. Main Street, however, sees the prices rise
before they are able to take advantage of the newly-created credit. The
purchasing power of the dollar is eroded and the standard of living of the
American people drops.
We live today not in a free market economic
system but in a "mixed economy", marked by an uneasy mixture of corporatism;
vestiges of free market capitalism; and outright central planning in some
sectors. Each infusion of credit by the Fed distorts the structure of the
economy, damages the important role that interest rates play in the market, and
erodes the purchasing power of the dollar. Fed policymakers view themselves as
wise gurus managing the economy, yet every action they take results in economic
distortion and devastation.
Unless Congress gets serious about reining in
the Federal Reserve and putting an end to its manipulation, the economic
distortions the Fed has caused will not be liquidated; they will become more
entrenched, keeping true economic recovery out of our grasp and sowing the seeds
for future crisis.
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