Some 500 economists work for the Federal Reserve System. This is probably more than the entire dismal science faculty at all eight Ivy League Universities, perhaps with Chicago and Berkeley thrown in for good measure. If the Fed were disbanded, they would all have to seek other work, perhaps leading to prosperity. Under the present institutional arrangements, they undermine the economy. On the other hand, this is an empirical issue. Presumably, many of them would obtain faculty positions, on the basis of which they would be inculcating their charges with the same voodoo economics with which they ruin the economy.
Why? How so? That is because one of their present roles is to determine, among other things, the interest rate. Thus, this job of theirs is “beneath contempt.” From whence did this phrase spring? It comes to us courtesy of an economist who has been accurately characterized as a “national treasure.” Here is the quote from Thomas Sowell (from Sowell’s textbook, Basic Economics) to which he refers:
“Another reason for public support for protectionism is that many economists do not bother to answer either the special interests or those who oppose free trade for ideological reasons. The arguments of both have essentially been refuted centuries ago and are now regarded by the economics profession as beneath contempt.”
Well, so it is for price controls, and, as interest rates are a price, just like that of imports, so too is controlling them via the Fed’s central planning “beneath contempt.”
Moreover, if there is anything we have learned both from theory and practice, it is that price controls create economic disarray.
Have we learned nothing from the almost perfectly controlled experiments of East and West Germany, North and South Korea, a true rarity not only in economics, but in all of social science? Presumably not, otherwise the Fed would never have lasted as long as it so far has.
Central planning never works and never will work. Prices, market prices, free market prices, are the eyes and ears of the economy. Without them, we would not know whether it is economically better to use platinum or steel for railroad lines. The former can do a better job. But its market price is so high we may do no such thing, if we want to allocated resources productively. Its relatively high price indicated that this metal should be used for more important purposes elsewhere in the economy, and lower-priced steel for this use.
Ditto for interest rate prices. Should we build a tunnel through the solid rock mountain, or a far longer road all around it? The former will cost far more right now and will take many years to come online, maybe decades. But it will save money for centuries, most likely in terms of reduced travel outlays. The circular road will cost less and will be available for motorists much sooner. It will last longer, and be in less need of repair, given that the danger of cave-ins will be comparatively minimal. If the interest rate is high, we will veer in the direction of the road. We will heavily discount the roundabout process of the tunnel. If low, the shortcut in terms of vehicle mileage will be more attractive. But this assumes a market rate of interest, not one concocted out of whole cloth by a bunch of central planners scattered all around the country, who pay no price, none at all, for being wrong.
We have not yet said anything about the second job of the Fed: maintaining the value of the dollar. It has lost some 97% of its value from the time of its inception in 1913 to the present time. On that ground alone, it ought to be disbanded, forthwith, and salt sowed where it once stood.
Walter E. Block is Harold E. Wirth Eminent Scholar Endowed Chair and Professor of Economics at Loyola University New Orleans.
READER COMMENTS
Monte
Sep 4 2025 at 2:05am
Great post, but the question remains: How do we end the Fed without causing too much turbulence? Also, what are your thoughts regarding digital currency’s ability to maintain the value of the dollar?
Mactoul
Sep 4 2025 at 2:34am
Great but raises the question whether the field of economics, which came into being in 18c, has been a net positive or negative for overall prosperity.
Prosperity was driven by technological progress, and even without beneficial contributions from Adam Smith and a few others, would have continued. While the contribution from modern economists in the mainstream is very debatable– these are the people who lauded and implemented socialist planning in newly independent countries from their perch at London School of Economics. And they still do and get Noble prizes too.
steve
Sep 4 2025 at 11:11am
Why should I care that the dollar has lost value? When you adjust for the decreased value I can still buy a lot more than I could in the past. We have had better growth than almost any other country.
As an aside, where does one get the idea platinum would begetter for rails? It is much softer and less durable than steel. It would deform and not hold the weight of a train. Might you be thinking about model trains? There are occasional debates about rail material for model trains. Steel is actually used for some low budget stuff but nickel-steel is the usual choice. I think some of the larger scale trains use aluminum. Conductivity is important and both the metal and the oxide it forms need to be taken into consideration which is why nickel-steel wins. Platinum would have some advantages but it’s not clear it would actually be better and would like kind of funny (shiny), not something model railroad people would like. (Sorry for the aside but lots of engineers in the family.)
Steve
Matthias
Sep 5 2025 at 7:03am
The Fed has an inflation target. It’s a positive inflation target. If they are doing their job, the dollar will lose value.
If you want the dollar to keep its value in the long run, you should lobby the task masters of the Fed to give it a constant price level target. (Just like nominal GDP level targeting, but for the price level.)
The Fed doesn’t really set interest rates, it’s more complicated. They influence interest rates however.
Not all central banks use interest rates as their favourite policy instrument. In Singapore we have an (implicit) inflation target, but our central bank uses the exchange rate as the policy instrument and lets the market handle interest rates.
In terms of ‘central planning’ both approaches focus on a price.
(Almost any central bank target could in principle be viewed as the price of an appropriate instrument on a prediction market.)
Instead of focusing on abolishing the Fed, I suggest you focus on making it easier for competition. Remove legal advantages that the Fed has over private issuer and foreign issuers. Level the playing field, etc.
nobody.really
Sep 5 2025 at 10:52am
Welcome back, Dr. Block.
Off-topic: Externalities
We’ve had some discussions on this blog about the merits of policing externalities. There seems to be a growing view that the benefits aren’t worth the costs–or, rephrased, that the goal of policing externalities gives progressives too much leeway to meddle in the market.
I recall you taking a rather different position:
Walter E. Block, “The Trouble with Democracy” (August 25, 2007).
Do I correctly understand this to express an implacable opposition to externalities? And have you adopted any different views since 2007?
Feel free to delete this comment–or perhaps use it to kick off a future post!
Kurt Schuler
Sep 5 2025 at 6:46pm
It is the Board of Governors and the Federal Open Market Committee who make the major decisions for the Federal Reserve, not the economists. Perhaps the economists even provide a net benefit under the circumstances by restraining unwise impulses of the governors. I don’t know; it would take a deeper inquiry of the kind this post studiously avoids. It reads as if written by a college freshman using ChatGPT. Walter, you need to do a lot better to live up to the standards of recently departed bloggers David Henderson and Scott Sumner, as well as some of your own past work.
Robert EV
Sep 8 2025 at 10:25am
Right now there’s nothing stopping me from loaning money at a negative interest rate, or any interest rate at all (except the usury laws). The Fed doesn’t control market interest rates, it controls government interest rates. Most market participants just choose to base their interest rates around the Fed rate.
Knut P. Heen
Sep 8 2025 at 11:31am
Did not both West Germany and East Germany have a central bank?
The interest rate is set by the world market due to the interest rate parity. Central banks are really just setting the value of their own currency. Otherwise, you could borrow money in a low interest country and save it in a high interest rate country and become infinitely rich by this arbitrage. Changes in the currency exchange ratio prevents this arbitrage.
If the Fed reduces the interest rate unexpectedly, the US dollar will drop immediately such that the expected return of holding US dollars is equal to holding any other currency. Otherwise, there is an arbitrage opportunity.
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