Supposedly the U.S. Federal Reserve Bank stopped its quantitative
easing (QE) program this past October (wherein it bought $40 billion of
government debt and mortgage-backed securities every month to essentially
expand the U.S. money supply … see: Yeasty Blog Entry.) This being the case, how come the Fed’s balance sheet expanded by $187
billion dollars in the last two months (over four times its QE targets) … see: CNBC Story? And why
are we just hearing about this now? And what was the purpose of this unexpected monetary expansion?
Our Federal Reserve Bank is a quasi-governmental agency with
enormous powers that operates mostly in the dark … manipulating monetary levers
and turning interest-rate dials that have enormous impact on the economic
health (or illness) of our nation. In a way, one could compare this group to
the Wizard of Oz … creating its “great and powerful” image from behind the curtain.
For the most part it has operated with a benign ethic (we hope) … but there
is the implicit threat of it falling under the control of someone with evil
intent. To Senator Rand Paul this is a dangerous situation and he wants
Congress to have audit control over this institution … he wants to be like
Toto pulling back the curtain on the Wizard of Oz … see: Forbes Story.
Up until now, I had hoped that this was not a necessary
intrusion into the workings of the Fed. After all Congress doesn’t have a
stellar reputation of late for not politicizing things … but, with this latest Fed revelation, I now feel that a little more careful oversight might not be a bad idea.
As Ronald Reagan once said, "trust but verify."
Afterward: We have had at least two quasi-govenrmental institutions that have been corrupted of late ... Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac ... good enough reason to worry about this happening to the Fed.
As Ronald Reagan once said, "trust but verify."
Afterward: We have had at least two quasi-govenrmental institutions that have been corrupted of late ... Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac ... good enough reason to worry about this happening to the Fed.
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