Money wasn’t always the sole dominion of government. There is a reason we’ve ended up at this point. I find it to be entirely reasonable.
This isn't true. Private currencies exist(ed) and are afaik still legal.
The reason we put governments in charge of our money is that up until about a decade ago it was either the government or a corporation as a decentralizes currency was not really implementable. Do you want to get paid in amazon coins only redeemable on amazon? No, you do not.
>interest rate meddling by govt contractor federalreserve
You need to do that. Any currency needs some mechanism to control issuing. If not the government who else could do that?
For most of my life, those were ancient history or theoretical. Then in 2009, something changed.
And ever since then, I've seen nothing less than the most zealous propaganda campaign to undermine those... it's bizarre to watch it unfold. I keep side-eyeing everyone, wondering if I'm the only one that sees it. Sure, it doesn't help that the cryptocurrency people are whackjobs that might have screwed it all up without any outside help. But I guess they couldn't trusted to do that, so the help was provided.
Saying that it's "legal" doesn't change the fact that if someone were to come up with a private currency, gigantic forces, government and not, would be arrayed against them to put an end to it.
> Any currency needs some mechanism to control issuing. If not the government who else could do that?
I think the implication here is: who could be trusted to do it in a way that doesn't favor some at the expense of others?
Thousands of private currencies exist right now.
Nobody would care about your currency, since it is useless, and as such worthless. A centralized currency is an enormous social asset. Nobody wants private currencies.
>who could be trusted to do it in a way that doesn't favor some at the expense of others?
Just try to imagine a currency controlled by amazon. Do you think they won't do some hyperinflation making you poor once a decade?
The controller of a currency has enormous power. If the government can't handle it nobody can.
The fed may have a small advantage you are willfully overlooking.
If we accept some minor inflation, then the fed is always setting the rate a bit too low rather than too high.
In other words. Whatever the Fed does, it is mostly irrelevant.
On the other hand, if there is actually some leeway and elasticity then monetary policy can actually result in increases in economic welfare. In this scenario we want to see some utilitarian meddling.