From: Global Research
by Ellen Brown
December 23rd marks the 100th
anniversary of the Federal Reserve. Dissatisfaction with its track
record has prompted calls to audit the Fed and end the Fed. At the
least, Congress needs to amend the Fed, modifying the Federal Reserve
Act to give the central bank the tools necessary to carry out its
mandates.
The Federal Reserve is the only central bank with a dual mandate. It
is charged not only with maintaining low, stable inflation but with
promoting maximum sustainable employment. Yet unemployment remains
stubbornly high, despite four years of radical tinkering with interest
rates and quantitative easing (creating money on the Fed’s books). After
pushing interest rates as low as they can go, the Fed has admitted that
it has run out of tools.
At an IMF conference on November 8, 2013, former Treasury Secretary
Larry Summers suggested that since near-zero interest rates were not
adequately promoting people to borrow and spend, it might now be
necessary to set interest at below zero. This idea was lauded and expanded upon by other ivory-tower inside-the-box thinkers, including Paul Krugman.
Negative interest would mean that banks would charge the depositor
for holding his deposits rather than paying interest on them. Runs on
the banks would no doubt follow, but the pundits have a solution for
that: move to a cashless society, in which all money would be
electronic. “This would make it impossible to hoard cash outside the
bank,” wrote Danny Vinik in Business Insider, “allowing the Fed to cut interest rates to below zero, spurring people to spend more.” He concluded:
. . . Summers’ speech is a reminder to all liberals that he is a brilliant economist who grasps the long-term issues of monetary policy and would likely have made an exemplary Fed chair.
Maybe; but to ordinary mortals living in the less rarefied atmosphere
of the real world, the proposal to impose negative interest rates looks
either inane or like the next giant step toward the totalitarian New
World Order. Business Week quotes Douglas Holtz-Eakin, a former director
of the Congressional Budget Office: “We’ve had four years of
extraordinarily loose monetary policy without satisfactory results, and
the only thing they come up with is we need more?” MORE
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