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July 28, 2022

The Church of the Federal Reserve opened its tent for quarterly services this week. Pastor Jerome Powell played the role of Elmer Gantry, a role previously filled by others in the economics profession. Like the charlatans before him, he claimed the Fed was ahead of events and in control of the economy. The message to the faithful was that everything would be fine. No reason to fear; Elmer has your back!

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The Federal Reserve is a fraud and has been from its inception. Its creation was via dubious means in 1913. That year was arguably the worst in U.S. history for freedom lovers — 1913 was during the “Progressive Era” and also saw the passage of a permanent income tax.

Oversight of the banking industry is necessary, particularly in a world of fractional-reserve banking. Banking committees and oversight functions exist inside the Federal Government. Why was this one created as some contrived hybrid? G. Edward Griffin addressed this abnormality in his The Creature from Jekyll Island.

To assess the effectiveness of the Federal Reserve, an economic review of general economic performance before and after its creation is useful. The Fed began operations in 1914. Shortly after its creation, a boom, the “Roaring 20s,” occurred. That quickly ended with the greatest stock market crash in history in 1929, which preceded the Great Depression of the 1930s:

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The stock market crashed over 90%. In the years to follow, economic upheaval ensued as the U.S. economy shrank by more than 36% from 1929 to 1933, as measured by Gross Domestic Product (GDP). Many U.S. banks failed, leading to a loss of savings for their customers, while the unemployment rate surged to over 25% as workers lost their jobs.

These outcomes suggest a failure by the Fed. Even unprecedented interventions by the Fed and the government failed to resolve this disaster. It wasn’t until the end of World War II that the economic recovery began (in the mid-late 1940s). It took 25 years for the stock market to regain its high from the 1920s.

Was this evidence of Fed failure or merely ignorance? Were they guilty of taking their “training wheels” off too soon? Economic scholars differ on the issue.

Economic growth and stock valuations strengthened in the 1950s. The rebuilding effort after the war contributed. Then, in the 1970s and early 80s, the country experienced high inflation:

In 1973, inflation tripled, from 3.9 percent to 9.6 percent. The Fed only doubled interest rates from 5.75 to a high of 11 points. Inflation continued to remain in the double-digits through all of 1974, lasting until April 1975. The Fed kept raising the fed funds rate to a peak of 13 in July 1974, and then dramatically lowered the rate, reaching 7.5 by January 1975.

The fed funds rate reached a high of 20 points in 1979 and 1980. That was to combat double-digit inflation.