"Centralization of credit in the banks of the state,
by means of a national bank with state capital and an exclusive
monopoly."
~ Fifth plank of the Communist Manifesto,
1848
Statists have long prized and fueled crisis as the means for
enlarging government. They convince enough people that the federal
government never does wrong, yet the evil that lurks in the world will on
occasion strike us. Sometimes the evil is external, as in 9-11,
other times it is internal, as in the case of certain economic upheavals.
When the crisis is mostly economic, the culprit is always the
private sector, and the guilty parties are usually big shots who got swept
away with avarice. With a lapdog media clamoring for "reform,"
politicians pass more laws and flood the airwaves with rhetoric about how
their new legislation will crush the forces of greed.
It was
crisis that helped launch one of the greatest destroyers of our world, the
Federal Reserve System.
In the era following the War of Secession,
the federal government aggressively promoted development of the West
through huge subsidies and other favors to business cronies.
Corruption flourished, and overextended banks occasionally failed,
causing panics in 1873, 1884, 1893, and 1907. Throughout this era
there was growing opposition to sound money, eloquently expressed by
railroad speculator Jay Cooke in 1869: "Why," he asked, "should this Grand
and Glorious country be stunted and dwarfed--its activities chilled and
its very life blood curdled by these miserable 'hard coin' theories--the
musty theories of a bygone age." [1]
The Panic of 1907 is
especially significant because it led to government-directed banking
"reform." The panic got underway when United Copper's stock price
collapsed. Knickerbocker Trust of New York had invested heavily in
United Copper, and depositors made a run on the bank to get their money
out. When Knickerbocker failed, depositors at other banks got
nervous and demanded their money, igniting the panic. [2]
J. P. Morgan got together with other banking
leaders and met virtually nonstop for three weeks to solve the crisis.
They secured credit from foreign investors, redirected funds from
strong banks to weak ones, and bought stock in foundering but still
promising companies. [3] The panic died a few weeks
later.
For the New York bankers, however, there remained a much
more serious problem. The growth of state banks over the previous 20
years had slowly eroded their power. By 1896, state and other
nonnational banks constituted 61% of the total, and by 1913, 71%.
More significantly, nonnationals commanded 57% of banking resources
by 1913. [4]
With such a troubling trend, what did the New
York bankers do? They turned to their pals in Washington. As
we've seen, from the time of Lincoln's administration government sought to
partner with business, delivering special favors in return for political
support. This is mercantilism, the system we rejected in 1776.
By the early 20th century, we were neck-deep in Progressive
propaganda, and there was no viable group opposing government takeover of
our lives. The once laissez-faire, sound-money Democratic Party died
with the nomination of William Jennings Bryant for president in 1896.
From that point on, Republicans and Democrats alike were promoting
more statism as the miracle cure for ills it had breeded.
Both
Congress and the American Banking Association had been pushing for central
banking since the 1890s. The Panic of 1907 gave them another excuse
to make it a reality. Amid all the maneuvering and proposals
for fundamental change, Morgan banker Henry Davison organized a duck
hunting trip at Jekyll Island, Georgia in December, 1910. The ducks
they took aim at were not the web-footed kind, but the unsuspecting
American citizen who had always thought of money as gold.
The
hunters were major players in American mercantilism: Senator Nelson
Aldrich (R., R.I.), who had headed up the National Monetary Commission, a
congressional committee dedicated to developing ideas for central banking;
Frank Vanderlip of Rockefeller's National City Bank; Paul Warburg of the
investment firm of Kuhn, Loeb, & Co., who was there to promote the
German central bank of Bismarck; Charles Norton of First National Bank of
New York, a Morgan company; and Davison, a partner of J.P. Morgan's.
[5]
They devised a plan whereby a board of commercial bankers
would supervise regional reserve banks. When Aldrich later
introduced it to Congress, Democrats blocked it. In 1913, Carter
Glass, a Democratic congressman from Virginia, used the Jekyll Island
scheme as the basis for the Federal Reserve Act. [6]
The Act
created 12 regional reserve banks ruled by a board of Washington
bureaucrats, including the Treasury secretary and presidential appointees.
Though the reserve banks are officially "private" institutions,
they're little different than government agencies, as Murray Rothbard
noted.
In this manner government seized what Rothbard called "a
crucial command post" of the economy, and therefore of the American
society. [7] It used crisis--repeated panics created by
government meddling--and the economic illiteracy and trust of the public
to achieve its purpose.
And what has it sown from its command post?
A subtle means of wealth transfer. A method of taxing us
without legislation. A way of counterfeiting money legally.
"Through the purchase of [usually government] debt by a bank, fiat
money is injected into the economy," Gary North writes. [8] "Wealth
then moves to those market participants who gain early access to this
newly created fiat money," who are usually politically connected. The ones
on fixed incomes or without close government connections are the losers,
as the injection of money eventually jacks up prices.
The Fed
greatly reduced reserve requirements during the 1920s, expanding credit
recklessly and generating a false prosperity that ended in the crash of
1929. People knew what the Fed was up to--manufacturing dollars out
of thin air--and started a run on banks to pull their money out in the
form of gold specie and certificates. When Roosevelt took office, he
slammed the bank door in their faces, then later ordered them to return
their gold. In 1933 he made the dollar a fiat currency domestically,
but backed by gold internationally.
Roosevelt also created the
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) in 1933, providing federal
guarantee of bank deposits. Bank runs and the threat thereof have
vanished, and most people believe this is good. As Lew Rockwell
observes, the threat of bank runs used to "to keep wanton investing at
bay," but the government-banking cartel views such restrictions "as
against the national interest. As a result, the [banking] industry
is perpetually shaky, and the largest banks are a menace to public life
itself." [9]
Prior to 1929 the government had never intervened to
help recovery from a recession. Previous administrations had let
recessions run their course, and recovery, at the hands of the market,
usually occurred in a year or less. Hoover, and then Roosevelt to a
much greater degree, took the statist course and drove the economy into a
prolonged depression. For his part, Roosevelt has been
deified.
The Fed, as the engine of inflation, bankrolls government
wrong-doing. Its creation marked the first step in the destruction
of sound money--our gold standard. As Ludwig von Mises wrote long
ago, "Ideologically, [sound money] belongs in the same class with
political constitutions and bills of rights." [10] In the name
of civil liberty and civilization itself, the Fed should be
abolished.
References
1. The Mystery of
Banking, Murray Rothbard, New York: Richardson and Snyder, 1983. p. 135.
(PDF version)
2. Separating Money and the State, Part I:
Eighty Years of Destruction, Douglas E. French,
http://www.fff.org/freedom/1094e.asp
3. The Panic of
1907 and the Birth of the Federal Reserve, Jim Klann,
http://www.lp.org/lpnews/0108/klann.html
4. Rothbard,
p. 136
5. Rothbard, p. 137
6. French
7.
Taking Money Back, Murray Rothbard,
http://www.lewrockwell.com/rothbard/tmb.html
8. Gary
North, in Forward to Rothbard's Mystery of Banking
9. Banks
on the Dole, Llewellyn H. Rockwell,
http://www.mises.org/freemarket_detail.asp?control=216&sortorder=articledate
10.
The Theory of Money and Credit, Ludwig von Mises, Yale University
Press, 1953, p. 414