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Fed Doesn't Have 'Unconditional Optimism' On Economy (Demo)

Stocks Rise On Positive Economic Reports

Traders work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange. (Andrew Burton / Getty Images / June 27, 2013)

On June 29, 2013, Jim Puzzanghera writes in the Los Angeles Times:

The Federal Reserve doesn’t have “unconditional optimism” about the economic recovery and won’t pull back on stimulus efforts if conditions don’t warrant it, a top central bank policymaker said Friday.

In prepared remarks to the Council on Foreign Relations, Fed Governor Jeremy C. Stein suggested that the central bank could begin tapering its $85 billion in monthly bond purchases at its September meeting.

But the central bank would move slowly and would be prepared to halt the tapering if the recovery did not appear to have enough momentum to get the unemployment rate down to the Fed’s goal of about 7 percent when the bond-buying would end next year, he said.

Instead of about investment and profit,  SPECULATION and CAPITAL GAIN is the focus of the stock exchanges. But the media continues to framed the term as investment and investors instead of speculation and speculators when related to the stock exchanges.

Stock purchased from a company and in which the company receives the (typically past savings) money from the purchase in order to produce things is a TRUE INVESTMENT.

The stock market operates on the secondary level whereby stock is purchased from another stockholder who receives the cash from the transaction, which when held for sale at a future time is speculation. This is “speculating” in financial instruments such as stocks and bonds. None of the money goes directly to consumers or producers. The stock market does fine as we have seen in the last several years but that is where the inflation has settled and it does not produce more products nor help the consumer. The only way to get more production into the hands of consumers is to eliminate the exponential disassociation of production and consumption in the United States economy, and enable ordinary citizens to gain access to productive capital ownership to improve their economic well-being.

In the first case the stock becomes speculative as soon as that buyer decides to hold it for appreciation but it is important to understand that the money received by the producer company is used to build new asset activity or replace old assets.

In the case of speculative stock buying and selling, this activity does not provide gain to the producer company (even if the price of the stock offered initially (issued and sold) goes up, but instead enriches the holder of the asset (stock). Of course, if the producer company decides to later issue new stock the company owners will receive more money per share of stock issued.

Speculators do not add to economic activity, at least primarily. Perhaps members of society will feel more optimistic with the stock shares (market) going up, and perhaps they will be looser with their savings to purchase products and services. Unless, however, the producer company has new cash to build products and extend services in demand, then speculation will not help. Eventually, the speculators might sell their stock or other asset and use some of that to purchase consumer items, but that is a tenuous trail to economic progress and again it does not assure the producer company having the cash to actually build more things.

Of course, if the money from these sources were sitting in the bank, the producer company could borrow money needed for new production.

What is needed is to implement the Capital Homestead Act.

Right now the Federal Reserve creates money by loaning it to banks, who re-loan it multiple times because of fractional banking rules. With Capital Homesteading, money would be created by loaning it directly to citizens via banks at near-zero interest to invest in FUTURE wealth-creating, income-generating (full dividend payout) productive capital assets formed by producer companies. To build real wealth and also phase out our near-defunct social security scheme, the new full-reserve money would go into a long-term retirement account to be invested in dividend-paying, asset-backed shares of corporations. That way, money power would be spread to all citizens. The middle class would be invigorated using the principle of compounding interest, instead of being decimated by mushrooming public and personal debt.

The Federal Reserve could play a more positive role, removing artificial barriers to equal citizen access to acquiring and owning productive capital wealth. By creating asset-backed money for production, supported by growth-oriented tax policies, the Federal Reserve could truly help promote shared prosperity in a market system.

Support the Agenda of The Just Third Way Movement at http://foreconomicjustice.org/?p=5797

Support Monetary Justice at http://capitalhomestead.org/page/monetary-justice

Support the Capital Homestead Act at http://www.cesj.org/homestead/index.htm and http://www.cesj.org/homestead/summary-cha.htm

http://www.latimes.com/business/money/la-fi-mo-federal-reserve-jeremy-stein-stimulus-economy-20130628,0,7587855.story

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