The Fed

Displaying 1951 - 1960 of 2284
Mark Thornton

According to my reckoning, between the close of business Thursday and Tuesday, the Fed’s extra $352 billion in liquidity enhancing measures b

Henry Hazlitt

Inflation, to sum up, is the increase in the volume of money and bank credit in relation to the volume of goods. It is harmful because it depreciates the value of the monetary unit, raises everybody's cost of living, imposes what is in effect a tax on the poorest (without exemptions) at as high a rate as the tax on the richest, wipes out the value of past savings, discourages future savings, redistributes wealth and income wantonly, encourages and rewards speculation and gambling at the expense of thrift and work, undermines confidence in the justice of a free enterprise system, and corrupts public and private morals.

Mark Thornton

Bernanke is evidently dedicated to one tactic: inflation now and forever.

Douglas French

Under its current leadership, the Federal Reserve is looking more and more like a Banana Republic central bank

Mises Institute

The Federal Reserve System virtually controls the nation's monetary system, yet it is accountable to no one.

Frank Shostak

In the real world, an artificial boost in demand that is not supported by production leads to the dilution of the pool of real savings and, contrary to the Keynesian view, to a shrinking in the flow of real wealth. The result is economic impoverishment.

Llewellyn H. Rockwell Jr.

And what has Washington done? Rob us, badger us, and take us to war.

Thorsten Polleit

At the end of the day, inflation is a serious threat to freedom. The majority of the people, suffering badly from inflation, would most likely blame the free market for their plight, rather than blame the central bank for the debasing of the currency.

Douglas French

Taking the counterfeiters money is not wrong, but when the women started spending the money, as Lew Rockwell points out, that's "another matter, of course, as it imitates on a tiny scale what the Fed does, and dilutes the value of other people's money."

Frank Shostak

Last Tuesday, January 22, 2008, the US central bank lowered its federal funds rate target by a hefty 0.75% to 3.5%.