It has been forgotten by many that before 1913, there was no central bank in the United States to bail out troubled commercial and associated financial institutions or to keep inflation in check by trading employment for price stability. Few want inflation but fewer still would trade their jobs for price stability.
For the first 137 years of its history, the US did not have a central bank. The nation then was plagued with recurring business cycles of boom and bust. For the past 94 years the Federal Reserve, the
US central bank, has assumed the role of monetary guardian for the nation, yet recurring business cycles of boom and bust have continued, often with the accommodating participation of the Fed. Central banking has failed in its fundamental functions of stabilizing financial markets with monetary policy, succeeding neither in preventing inflation nor sustaining growth nor achieving full employment.
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But it has made certain people quite a bit of profit from usury. The US Constitution gives the power to coin money to the people, via their elected representatives. If we wish to print/coin more money, the Constitution provides us that ability WITHOUT ANY INTEREST PAYMENTS TO PRIVATE PARTIES. The whole idea of paying interest on our national debt is ridiculously unconstitutional.
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