Showing posts with label Fed Reserve. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Fed Reserve. Show all posts

Thursday, October 9, 2008

Who Owns The Federal Reserve?

"Some people think that the Federal Reserve Banks are United States Government institutions. They are private monopolies which prey upon the people of these United States for the benefit of themselves and their foreign customers; foreign and domestic speculators and swindlers; and rich and predatory money lenders." – The Honorable Louis McFadden, Chairman of the House Banking and Currency Committee in the 1930s
The Fed’s website insists that it is not a private corporation, is not operated for profit, and is not funded by Congress. But is that true? The Federal Reserve was set up in 1913 as a "lender of last resort" to backstop bank runs, following a particularly bad bank panic in 1907. The Fed’s mandate was then and continues to be to keep the private banking system intact; and that means keeping intact the system’s most valuable asset, a monopoly on creating the national money supply. Except for coins, every dollar in circulation is now created privately as a debt to the Federal Reserve or the banking system it heads.



So let’s review:

1. The Fed is privately owned.

Its shareholders are private banks. In fact, 100% of its shareholders are private banks. None of its stock is owned by the government.

2. The fact that the Fed does not get "appropriations" from Congress basically means that it gets its money from Congress without congressional approval, by engaging in "open market operations."

Here is how it works: When the government is short of funds, the Treasury issues bonds and delivers them to bond dealers, which auction them off. When the Fed wants to "expand the money supply" (create money), it steps in and buys bonds from these dealers with newly-issued dollars acquired by the Fed for the cost of writing them into an account on a computer screen. These maneuvers are called "open market operations" because the Fed buys the bonds on the "open market" from the bond dealers. The bonds then become the "reserves" that the banking establishment uses to back its loans. In another bit of sleight of hand known as "fractional reserve" lending, the same reserves are lent many times over, further expanding the money supply, generating interest for the banks with each loan. It was this money-creating process that prompted Wright Patman, Chairman of the House Banking and Currency Committee in the 1960s, to call the Federal Reserve "a total money-making machine." He wrote:

"When the Federal Reserve writes a check for a government bond it does exactly what any bank does, it creates money, it created money purely and simply by writing a check."

3. The Fed generates profits for its shareholders.

The interest on bonds acquired with its newly-issued Federal Reserve Notes pays the Fed’s operating expenses plus a guaranteed 6% return to its banker shareholders. A mere 6% a year may not be considered a profit in the world of Wall Street high finance, but most businesses that manage to cover all their expenses and give their shareholders a guaranteed 6% return are considered "for profit" corporations.

In addition to this guaranteed 6%, the banks will now be getting interest from the taxpayers on their "reserves." The basic reserve requirement set by the Federal Reserve is 10%. The website of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York explains that as money is redeposited and relent throughout the banking system, this 10% held in "reserve" can be fanned into ten times that sum in loans; that is, $10,000 in reserves becomes $100,000 in loans. Federal Reserve Statistical Release H.8 puts the total "loans and leases in bank credit" as of September 24, 2008 at $7,049 billion. Ten percent of that is $700 billion. That means we the taxpayers will be paying interest to the banks on at least $700 billion annually – this so that the banks can retain the reserves to accumulate interest on ten times that sum in loans.

The banks earn these returns from the taxpayers for the privilege of having the banks’ interests protected by an all-powerful independent private central bank, even when those interests may be opposed to the taxpayers’ -- for example, when the banks use their special status as private money creators to fund speculative derivative schemes that threaten to collapse the U.S. economy. Among other special benefits, banks and other financial institutions (but not other corporations) can borrow at the low Fed funds rate of about 2%. They can then turn around and put this money into 30-year Treasury bonds at 4.5%, earning an immediate 2.5% from the taxpayers, just by virtue of their position as favored banks. A long list of banks (but not other corporations) is also now protected from the short selling that can crash the price of other stocks.

Read further Ellen Brown article here.
Ellen Brown, J.D., developed her research skills as an attorney practicing civil litigation in Los Angeles. In Web of Debt, her latest book, she turns those skills to an analysis of the Federal Reserve and "the money trust." She shows how this private cartel has usurped the power to create money from the people themselves, and how we the people can get it back. Her eleven books include the bestselling Nature’s Pharmacy, co-authored with Dr. Lynne Walker, and Forbidden Medicine. Her websites are www.webofdebt.com and www.ellenbrown.com .

Thursday, March 13, 2008

Abolish The Federal Reserve


Jim Rogers, co-founder of the Quantum Fund along with billionaire investor George Soros, expressed his unequivocal view on the Fed’s $200 Billion bailout plan - abolish the Federal Reserve.

More than headline grabbing, Rogers’ view is based on very sound logic. Though we all know the Fed is not going to be abolished anytime soon, he will probably use today’s interview on CNBC Europe to tell the world “I told you so” if the US economy goes as he expects. So far, he’s been dead on nails by calling for climbing oil, a falling US dollar and climbing agricultural prices. Read this post from November 14th in which I reported his calls on these very items.

HIGHLIGHTS

I strongly recommend you watch the video above but for those of you that are short on time, here are the noteworthy points:

In the 1970s, the Fed printed money to avert a recession, boosting inflation and then forcing interest rates to more than 20 percent to keep a lid on price rises.
“No country in the world has ever succeeded by debasing its currency,” he said. “That’s what this man is trying to do. He’s trying to debase the currency as a way to revive America. It has never worked in the long term or the medium term.”
Investment Banks should be allowed to fail.
“If you bail out every investment bank that gets in trouble, that’s not capitalism, that’s socialism for the rich”
He has a short position on all investment banks. Fannie Mae is the weakest. (Eric Sprott said the same thing a couple of days ago…this is the second time Jim Rogers has echoed someone at Sprott within 2 business days. Here is the first time.)

A recession may be a good way to clean up the economy, while trying to prevent one may cost more and actually worsen the recession.

I can’t poke a hole in any of these points. The Fed is making a valiant effort to save the US economy for - most likely - political reasons, but you can’t fight this credit crisis, which is essentially a string of colossal errors made by individuals, banks and funds. This is too big of a mess to clean up … but it isn’t big enough to get even worse. By printing more money, the Fed is doing just that.

Gold $2,000 is starting to look a little more plausible.

Regards,
George