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When money ceases to be the tool by which men deal with one another, then men become the tools of men. Blood, whips and guns – or dollars. take your choice – there is no other – and your time is running out.
-Francisco d'Anconia
“I drank a fifth of vodka, you dare me to drive?” -Benjamin Shalom Bernanke
25 01 2010Like Stan, Eminem’s biggest yet perilously ignored fan, Fed Chairman fails to garner the acceptance of one of his biggest idols, Anna Schwartz. Like Stan, Bernanke justifies his inane decisions by referencing staments, principles, and actions of his hero; and like Stan, Bernanke receives a less-than-satisfactory response from the mind that he claims shape his policies.
In November 2002, Bernanke gave a speech admiring the work of Milton Friedman and Anna Schwartz. Specifically, he commented on their belief that the Federal Reserve’s drain of liquidity in the late 1920s catalyzed the Great Depression:
Six years later, Bernanke lowered the Federal Funds rate to zero, citing Schwartz and Friedman’s beliefs as justification.
But Schwartz wasn’t too sure about his train of thought. In an October 2008 WSJ op-ed, she criticized Bernanke’s view of the financial crisis as a liquidity crisis, rather than a solvency crisis, and refutes his comparisons to the Great Depression and the Fed’s involvement in it:
And in July of last year, she published another op-ed, entitled Man Without a Plan, this time in the New York Times. It is reprinted below (emphasis ours).
We urge Mr. Bernanke to not drink and drive, nor strangle his pregnant girlfriend, as Stan does. Instead we suggest he listen to Ms. Schwartz and abandon his policy of reflation of asset bubbles with taxpayer-funded injected liquidity.