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As an Economics students with fervent Austrian beliefs, the authors of this presentation are thrilled at even hearing the word “central”, whether it is applied in the context of politics, banking, or philosophy.
As an Economics students with fervent Austrian beliefs, the authors of this presentation are thrilled at even hearing the word “central”, whether it is applied in the context of politics, banking, or philosophy.


Central banking is based on a major misconception that knowledge is circumscribable. Embracing Hayek’ theory as it is exposed in the familiar to any cognizable student paper “The Use of Knowledge in Society” http://www.jstor.org/view/00028282/di950315/95p0423m/0 , we endorse the conception that absolute knowledge is an oxymoronic phrase. Knowledge is dispersed among innumerable individuals and only in their multifaceted interactions can knowledge be transmitted.  Any exterior intervention, whether it is called government, institution or Federal Reserve Board of Governors, is a carrier of manipulative forces that only lead to misbalance.
Central banking is based on a major misconception that knowledge is circumscribable. Embracing Hayek’ theory as it is exposed in the familiar to any cognizable student paper “The Use of Knowledge in Society” http://www.jstor.org/view/00028282/di950315/95p0423m/0 , we endorse the conception that absolute knowledge is an oxymoronic expression. Knowledge is dispersed among innumerable individuals and only in their multifaceted interactions can knowledge be transmitted.  Any exterior intervention, whether it is called government, institution or Federal Reserve Board of Governors, is a carrier of manipulative forces that only lead to misbalance.
The fundamental starting point of our critique of the central banking theory is that not only perfect knowledge about the vicissitudes of the economy is a surrealistic concept but that, were its existence to be possible, savoir would still not have been collectible by a single institution of human minds. As Hayek put it in “Constitution of  Liberty” (1960),
The fundamental starting point of our critique of the central banking theory is not only that perfect knowledge of the vicissitudes of the economy is a surrealistic concept but also that, were its existence to be possible, savoir would still not have been collectible by a single institution of human minds. As Hayek put it in “Constitution of  Liberty” (1960),
 
“''Italic text''No human mind can comprehend all the knowledge which guides the actions of society”


“No human mind can comprehend all the knowledge which guides the actions of society”
Our belief in the inability of the Fed to integrate the economy as a function of the consumers’ preferences is supported by real examples of wrong assumptions of the Fed that have led to severe states of the economy. We exemplify this with a familiar case: cost- push demand. This is a good illustration of how interventionism leads to more and more interference and the Fed’s attempts to correct its mistakes are actually aggravating them. Also, targets are often inconsistent with each other, and it is usually not unequivocal which target is to be preferred.  
Our belief in the inability of the Fed to integrate the economy as a function of the consumers’ preferences is supported by real examples of wrong assumptions of the Fed that have led to severe states of the economy. We exemplify this with a familiar case: cost- push demand. This is a good illustration of how interventionism leads to more and more interference and the Fed’s attempts to correct its mistakes are actually aggravating them. Also, targets are often inconsistent with each other, and it is usually not unequivocal which target is to be preferred.  



Revision as of 21:24, 3 December 2006

CENTRAL BANKING- WHY NOT?

As an Economics students with fervent Austrian beliefs, the authors of this presentation are thrilled at even hearing the word “central”, whether it is applied in the context of politics, banking, or philosophy.

Central banking is based on a major misconception that knowledge is circumscribable. Embracing Hayek’ theory as it is exposed in the familiar to any cognizable student paper “The Use of Knowledge in Society” http://www.jstor.org/view/00028282/di950315/95p0423m/0 , we endorse the conception that absolute knowledge is an oxymoronic expression. Knowledge is dispersed among innumerable individuals and only in their multifaceted interactions can knowledge be transmitted. Any exterior intervention, whether it is called government, institution or Federal Reserve Board of Governors, is a carrier of manipulative forces that only lead to misbalance. The fundamental starting point of our critique of the central banking theory is not only that perfect knowledge of the vicissitudes of the economy is a surrealistic concept but also that, were its existence to be possible, savoir would still not have been collectible by a single institution of human minds. As Hayek put it in “Constitution of Liberty” (1960),

Italic textNo human mind can comprehend all the knowledge which guides the actions of society”

Our belief in the inability of the Fed to integrate the economy as a function of the consumers’ preferences is supported by real examples of wrong assumptions of the Fed that have led to severe states of the economy. We exemplify this with a familiar case: cost- push demand. This is a good illustration of how interventionism leads to more and more interference and the Fed’s attempts to correct its mistakes are actually aggravating them. Also, targets are often inconsistent with each other, and it is usually not unequivocal which target is to be preferred.

TEXTBOOK

Unfortunately, the mistakes of the Fed cannot be encompassed in a brief undergraduate presentation but are rather subject to graduate dissertation. Another criticism that we would like to address to the central banking system’ s (mal)functioning is the pure focus on ex ante state of the economy without taking into account ex post conditions that are in fact incorporated into agents expectations, and thus affect their present behavior. Path-dependent strategies are anything but smart and unavoidably distress the economy.


HYSTERESIS EXAMPLE- NOTEs

Last but not least, we would like to use Selgin as a reference and list some of the most recurrent mistakes of the Federal Reserve’s control on the Money Supply. These mistakes are mainly due to the motivation hidden behind these changes, namely: • To stabilize some index of prices Our criticism: prices reflect relative scarcity of resources worldwide, and are thus the only trustworthy information transmission mechanism. If prices fluctuate, this is due to a change in availability of a resource, and intervening to stabilize their movement, is a crude attempt to manipulate date and misinform the public • To peg an interest or discount rate Our criticism: Similarly, interest rates are “prices” of loans, and reflect most veraciously their private and public demand. Manipulation of the interest or discount rates would mislead entrepreneurs and push them into risky projects, or prevent them from engaging into successful investments that could lead to expansion of the economy. Example of pegging rates in the textbook • To attain full employment ( Our criticism: Again, we do not accept “full” (employment), “absolute” (power), “complete” knowledge as economically adequate terminology, all these terms indicating over-determination, which is in sharp contrast with our veneration of the perfectly competitive market. (Here, the authors risk contradicting their basic anti-absolutistic linguistic approach but the educated reader will not ignore the fact that even Adam Smith assumes some minimum intervention of the government in his invisible hand theory). How is the “natural” rate of unemployment to be determined? Economists have not reaches an affirmative conclusion on this question. This is why we doubt the precision with which the Fed can determine it, if all the experts in the world are still leading RAZGORE6TENI debates on this question. • To achieve a fixed percent rate of growth of MB or some other money aggregate Again, we face the transingent belief of the Fed that they can determine what the most desired condition of the economy is. This mistake is sharpened by the notion that the economy’s development should follow any change in monetary aggregates rather than let the money aggregates follow the natural interactions in the economy, and thus change in response to actual processes and, eventually, be used as a dependable indicator of the economic situation. There is no justification of the Fed turning the banking system into an absolute monarchy with the Fed as an omnipotent governor.