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IPFS News Link • Politics

Financial Times Fumbles Trump's Central Banking Criticism

• http://www.thedailybell.com

Populists stick to tradition of central bank-bashing … If anyone still doubts the affinity between support for Trump in the US and for Brexit in the UK, they should look no further than the two movements' attitude to monetary policy. –Financial Times

The "populism vs. globalism" meme is increasingly evident in the mainstream media just as we predicted, and analyzing it can generate considerable insight into elite plans and societal positioning.

This Financial Times article provides us further information in a short editorial. Interestingly, it is not by any means persuasive propaganda. It would have been far more effective in the 20th century than today when so many more people are beginning to be educated about free-market economics.

More:

Donald Trump has accused the Federal Reserve of keeping interest rates too low for what is healthy for the economy in order to make the Obama administration, and by extension Hillary Clinton, look good. Theresa May, more elegantly but no more justifiably, used her party Conservative party conference speech to attack the Bank of England's policy of quantitative easing.

In both cases, the technocrats at central banks are accused of making policy that helps rich elites and hurts the more deserving common people, be they small savers or hardworking families.

So far so good. But toward the end of the article we are – unfortunately for the argument – provided with more specifics. This is where the article's logic weakens and then disintegrates.

A cursory search of "populism" or "populism vs. globalism" will reveal a tremendous amount of commentary in a short period of time. In fact,  this particular dominant social theme seems to be a foundational feature of upcoming arguments in favor of globalism.

But it is fatally flawed – as this article offers in a few sentences that are meant to be damning but instead reveal the basic bankruptcy of this rhetorical approach:

Traditionally, populists have berated central banks for their obsession with "sound money": tight monetary policy, high interest rates and the gold standard. ¨

In about 25 words, the article seems to sabotage its entire argument and by extension the larger meme.

Is this the best that can be done? Probably so. It provides terrible testimony as to the state of elite memes generally.

For one thing, central bank criticism in the past few decades has not focused on central bank "obsession with sound money."

On the contrary, most modern criticism regarding central banking focuses on the endless debasement of the fiat currency monetary facilities spew relentlessly.

Additionally, critics of central banking in the past decade or more have been sounding the alarm regularly about too-low interest rates. Rates so low, in fact, that they have now gone into negative territory.

Finally, in addition to mischaracterizing modern central bank criticism, the article doesn't even attempt to grapple with cogent criticisms of central banking that are common on the Internet today.

These criticisms are rooted in the free-market economics of the Austrian School, which is in many ways the basis of all modern economics.

Marginal utility shows us clearly that markets create valid prices. Yet central banks "fix" the value and volume of money via interest rates and in other ways.


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