Tag: Fed

  • Defying the Impossible

    Defying the Impossible

    Money Woes & the Fed’s Overbearing Role

    Early this year, I found myself chatting with a prominent libertarian economist about the latest in fiscal and monetary policy. I couldn’t help but spotlight what I see as the real linchpin in the whole mess: the Federal Reserve’s relentless hold over our nation’s money supply and the financial system at large.

    Why the Fed’s Hand Matters

    • The High Stakes – Every paycheck, loan rate, and savings account feels the ripples of Fed decisions.
    • The Tight Control – From printing currency to steering banks, it’s all in their hands.
    • All In for the Big Picture – Controlling money means steering the entire economy.

    Our Takeaway

    Think of the Fed as a massive, invisible puppet master pulling the strings of our financial reality. That dominance keeps the whole system in a delicate dance, and maybe what we need is a new choreography to play it right.

    Why My Speech About the Fed Went Overboard

    I told the other libertarian economist that the only way to erase inflation, avoid crappy “malinvestments,” and keep savers from losing their buying power was to tear the Federal Reserve to pieces.

    He just shrugged and said “Impossible.” That one word stuck with me like a stubborn stain on a shirt you never quite get clean.

    What Impossible Actually Means

    If a word is truly impossible, there’s no point arguing over it. For example:

    • Three angles of a triangle can’t add up to anything other than 180°.
    • Dropping a heavy rock from a straight line won’t make it levitate.
    • Humans don’t usually give birth to trees.

    These are rules of logic—a fact, not a philosophy.

    But Human Affairs Aren’t Written in Stone

    Governments rise, fall, change hands. The Federal Reserve was created by Congress and could equally be dismantled by it. Political systems are fluid, not mathematically sealed. 2 + 2 will always be 4, but the Soviet Union existed only until 1991. These are not immutable truths; they’re narratives.

    Why “Impossible” Gets Misused

    On the American right, too many pundits wave a hand and label policies as “impossible.”
    That fatalistic outlook wipes out good ideas before they get a chance to sprout.
    It’s not the same as saying “This is just hard.” The latter is a challenge; the former is a surrender.

    Stats Are Not a Substitute for Action

    Sure, the odds that an average American becomes a billionaire are 1 in 380,000. That doesn’t mean you can’t craft a breakthrough idea or start a company in a less regulated market. Numbers give us a snapshot, but they aren’t a script.

    Precise Thinking = Better Politics

    Being honest about what we know and what we don’t is a super‑power. Pessimism isn’t wisdom—despair is a sin. The real world moves. If we’re skeptical, at least we’re open to finding paths forward.

    Excuse Yourself from the “Fed” Myth

    Eliminating the Fed is an ambitious dream—whether it’s the top priority for conservatives now is another question. What does matter is that no one can gloss over the fact that a central bank infiltrates almost every corner of the U.S. economy.

    The Call to Action
    • Oppose tyranny. Whether it’s an overreaching bank or a state of mind, speak up.
    • Be honest. With yourself and with the people you’ll serve.
    • Fight. Make every day count—much like Virgil’s urging: “Don’t give in to evil. Stand boldly against it!”

    So next time you hear someone say something’s impossible, ask yourself: is it really a logical dead‑end, or just a stubborn hurdle we haven’t yet nailed down? Then get out there and knock it down.

  • Trump Shortlists Hassett, Warsh, And Waller As Top Picks For Fed Chair

    Trump Shortlists Hassett, Warsh, And Waller As Top Picks For Fed Chair

    Authored by Aldgra Fredly via The Epoch Times,

    President Donald Trump confirmed on Sept. 5 his top three candidates to succeed Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell when his term ends in May next year.

    Speaking to reporters, Trump said he is considering former Fed board member Kevin Warsh, current Fed board member Christopher Waller, and National Economic Council Director Kevin Hassett for the role.

    “You could say those are the top three,” the president told reporters in the Oval Office.

    Trump added that he had initially considered Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent as a fourth finalist, but Bessent said he preferred to remain in his current role.

    “I had him as a fourth,” he said of Bessent. “He told me ‘I’m not leaving.’”

    Bessent, who is overseeing the search for Powell’s successor, said at the press conference that he was not interested in the job.

    Trump has signaled he wants to appoint someone who is more inclined to lower interest rates, a point on which he has clashed with Powell.

    The Trump administration has been at loggerheads with the Fed over interest rate cuts. Trump wanted the Fed to lower interest rates to bring down borrowing costs and spur growth, but the central bank has kept its benchmark policy rate unchanged at 4.25 to 4.50 percent for five consecutive meetings.

    Powell has argued that the Fed should wait for more clarity on the economy’s trend before moving to cut rates, citing the impact of the administration’s policy changes.

    Bessent, on Aug. 12, urged the central bank to slash interest rates by half a percentage point at its September policy meeting of the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC), and follow up with a series of reductions to bring borrowing costs down by at least 150 basis points.

    The push for lower rates comes as inflation appears substantially contained.

    The headline Consumer Price Index rose 2.7 percent in July, in line with expectations, while core inflation ticked up to 3.1 percent.

    Waller has supported lowering interest rates. The Fed governor said in April that he would favor cutting rates “sooner, and to a greater extent than I had previously thought.”

    “With a rapidly slowing economy, even if inflation is running well above 2 percent, I expect the risk of recession would outweigh the risk of escalating inflation, especially if the effects of tariffs in raising inflation are expected to be short lived,” Waller said in his speech.

    Hassett had agreed with Trump that the Fed has kept rates inappropriately high, while Warsh had previously called for a “regime change in the conduct of policy” at the central bank.

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