A passel of bigwig economists has signed a petition
urging Congress and the executive branch “to reaffirm their support for and
defend the independence of the Federal Reserve System as a foundation of U.S.
economic stability.”
In support of this defense of the Fed against those now
challenging the secrecy of its undertakings and, in some cases, its very
existence, these economists offer three arguments.
First, “central bank independence has been shown to be
essential for controlling inflation.” A little difficulty for this claim,
however, resides in the undeniable fact that for more than a century before the
Fed’s establishment, the purchasing power of the dollar fluctuated around an
approximately horizontal trend line -- that is, despite inflations and
deflations usually associated with the wartime issuance of fiat money and the
postwar return to specie-backed currency, the dollar more or less retained its
exchange value against goods and services over the long run, whereas since the
Fed’s establishment the dollar has lost more than
95 percent of its purchasing power.
If this post-1913 experience is what these economists
consider “controlling inflation,” I would not want to see what happens to a
currency’s purchasing power when inflation is not controlled! It seems
that the petitioning economists have placed the performance bar absurdly low in
their judgment of the Fed’s containment of inflation. Evidently, barring a
Weimar-Germany-style hyperinflation, they suppose that everything is hunky-dory
on the monetary front.
Second, say our esteemed economists, “lender of last resort
decisions should not be politicized.”
This statement only goes to prove that, as everybody knew
already, economists make terrible comedians: the statement is obviously a joke,
but it’s just not funny. “Not be politicized,” they say? What is one to call
the Fed’s decisions during the past year to dole out trillions in loans, credit
lines, guarantees, asset exchanges, and so forth to the big boys on Wall
Street? Are we supposed to believe that all those big investment banks that
were permitted to transform themselves instantaneously into depository
institutions, thereby gaining access to various forms of Treasury and Fed
support, were selected and accommodated on purely disinterested grounds? Or may
we be permitted to imagine that institutions such as Goldman Sachs and Morgan
Stanley just might -- might, I said -- enjoy a tad more political coziness with
the government in general and the Fed in particular than, say, you
and I and another 300 million Americans do?
Finally, the leading economists declare, “The democratic
legitimacy of the Federal Reserve System is well established by its legal
mandate and by the existing appointments process. Frequent communication with
the public and testimony before Congress ensure Fed accountability.”
But legitimacy, it would seem, properly lies in the eyes of
the legitimizer, not in the tables, charts, and econometric exercises of
top-tier academic economists. The Fed’s appointment process, as I see it,
suggests more the co-conspiratorial character of the ruling elites than
anything we might grace with the adjective “democratic.” And if frequent
congressional testimony by Fed officials, notorious for its mumbo-jumbo lack of
clarity and definiteness, suffices to “ensure Fed accountability,” then we are
left to wonder what led Senator Byron Dorgan to complain
on the floor of the Senate on February 3: “We’ve seen money go out the back
door of this government unlike any time in the history of our country. Nobody
knows what went out of the Federal Reserve Board, to whom and for what purpose.
. . . When? Why?” Indeed, the lack of Fed transparency and accountability has
been so outrageous during the past year that it has prompted nearly 300 members
of the House of Representatives to support Congressman Ron Paul’s bill
to audit the Fed.
All in all, the economists’ petition reflects the
astonishing political naïvité and historical myopia that now characterize the
top echelon of the mainstream economics profession. (I prefer this
interpretation to the more conspiratorial one that they are fronting for the
Fed in order to reap some form of personal gain. Academic economists are more
often obtuse than evil.) Everybody now understands that economic central
planning is doomed to fail; the problems of cost calculation and producer
incentives intrinsic to such planning are common fodder even for economists in
upscale institutions. Yet, somehow, these same economists seem incapable of
understanding that the Fed, which is a central planning body working at the
very heart of the economy -- its monetary order -- cannot produce money and set
interest rates better than free-market institutions can do so. It is high time
that they extended their education to understand that central planning does not
work -- indeed, cannot work -- any better in the monetary order than it works
in the economy as a whole.
It is also high time that the Fed be not only audited and
required to reveal its inner machinations to the people who suffer under its
misguided actions, but abolished root and branch before it inflicts further
centrally planned disaster on the world’s people.
Robert
Higgs is Senior Fellow in Political Economy for The Independent Institute and
Editor of the Institute’s quarterly journal The Independent Review.
He received his Ph.D. in economics from Johns Hopkins University, and he has
taught at the University of Washington, Lafayette College, Seattle University,
and the University of Economics, Prague. He has been a visiting scholar at
Oxford University and Stanford University, and a fellow for the Hoover
Institution and the National Science Foundation. He is the author of many
books, including Depression,
War, and Cold War.