Prescription for Prosperity: The Public Banking Remedy
Global Research News Hour Episode 113
“Once a nation parts with control of its currency
and credit, it matters not who makes that nation’s laws, Usury, once in
control, will wreck any nation. Until the control of the issue of
currency and credit is restored to government and recognized as its most
conspicuous and sacred responsibility, all talk of the sovereignty of
Parliament and of democracy is idle and futile.” – William Lyon Mackenzie King, prime minister of Canada, August 2, 1935 (quote courtesy of Canadian Monetary Reform News) [1]
LISTEN TO THE SHOW
Length (59:09)
In the midst of the Canadian election campaign, the
federal liberal leader and would-be Prime Minister of Canada, Justin
Trudeau has made some comments, controversial in the current cultural
context, about the merits of deficit-spending in order to finance
critical infrastructure spending. During the Globe and Mail-sponsored
Leaders’ Debate he explained in a dialogue with rival candidate Thomas
Mulcair of the NDP:
“…And the fact of the matter is that we have a situation right now where interest rates are low so borrowing has never been cheaper for the Federal government, our debt to GDP ratio is low and getting lower, our economy has been flat for 10 years. So my question is, now that there are thousands upon thousands of skilled Canadians for work in construction and in growth, if this isn’t the time to invest, when would be?” [2]
Mr. Trudeau has a point. However, what is missing in
his argument, and the wide-spread assumptions among main-stream
economists, is that Canadian governments always had the option of
borrowing at low to no rates of interest by borrowing through the Bank
of Canada.
Groups such as the Committee on Monetary and Economic Reform (COMER)
have been trying to not only raise awareness about this hidden tool in
the the country’s fiscal toolbox, but actually have leveled a legal case
against the Bank of Canada compelling the BOC to fulfill its legal
mandate to function as the Federal government’s lender of choice.
It is remarkable, (but then again perhaps not really)
that this case has gotten so little attention in the current political
debate where economics is said to be a key, if not THE key issue.
Herb Wiseman, COMER’s Information officer will join
us in the first half hour to explain the need for monetary reform, the
historic role of the Bank of Canada, and why it was abandoned by the
feds.
Global Research News Hour contributor Kellia
Ramares-Watson completes the hour with a previously recoded interview
with Ellen Brown on the theme of banking as a public utility. Ellen
Brown is founder of the Public Banking Institute, and author of Web Of Debt: The Shocking Truth about our Money System and How we can Break Free, and her more recent From Austerity to Prosperity: The Public Bank Solution.
LISTEN TO THE SHOW
Length (59:09)
The Global Research News Hour airs every Friday at 1pm CT on CKUW 95.9FM in Winnipeg. The programme is also podcast at globalresearch.ca .The show can be heard on the Progressive Radio Network at prn.fm. Listen in every Monday at 3pm ET.
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Notes:
2) Globe and Mail Leaders’ Debate 2015 (43 minute mark); https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XbnMz7tsXjo
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