The Two Dems Hosting This Rally Together Really Are Two Peas in a...
Deputy FBI Director Dan Bongino Just Made a Huge Announcement
The Government Rests Its Case: Here's the Hannah Dugan Trial Day Three Recap
Dear Kathy Hochul: God Is Merciful. The State Is Not.
After One Year, Trump Reverses Biden Decline
Four More Years: Miriam Adelson Jokingly Tells Trump She’ll Back Another Term
The Dumbest Assumption in All of Politics
Trump Touts Energy, Trade, and Manufacturing Gains in National Speech
Chinese-Owned Real Estate Firms Agree to $7.3M PPP Fraud Settlement
California Engineer Gets 120 Months for Attacks on Power Grid, Federal Judge Rules
Alleged Minneapolis Gang Member Sentenced to Life for RICO Murder of Innocent Bystander
Federal Grand Jury Indicts Telehealth Company in $100M Adderall Distribution Scheme
U.S. Senate Pushes $900B Defense Bill to Trump's Desk
Four Texas Family Members Convicted in $8.5 Million Tax Refund Fraud Scheme
Terror in Australia on Hanukkah: Why People of Faith Must Bring Light—Together
Tipsheet

Quantitative Easing Doesn't Make Anyone Easy

The Fed approved a second, $600 billion round of quantitative easing for our economy — a massive amount that is designed to ensure “price level stability,” and regulate inflation. This is simply invented money that will be printed and dropped, carpet-bomb style, into our economy.
Advertisement


The reasons for doing it are complex, but if I can try to distill them: there are not that many dollars for not that many goods and services right now, so decreasing the dollar value allows those goods and services to be worth more. Unemployment will decrease and we’ll all have more “stuff.” Theoretically, everyone will be better off, especially pension funds that are suffering — though, arguably that was the pension fund's own darn fault.

Federal Reserve chairman Ben Bernanke is on the defensive about this move. A number of critics have emerged from within our government’s financial institutions as well as from the world economy that are wary of artificially boosting our money supply. Sarah Palin has jumped into the fray – criticizing Bernanke after criticism from countries like China, who’s credit service agencies have recently downgraded our debt.
Advertisement


Intelligent people can disagree on the issue of quantitative easing, but it’s clear that most fiscal hawks are against it. Notably, Paul Ryan is against the plan, saying that it was “going to give us a big inflation problem down the road.”

Updated to add: it's also important to note that there are prominent conservatives do support this round of QE. For more backgrounder, there was a debate last week about whether Milton Friedman would support it. David Beckworth says yes. Allan Meltzer says no (subscription required).

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement