Last week  I held a hearing to examine the various proposals that have been put  forth both to mend and to end the Fed. The purpose was to spur a  vigorous and long-lasting discussion about the Fed's problems, hopefully  leading to concrete actions to rein in the Fed.
First,  it is important to understand the Federal Reserve System. Some people  claim it is a secret cabal of elite bankers, while others claim it is  part of the federal government. In reality it is a bit of both. The  Federal Reserve System is the collusion of big government and big  business to profit at the expense of taxpayers. The Fed's bailout of  large banks during the financial crisis propped up poorly-run  corporations that should have gone under, giving them a  market-distorting advantage that no business in the United States should  receive. The recent news about JP Morgan is a case in point. JP Morgan,  a recipient of $25 billion in bailout money, recently announced it lost  another $2 billion. If a corporation shows itself to be a bottomless  money pit of "errors, sloppiness and bad judgment," the Fed shouldn't  have expected $25 billion in free money to change that or teach anyone a  lesson in fiscal discipline. But it determined that this form of  deliberate capital destruction was preferable to one business suffering  bankruptcy. Clearly, some changes need to be made.
Several  reforms for the Fed were discussed at the hearing. One was a call for  the full employment mandate to be repealed, in order to allow the Fed to  focus solely on stable prices. 
Another  reform calls for changes to the composition of the Federal Open Market  Committee. Still another proposal was for outright nationalization of  the Fed or of its functions. But if what the Fed does now is bad and  inflationary, allowing the Treasury to print and issue money at-will  would be even worse, and could possibly lead to a Weimar-like  hyperinflation.
The  problems and advantages of the gold standard were discussed at the  hearing. The era of the classical gold standard was undoubtedly one of  the greatest eras in human history. For a period of several decades in  the late 19th century, the West made enormous advances. However, the  gold standard was still run by government. The temptation to suspend  gold redemption reared its head again with the outbreak of World War I.  Once the tie to gold was severed and fiscal restraint thrown to the  wind, undoing the damage would have required great fiscal austerity.  Instead, the Western world proceeded to set up a gold-exchange standard  which lasted not even a decade before easy money led to the Great  Depression. 
While  returning to the gold standard would certainly be far better than  maintaining the current fiat paper system, as long as the government  retains the power to go off gold we may end up repeating the same  mistakes.
The  only viable solution is to get government out of the money business  permanently. The way to bring this about is through currency  competition: allow parallel currencies to circulate without receiving  any special recognition or favor from the government. Fiat paper  monetary standards throughout history have always collapsed due to their  inflationary nature, and our current fiat paper standard will be no  different. 
read full article The Fed: Mend It or End It?
 
 
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