2002 Ron Paul 86:1
Mr. PAUL. Mr. Speaker, I rise to introduce
legislation to restore financial stability to Americas
economy by abolishing the Federal Reserve.
I also ask unanimous consent to insert
the attached article by Lew Rockwell, president
of the Ludwig Von Mises Institute, which
explains the benefits of abolishing the Fed and
restoring the gold standard, into the RECORD.
2002 Ron Paul 86:2
Since the creation of the Federal Reserve,
middle and working-class Americans have
been victimized by a boom-and-bust monetary
policy. In addition, most Americans have suffered
a steadily eroding purchasing power because
of the Federal Reserves inflationary
policies. This represents a real, if hidden, tax
imposed on the American people.
2002 Ron Paul 86:3
From the Great Depression, to the stagflation
of the seventies, to the burst of the
dotcom bubble last year, every economic
downturn suffered by the country over the last
80 years can be traced to Federal Reserve
policy. The Fed has followed a consistent policy
of flooding the economy with easy money,
leading to a misallocation of resources and an
artificial boom followed by a recession or depression
when the Fed-created bubble bursts.
2002 Ron Paul 86:4
With a stable currency, American exporters
will no longer be held hostage to an erratic
monetary policy. Stabilizing the currency will
also give Americans new incentives to save as
they will no longer have to fear inflation eroding
their savings. Those members concerned
about increasing Americas exports or the low
rate of savings should be enthusiastic supporters
of this legislation.
2002 Ron Paul 86:5
Though the Federal Reserve policy harms
the average American, it benefits those in a
position to take advantage of the cycles in
monetary policy. The main beneficiaries are
those who receive access to artificially inflated
money and/or credit before the inflationary effects
of the policy impact the entire economy.
Federal Reserve policies also benefit big
spending politicians who use the inflated currency
created by the Fed to hide the true
costs of the welfare-warfare state. It is time for
Congress to put the interests of the American
people ahead of the special interests and their
own appetite for big government.
2002 Ron Paul 86:6
Abolishing the Federal Reserve will allow
Congress to reassert its constitutional authority
over monetary policy. The United States
Constitution grants to Congress the authority
to coin money and regulate the value of the
currency. The Constitution does not give Congress
the authority to delegate control over
monetary policy to a central bank. Furthermore,
the Constitution certainly does not empower
the Federal Government to erode
Americans living standard via an inflationary
monetary policy.
2002 Ron Paul 86:7
In fact, Congress constitutional mandate regarding
monetary policy should only permit
currency backed by stable commodities such
as silver and gold to be used as legal tender.
Therefore, abolishing the Federal Reserve and
returning to a constitutional system will enable
America to return to the type of monetary system
envisioned by our Nations founders: one
where the value of money is consistent because
it is tied to a commodity such as gold.
Such a monetary system is the basis of a true
free-market economy.
2002 Ron Paul 86:8
In conclusion, Mr. Speaker, I urge my colleagues
to stand up for working Americans by
putting an end to the manipulation of the
money supply which erodes Americans standard
of living, enlarges big government, and enriches
well-connected elites, by cosponsoring
my legislation to abolish the Federal Reserve.
As with all matters of investment, everything
is clear in hindsight. Had you bought
gold mutual funds earlier this year, they
might have appreciated more than 100 percent.
Gold has risen $60 since March 2001 to
the latest spot price of $326.
2002 Ron Paul 86:10
Why wasnt it obvious? The Fed has been
inflating the dollar as never before, driving
interest rates down to absurdly low levels,
even as the federal government has been
pushing a mercantile trade policy, and New
York City, the hub of the world economy,
continues to be threatened by terrorism. The
government is failing to prevent more successful
attacks by not backing down from
foreign policy disasters and by not allowing
planes to arm themselves.
2002 Ron Paul 86:11
These are all conditions that make gold
particularly attractive.
2002 Ron Paul 86:12
Or perhaps it is not so obvious why this is
true. Its been three decades since the dollars
tie to gold was completely severed, to
the hosannas of mainstream economists.
There is no stash of gold held by the Fed or
the Treasury that backs our currency system.
The government owns gold but not as a
monetary asset. It owns it the same way it
owns national parks and fighter planes. Its
just another asset the government keeps to
itself.
2002 Ron Paul 86:13
The dollar, and all our money, is nothing
more and nothing less than what it looks
like: a cut piece of linen paper with fancy
printing on it. You can exchange it for other
currency at a fixed rate and for any good or
service at a flexible rate. But there is no established
exchange rate between the dollar
and gold, either at home or internationally.
2002 Ron Paul 86:14
The supply of money is not limited by the
amount of gold. Gold is just another good for
which the dollar can be exchanged, and in
that sense is legally no different from a gallon
of milk, a tank of gas, or an hour of
babysitting services.
2002 Ron Paul 86:15
Why, then, do people turn to gold in times
like these? What is gold used for? Yes, there
are industrial uses and there are consumer
uses in jewelry and the like. But recessions
and inflations dont cause people to want to
wear more jewelry or stock up on industrial
metal. The investor demand ultimately reflects
consumer demand for gold. But that
still leaves us with the question of why the
consumer demand exists in the first place.
