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Fed Secretive for Good Reason

Wednesday, September 02, 2009 – by Staff Report

Ben Bernanke

Northern Trust's Paul Kasriel says the real reason the Fed doesn't want us to see its books is not that it fears hampering competition but that The Fed is scared to death that the revelation will trigger another run on some of those banks. "If the Fed is required to publish the names of financial institutions to which it has extended credit and this publication induces financial institutions to refrain from borrowing from the Fed, one can only speculate if this would be the tinder for another liquidity conflagration in the coming months," Kasriel observes. He notes that in 1932, when the Reconstruction Finance Corporation (RFC) made public the names of banks that had borrowed from it, current borrowers quit borrowing and prospective borrowers quit coming. Kasriel points out that because we now have the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, the probabilities and magnitude of depositor runs on banks are far less today than they were in 1933. But, he says, there could well be runs on banks if fears of financial problems within those banks arise. The central bank on Monday won a court delay of an order that it reveal banks that have participated in its emergency lending programs and how much money those banks received. Also, the FDIC said this week it has no plans to borrow money despite the chance that it could soon go broke. – MoneyNews

Dominant Social Theme: Leave the Fed alone.

Free-Market Analysis: We would like t o give the Federal Reserve the doubt here, but we have considerable trouble doing so. In fact, in our opinion, the Fed is under attack because it comes up with apologists that Paul Kasriel that defend the institution in ways that many people might find unbelievable in this day and age. The Fed is really struggling with three separate trends that undermine its credibility in our opinion.

Its track record is discouraging: First, it has been around nearly a century now, long enough to create a track record of recessions and depressions that rival anything that came before. Trouble was that the Fed was mainly supposed to even out the economic downturns that were occurring prior to its creation. In fact, the Fed probably was not created just as a national financial "reserve" but also as a way for a handful of wealthy industrialists and entrepreneurs to influence the direction of the economy, especially the banking sector. It's proved admirable at accruing power for the monetary elite, less so at securing the economy.

Its mechanisms have been shockingly revealed during this crisis: Second, the Fed has literally pumped trillions into the economy in a fairly short period of time to secure it and get it growing again – and these actions have been minutely observed by an increasingly irate public via the Internet. Used to be that such massive monetary moves were accomplished secretly and without sunlight. But no more.

In fact, the Fed's drastic actions, when comingled with those of other central banks, have likely given the body populace a headache that is ongoing. The Fed itself is said to have provided up to US$8 trillion to financial entities at home and abroad. These may be short term loans at extraordinarily low interest rates – but who couldn't use an extra billion at a low rate. That's exactly the point. Most people, struggling to get by, had no idea of how the financial system worked. Thanks to central banking propaganda, most in the West looked on paper bills as money, real money. Of course it is not. It is fiat money, backed by nothing, and the ability of central banks to print as much of the stuff as they wanted without constraint provided the kind of example that wonderfully concentrated citizens' minds.

Its lack of justification for its own actions is increasingly obvious: Third, the Fed and other central banks have been lamentable at combating the growing exasperation with the money system as it is and with central banking's role in it. One could postulate, really, that there has been no committed defense of central banking by those with the most to lose. There have been press conferences, announcements and forays throughout the West to committees that ask questions and receive bland, unimaginative and confusing answers.

But this is business as usual at a time when circumstances are determinedly unusual. The impression therefore lingers that banks are severe about how much money individuals can gain access to while big banks – which regularly threaten to sink the economy – somehow have access to as much money as they want. That this is a likely true conclusion only exacerbates the whole mess. It will have a lingering impact not only on the larger morality of society, but also on how central banks are regarded going forward – whether or not they are a fair institution. We believe increasingly the verdict will not be a happy one for this institution.

Yet on top of these negative trends, come central banking's apologists, maintaining that this banker's actions and that banker's criticism is proof positive that the system is working as it should work. It is a noisy system, so the logic goes, that can stand a great deal of shoving and pushing – and that it will be all the better for the rough treatment.

Of course, it is also noted, the rough treatment should stop short of a serious investigation of the books. This should not take place, wise heads explain, because it might panic the market all over again. Apparently, the market is so fragile that the release of the names of certain potentially troubled banks will prove such a blow to confidence as to set back the progress that has been made.

This is Keynesian logic at its finest. It is basically the idea that what drives the economy is confidence, nothing else. Absent confidence, the system itself will cease to create prosperity. To put this into context, think of a normal economic system. People buy and sell as they choose. Confidence is not the primary factor, the invisible hand is. Using this logic, one might be tempted to stand by as banks fail one after the other. They are failing anyway, and if bigger ones are to fail, then let them.

The world is fairly over-banked thanks to central banks. Banks are really, historically, nothing but money warehouses; however, the modern system of central banking has imbued banks, especially money center banks with great power and mystique. This is necessary to prop up and enhance the mystique of the dominant social theme of central banking itself.

This time, we think, it is not going to work especially well – not for the Federal Reserve. The three factors we have cited above are providing a fairly strong headwind against which various central banking apologies and prevarications are not likely to work. Central banks manufacture money, fix prices and are the proximate cause of modern booms and busts. Because millions are educated as to this in the modern, Internet age, the idea that central bank officials are concerned about financial stability takes on a certain ironic tinge. If central banks help cause financial stability, then it would be a good idea to look at their books to see how and why this occurring.

