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Last weekend, Ben Bernanke took an unprecedented gamble for a sitting Fed
Chairman: he granted a long-form interview to 60 Minutes, America's most watched
news program. There can be no doubt that the interview came about as the result
of a coordinated strategy between the Obama Administration and the Federal
Reserve. But was the decision to offer the public a rare look at the inner
workings of the central bank an act of resolution or desperation?
In the interview, Bernanke stressed the importance of political will to end
the current crisis. No doubt Bernanke himself hoped that his candor alone would
serve as a representation of that will. But talk is cheap. We all agree that
reform must be undertaken, but to what end? Nothing in his discussion with
60 Minutes gave any indication that Bernanke was ready, or willing, to grapple
with the real problems that underlie our economy.
While the need to "cut wasteful government spending" has become a mantra of
every political campaign for the last four decades, Washington has embarked
on the largest expansion of government in our history. If Bernanke were hinting
at a generational change that would reverse this sad record, now would indeed
be the time to sell it to America. But what if all he meant to do was sell
the same 'change' that Mr. Obama served to us during the campaign? This "change" has
revealed itself to be no more the same failed policies of the prior administration
- only more aggressive and more dangerous. For example, Obama's latest stimulus
package had some 8,000 earmarks-the very pork that Obama vowed in his campaign
to stop. Breaking this system of unlimited spending would indeed require political
will of epic proportions, but Mr. Bernanke has not addressed this issue in
the slightest.
For decades, massive Government spending was not financed through fiscally
sound means such taxes or government reserves but merely by the issuance of
debt. In 2000, the published U.S. Treasury debt was a staggering $5 trillion.
Today, it is approaching three times that number. If non-public debts and IOU's
are included, the national debt amounts to some $55 trillion!
In recent months alone, hundreds of billions of dollars of have been allocated
by Congress for a short-term "rescue" of the financial system. This all must
be to set the stage for deeper reforms, right? Wrong. Instead, massive amounts
were spent to bail out counterparties of AIG, such as Goldman Sachs, at par,
rather than allowing them to pay for their recklessness. As if that were not
enough, it is now emerging that tens of billions of the taxpayer funds were
used to give bonuses to the very bandits who gambled away much of America's
financial future.
So far, the Government has given no indication that it will claw back these
ill-gotten gains. On the contrary, the Administration has hidden behind a strict
legal interpretation of the bonus agreements. Only this past Monday, under
great grassroots pressure, did the Administration announce that they would
even begin to resist the $165 million in AIG bonuses. This is how much political
will it takes to resist AIG, in which the government has a controlling interest.
How much would it take to achieve fundamental reform?
Did Ben Bernanke even have reform on his mind when he spoke, or was he hinting
at something far more sinister? Perhaps he simply meant that the political
class will need the fortitude to steamroll these policies over the American
people despite the people sounding alarms about the price tag.
The Fed Chairman has access to prime information from many quarters and often
well in advance of publication. Indeed, some information he receives is likely
never published. Furthermore, Ben Bernanke is a student of the Great Crash.
As such, Bernanke must be well aware of the true threat that the current severe
recession is morphing rapidly into a worldwide depression, possibly worse that
1929-1934. As such, it could threaten the vital international supply chains
of major U.S corporate giants. What kind of political will could overcome their
short-term pressures to serve the general good? Obviously, the kind of will
the Fed Chairman cannot muster.
The American public is now in a mood of mounting anger. They know this so-called
stimulus amounts to generational robbery. So yes, political will is essential,
not to convince the people they are wrong, but to acknowledge that they're
right.
For a more in-depth analysis of our financial problems and the inherent dangers
they pose for the U.S. economy and U.S. dollar, read Peter Schiff's newest
book "The Little Book of Bull Moves in Bear Markets." Click here to
order your copy now.
For a look back at how Peter predicted our current problems read the 2007
bestseller "Crash Proof: How to Profit from the Coming Economic Collapse." Click here to
order a copy today.
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Download Euro Pacific's free Special Report, "Peter Schiff's Five Favorite
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Subscribe to our free, on-line investment newsletter, "The Global Investor" at http://www.europac.net/newsletter/newsletter.asp.
And now watch the latest episode of Peter's new video blog, The Schiff Report,
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