Why gold and not sugar or wheat or something
else?
2002 Ron Paul 86:16
There is no getting away from it: investor
markets have memories of the days when
gold was money. In fact, in the whole history
of civilization, gold has served as the basic
money of all people wherever its been available.
Other precious metals have been valued
and coined, but gold always emerged on top
in the great competition for what constitutes
the most valuable commodity of all.
2002 Ron Paul 86:17
There is nothing intrinsic about gold that
makes it money. It has certain properties
that lend itself to monetary use, like portability,
divisibility, scarcity, durability, and
uniformity. But these are just descriptors of
certain qualities of the metal, not explanations
as to why it became money. Gold became
money for only one reason: because
thats what the markets chose.
2002 Ron Paul 86:18
Why isnt gold money now? Because governments
destroyed the gold standard. Why?
Because they regarded it as too inflexible. To
be sure, monetary inflexibility is the friend
of free markets. Without the ability to create
money out of nothing, governments tend
to run tight financial ships. Banks are more
careful about the lending when they cant
rely on a lender of last resort with access to
a money-creation machine like the Fed.
2002 Ron Paul 86:19
A fixed money stock means that overall
prices are generally more stable. The problems
of inflation and business cycles disappear
entirely. Under the gold standard, in
fact, increased market productivity causes
prices to generally decline over time as the
purchasing power of money increases.
In 1967, Alan Greenspan once wrote an article
called Gold and Economic Freedom. He
wrote that:
2002 Ron Paul 86:20
An almost hysterical antagonism toward
the gold standard is one issue which unites
statists of all persuasions. They seem to
sense — perhaps more clearly and subtly than
many consistent defenders of laissez-faire —
that gold and economic freedom are inseparable,
that the gold standard is an instrument
of laissez-faire and that each implies
and requires the other. . . . This is the shabby
secret of the welfare statists tirades
against gold. Deficit spending is simply a
scheme for the confiscation of wealth. Gold
stands in the way of this insidious process. It
stands as a protector of property rights.
2002 Ron Paul 86:21
He was right. Gold and freedom go together.
Gold money is both the result of freedom
and its leading protector. When money
is as good as gold, the government cannot
manipulate the supply for its own purposes.
Just as the rule of law puts limits on the despotic
use of police power, a gold standard
puts extreme limits on the governments
ability to spend, borrow, and otherwise create
crazy unworkable programs. It is forced
to raise its revenue through taxation, not inflation,
and generally keep its house in
order.
2002 Ron Paul 86:22
Without the gold standard, government is
free to work with the Fed to inflate the currency
without limit. Even in our own times,
weve seen governments do that and thereby
spread mass misery.
2002 Ron Paul 86:23
Now, all governments are stupid but not
all are so stupid as to pull stunts like this.
Most of the time, governments are pleased to
inflate their currencies so long as they dont
have to pay the price in the form of mass
bankruptcies, falling exchange rates, and inflation.
2002 Ron Paul 86:24
In the real world, of course, there is a lag
time between cause and effect. The Fed has
been inflating the currency at very high levels
for longer than a year. The consequences
of this disastrous policy are showing up only
recently in the form of a falling dollar and
higher gold prices. And so what does the Fed
do? It is pulling back now. For the first time
in nearly ten years, some measures of money
(M2 and MZM) are showing a falling money
stock, which is likely to prompt a second dip
in the continuing recession.
2002 Ron Paul 86:25
Greenspan now finds himself on the horns
of a very serious dilemma. If he continues to
pull back on money, the economy could tip
into a serious recession. This is especially a
danger given rising protectionism, which
mirrors the events of the early 1930s. On the
other hand, a continuation of the loose policy
he has pursued for a year endangers the
value of the dollar overseas.
2002 Ron Paul 86:26
How much easier matters were when we
didnt have to rely on the wisdom of exalted
monetary central planners like Greenspan.
Under the gold standard, the supply of
money regulated itself. The government
kept within limits. Banks were more cautious.
Savings were high because credit was
tight and saving was rewarded. This approach
to economics is the foundation of a
sustainable prosperity.
2002 Ron Paul 86:27
We dont have that system now for the
country or the world, but individuals are
showing their preferences once again. By
driving up the price of gold, prompting gold
producers to become profitable again, the
people are expressing their lack of confidence
in their leaders. They have decided
to protect themselves and not trust the
state. That is the hidden message behind the
new luster of gold.
2002 Ron Paul 86:28
Is a gold standard feasible again? Of
course. The dollar could be redefined in
terms of gold. Interest rates would reflect
the real supply and demand for credit. We
could shut down the Fed and we would never
need to worry again what the chairman of
the Fed wanted. There was a time when
Greenspan was nostalgic for such a system.
Investors of the world have come to embrace
this view even as Greenspan has completely
abandoned it.
2002 Ron Paul 86:29
What keeps the gold standard from becoming
a reality again is the love of big government
and war. If we ever fall in love with
freedom again, the gold standard will once
more become a hot issue in public debate.
This chapter appeared in Ron Pauls Congressional website at http://www.house.gov/paul/congrec/congrec2002/cr091002b.htm