Posted on 04/28/2011 8:00:25 AM PDT by Kaslin
Fed head Ben Bernanke, at his first-ever news conference on Wednesday, slammed the door shut on any new QE3 pump-priming.
The $600 billion QE2 program to purchase bonds will end on target at the end of June, and that will be that. Mr. Bernanke also suggested that the Feds extended period for the near-zero federal funds target rate could end in a couple of meetings.
Perhaps these announcements suggest a bit-less-easy monetary policy.
Perhaps.
But Mr. Bernanke had no defense of the sinking dollar, or the inflation it brings, or the drop in middle-class living standards it causes.
So its little surprise that gold prices surged $24 to $1,526 during the Fed chairmans press conference. Silver jumped sharply as well.
The markets clearly dont see any King Dollar shift by the Fed.
Mr. Bernanke just doesnt get that inflation-sensitive market-price indicators -- like rising gold, oil, and commodity indexes, and the falling dollar exchange rate -- are trying to signal higher future inflation.
Instead of listening to markets, he is determined to fight them.
This is a losing battle. Instead of a market-price rule (anchored by gold) we have some sort of Bernanke fine-tuning rule.
Its not working.
While Mr. Bernanke slightly downgraded the central banks economic outlook and slightly upgraded its inflation concern, the Fed still holds out hope that the sluggish 2 percent first-quarter GDP will give way to 3 percent or more growth later this year, and that the commodity-based bulge of inflation will come back down as commodity prices somehow sink.
This seems to be a triumph of hope over experience.
With the CPI running about 6 percent annually in the first quarter, the real inflation-adjusted fed funds rate is deeply negative.
Under similar circumstances in Europe, Jean-Claude Trichet raised the ECB target rate by a quarter of a percent last month.
By that benchmark and others, the Feds so-called return to normalcy is way behind the curve.
Look, the economic emergency dating back to the fall of 2008 has long been over. And the alleged deflation threat has completely dropped off the radar screen. In the absence of these risks, the Feds ongoing emergency policies -- including the zero target rate and the $600 billion QE2 -- make no sense at all and should be withdrawn.
I recall how President Reagan often argued in the 1980s not simply that a strong dollar was in the nations interest, but that a great country, by necessity, needs a strong and reliable currency.
Link to gold -- that was Reagans argument. Paul Volcker and then Alan Greenspan (during the first three of his four Fed terms) essentially agreed with Reagan.
The 20-year collapse of gold prices that ensued was associated with a remarkable non-inflationary prosperity and a huge stock market rally that generated unbelievable volumes of new wealth for investors and entrepreneurs.
Today, this hard-money thinking is nowhere to be found in official Washington. Yes, the Fed can produce new money.
But no, it cant produce new jobs and growth in any permanent sense.
What does?
Limited spending, flat tax rates, minimal regulation, and stable money.
Now wheres the next great American leader to revive and restore this pro-growth model?
He better off going the voter fraud route.
How is that much manipulation possible to get a dunce re-elected? However, on the other hand should we be grateful that with Bernanke’s marvelous powers that he has not done even more damage in cahoots with the piranhas in the White House?
How true. No one else in the world wants to fund America's perpetual spending spree any longer.
..and the band played on..
What has this got to do with monetary policy? Like gold, U.S. dollars have value only to the extent that they are strictly limited in supply. But the U.S. government has a technology, called a printing press (or, today, its electronic equivalent), that allows it to produce as many U.S. dollars as it wishes at essentially no cost. By increasing the number of U.S. dollars in circulation, or even by credibly threatening to do so, the U.S. government can also reduce the value of a dollar in terms of goods and services, which is equivalent to raising the prices in dollars of those goods and services." - Ben Bernanke, 2002
Mission Accomplished!!!
The article title should be “Cheerleader Kudlow spills Crocodile Tears.”
He knows BurnYankee is trying to stimulate double-digit inflation to reflate housing, increase the velocity of money, and shrink the debt in relative terms. But what is a paid shill to do? You give the Fed the cover making it sound like the Chairman is going in a reasonable but wrong direction. Give it up Crazy Larry. Just admit that the Fed WANTS high inflation. He knows this is true. He is a Goldman Sachs insider so he knows the score, the flaming liar.
The mission is not yet accomplished. You ain’t seen nothing yet. Wait until inflation hits double digits.
Oh!....He gets it alright!....It's part of the plan...
ALL FIAT MONEY GOES TO -0-.....NO EXCEPTIONS!
Bernanke’s policies remind me of hospice care. He’s trying to minimize the symptoms while doing nothing to fight the underlying disease.
Now wheres the next great American leader to revive and restore this pro-growth model?
I sure don't see this in Romney, Huckabee, or Trump...(and, of course, any Democrap)
That said, it looks like the current crop of Republicrats are just as bad.
Congressman Paul,
If you are ever REALLY going to Audit the Fed, now would be an opportune time...
That model requires a moral and hard-working public to make it successful. Today's crop of looters aren't interested in playing. There is no longer any sizable political constituency favoring a low-tax, small-government approach, therefore we aren't likely to see it return any time soon.
I like your material. You go on my permanent feed.
The current inflation is a lot more from stupid do nothing energy policies than from monetary policy.
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