Conclusion: What central bankers are afraid of, especially Fed bankers, is not destabilization in our opinion, but the revelation that central banking is nothing more or less than crony capitalism of the most concentrated and powerful kind. The loans, the electronic money printed out of thin air, the outright giveaways – these, if analyzed closely, will show conflicts of interest that influenced the giveaway of trillions. It will show that the monetary elite directs money – fiat funds based on the faith and credit of the body populace – to those whom it wishes to enrich for purposes of generating further control and additional wealth for those who control the levers of money power. It will show, in other words, that Bernard Madoff was merely a piker who did it the hard way.




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Effective April 25, 2012, the Daily Bell will discontinue allowing feedback comments. We have left in place the large body of responses posted in the past, as we appreciate the valuable contributions made by some of our readers.
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  Posted by William Renfroe on 09/04/09 01:09 PM

What the Obama administration refuses to acknowledge is that 85% of Americans are satisfied with their present health care coverage. Obama wants Americans to sacrifice that in favor of the other 15%, comprised of illegal aliens, the irresponsible, and, yes, some victims of misfortune. Obama's plan is a classic case of throwing the baby out with the bath water.

Reply from The Daily Bell

The baby is a noisy one.

  Posted by James Downey on 09/03/09 01:34 PM

It is sad that we need the Bell to state the true situation facing the fundamental basis of my country. Fools such as McCain and those in power within both parties are ignorant or just simply see themselves as elites who know better than their intended masters.

The Fed's actions, the Ponzei Schemes of Social Security and Medicare further weaken my country's ability to compete and prosper. I am freightened to see how far we have sunk and the ultimate of the worthless paper we have issued to cover our government's lust for spending.

This will be a non-violent revolution but nothing good can be sustained if term limits are not added to the Constitution for Congress. It is their power club that permits the hugh transgressions and if ever there were an opportunity to utilize a precious metal backing to our currency, it would have to come from a Congress interested in the country, not their own power.

Reply from The Daily Bell

Good points. Our perspective, however ... Without central banks modern governments would lack funds for many transgressions. Getting rid of, say, the Fed, would like be more effective than even aggressive term limits.

  Posted by John Routt on 09/03/09 10:43 AM

I was so glad to hear somebody comment on John McCain's waffling on every issue. He truly does speak out of three sides of his mouth and this was apparent during the campaign. He was a pathetically weak candidate from the beginning.

Here in america there are those of us who still see our country as the founding father's saw it and would rather die than give it up to the radicals. My hope is that there are enough of us to stand against the brainwashed dopes who have continually elected what i view as traitors to our country.

The barney franks, henry waxmans, chuck shumers, maxine waters and obama are all guilty of treason by going against our constitution in their quest to remake america as a socialist state. They should all be tried in a court of law and suffer the consequences of treason as provided when this country was young and did not tolerate these kind of threats to our god given freedoms. God bless america and the daily bell. Keep up the good work.

Reply from The Daily Bell

Thanks for the kind words.

  Posted by Chester Strobel on 09/02/09 09:23 PM

I am appreciating what you say. I have a question. some of your contributors are strong on precious metals. What will happen when the government decides to call in all the silver and gold now held by private entities either individuals or funds? If I remember correctly it happened once before.

Reply from The Daily Bell

Limits on checking and savings accounts may be more likely than gold confiscation in this day and age.

  Posted by Jim Lorenz on 09/02/09 04:49 PM

Amen! (Secular meaning.)

Reply from The Daily Bell

Again, with brevity.

  Posted by Jim Lorenz on 09/02/09 04:32 PM

It's really brutally simple: Sound Money of silver/gold, that after minting costs, pays no interest to its creator. The central banks create Money substitutes, that lent into circulation, pay perpetual interest to the issuer.

This is the crushing wheel of perpetual debt for every non-banker.
This is precisely why the Framers of the U.S. Constitution, who had personal experience with both the Bank of England, and continental paper money, FORBADE any Money except Coin of gold/silver.

The people of the world, excluding bankers, will NEVER be free until Sound Money is restored to free circulation. It's really that simple.

Reply from The Daily Bell

Fine summary, Mr. Lorenz.

  Posted by Dean Kavouras on 09/02/09 11:26 AM

But won't they try to silence the internet? How would truth-loving, freedom-loving people react to that?

Reply from The Daily Bell

It is difficult to justify such Draconian actions in Western, regulatory democracies. The pretext needs to be established and the actions taken gradually. The trouble for those that wish to clamp down on the Internet is that technology in this sector continues to move rapidly.

  Posted by Drago V on 09/02/09 10:45 AM

When you look at it from a distance, central banking is a weird institution.

Reply from The Daily Bell

To say the least.

  Posted by Dean Kavouras on 09/02/09 08:42 AM

Time for a grassroots protest as follows: On Sunday Sept 6th at 6:00 to 6:05pm EST everyone stands outside his place of residence and chants in a conversational volume: Obama Go Home, Obama Go Home. Then everyone goes inside and emails the White House with the subject line: Obama Go Home.

Reply from The Daily Bell

Isn't the White House his "home" currently?

  Posted by VoteRight on 09/02/09 08:39 AM

In your article you state: "The end result in our opinion will be that the monetary elite will have to take a step back much as they stepped back during the Gutenberg era." Can you elaborate or direct me to where I can read more about how the financial elite stepped back during the Gutenberg era.

Reply from The Daily Bell

There was a movement over time, gradually, to de-emphasize outright Kingship and to empower regulatory democracies. This seems to have happened most everywhere in Europe but France where the realignment was considerably more violent. Also, the united States (as it was spelled back then) was founded.

  Posted by Janice Dorn, M.d., Ph.d on 09/02/09 02:46 AM

Underneath the anger--as so well described in this article--is mass fear. The internet will be a major catalyst for the revolution that is now fomenting.

Reply from The Daily Bell

Good point. Let it be the non-violent kind.