Sickness Unto Debt

Sickness Unto Debt

The Treasury bailout will only exacerbate red ink and inflation.

Posted Monday, October 13, 2008 - 10:01am

The common measure of inflation, the consumer price index, has been so manipulated over the years that it cannot be trusted to be an accurate indicator of the true effect of inflation on people's pocketbooks. This is especially true of “core inflation,” which eliminates food and energy prices, the two staples that are most important to every American. When the CPI figure is computed using the original method of calculation, it comes out to more than 10 percent per year, which is a more accurate indicator of the inflation being felt by middle-class Americans.

For years, I pointed to the now-discontinued M3 money supply figure, the broadest measure of the total money supply, and remarked how its rate of growth far outpaced the officially reported rate of inflation. Since inflation is chronically underreported, I continue to view money supply figures as a more accurate indicator of the true direction of prices. Now that the monetary base has spiked so dramatically, the result will be seen over the next few months as this new credit works its way through the system, resulting in significantly higher inflation. Unfortunately, because M3 is no longer reported, the full effect of this inflation on the U.S. economy will go unreported in official statistics.

Our government has lived beyond its means for decades. We now face a crucial juncture, at which we determine whether to continue down the path of debt, inflation, and government intervention or choose to return to the economics of the free market, which have been ignored for almost a century. Increased debt leads to higher taxes on future generations, while increased inflation diminishes the purchasing power of American families and destroys the dollar. No society has ever been achieved prosperity through indebtedness or inflation, and the United States is no exception. We cannot afford to continue our current policies of monetary expansion and unending bailouts. Unless we return to sound monetary policy, sharply reduce government expenditures, and realize that the government cannot act as a lender of last resort, we will drive our economy to ruin.

 

(Photo of new series of dollar bills by Alex Wong/Getty Images)

  • Ron Paul represents Texas’s 14th District in the U.S. House of Representatives and is the author of The Revolution: A Manifesto.
  • Comment Comment
  • RSS RSS

Comments

  • 4 Total
  • • Pending Comments 0
  • Login or register to post comments

Common Sense

Who wouldn't love to see Ron debate John McCain on monetary policy? I'd pay for that pay-per-view.

Is anybody else out there beginning to believe that maybe the Republican Party doesn't want to win the '08 election? Perhaps they don't want to be blamed for the next 4 years of gross inflation and imploding equity. If you guys thought the Carter years were bad, just wait...

Maybe it's a conspiracy theory, but I'll drop it if you can answer one question. Why would the media ignore a Republican so exciting that YOUNG people actually send him money?

Responsibility

Ron Paul is the best!

Regarding the media, they knows that most Americans do not want the type of freedom Dr. Paul talks about. They do not want to be responsible - they want someone else to take care of them and their families.

It's really sad. Freedom is hard work and they know it.

Ron Paul is the only person

Ron Paul is the only person who has actually been willing to discuss the possible effectiveness or lack thereof of this bailout. I am impressed that he is still talking about it. I was open to hearing Ben Barnanke's argument, but he did not offer it to me. He treated the American public and the congress as if we were just too ignorant to understand any of this and make a rational decision. He didn't offer a suitable answer to these questions when Dr. Paul asked them before the House. Such a painfully short time after the hasty and ultimately wrong decision to invade Iraq, our representatives once again fell victim to the argument that 'this is a crisis and we must act immediately without measuring consequences or precedent.' I would vote for Dr. Paul now, and I will vote for him if he runs again.

Amen ,Bro Paul

I cannot vouch for your ideas of virtually NO Social services.
But you are spot on as far as this bailout and government spending using credit.
Maybe the biggest failure this election year was that the voters did not make you the Republican Nominee and POTUS.
You are a cool drink of water in a desert of spend thrift politicians pandering for our votes.
You have made a convert...a liberal democrat, at that !!!!
PAUL 2012

Read more comments