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U.S. Is Bankrupt and We Don't Even Know

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  • U.S. Is Bankrupt and We Don't Even Know

    Let’s get real. The U.S. is bankrupt. Neither spending more nor taxing less will help the country pay its bills.

    What it can and must do is radically simplify its tax, health-care, retirement and financial systems, each of which is a complete mess. But this is the good news. It means they can each be redesigned to achieve their legitimate purposes at much lower cost and, in the process, revitalize the economy.

    Last month, the International Monetary Fund released its annual review of U.S. economic policy. Its summary contained these bland words about U.S. fiscal policy: “Directors welcomed the authorities’ commitment to fiscal stabilization, but noted that a larger than budgeted adjustment would be required to stabilize debt-to-GDP.”

    But delve deeper, and you will find that the IMF has effectively pronounced the U.S. bankrupt. Section 6 of the July 2010 Selected Issues Paper says: “The U.S. fiscal gap associated with today’s federal fiscal policy is huge for plausible discount rates.” It adds that “closing the fiscal gap requires a permanent annual fiscal adjustment equal to about 14 percent of U.S. GDP.”

    The fiscal gap is the value today (the present value) of the difference between projected spending (including servicing official debt) and projected revenue in all future years.

    Double Our Taxes

    To put 14 percent of gross domestic product in perspective, current federal revenue totals 14.9 percent of GDP. So the IMF is saying that closing the U.S. fiscal gap, from the revenue side, requires, roughly speaking, an immediate and permanent doubling of our personal-income, corporate and federal taxes as well as the payroll levy set down in the Federal Insurance Contribution Act.

    Such a tax hike would leave the U.S. running a surplus equal to 5 percent of GDP this year, rather than a 9 percent deficit. So the IMF is really saying the U.S. needs to run a huge surplus now and for many years to come to pay for the spending that is scheduled. It’s also saying the longer the country waits to make tough fiscal adjustments, the more painful they will be.

    Is the IMF bonkers?

    No. It has done its homework. So has the Congressional Budget Office whose Long-Term Budget Outlook, released in June, shows an even larger problem.

    ‘Unofficial’ Liabilities

    Based on the CBO’s data, I calculate a fiscal gap of $202 trillion, which is more than 15 times the official debt. This gargantuan discrepancy between our “official” debt and our actual net indebtedness isn’t surprising. It reflects what economists call the labeling problem. Congress has been very careful over the years to label most of its liabilities “unofficial” to keep them off the books and far in the future.

    For example, our Social Security FICA contributions are called taxes and our future Social Security benefits are called transfer payments. The government could equally well have labeled our contributions “loans” and called our future benefits “repayment of these loans less an old age tax,” with the old age tax making up for any difference between the benefits promised and principal plus interest on the contributions.

    The fiscal gap isn’t affected by fiscal labeling. It’s the only theoretically correct measure of our long-run fiscal condition because it considers all spending, no matter how labeled, and incorporates long-term and short-term policy.

    $4 Trillion Bill

    How can the fiscal gap be so enormous?

    Simple. We have 78 million baby boomers who, when fully retired, will collect benefits from Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid that, on average, exceed per-capita GDP. The annual costs of these entitlements will total about $4 trillion in today’s dollars. Yes, our economy will be bigger in 20 years, but not big enough to handle this size load year after year.

    This is what happens when you run a massive Ponzi scheme for six decades straight, taking ever larger resources from the young and giving them to the old while promising the young their eventual turn at passing the generational buck.

    Herb Stein, chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers under U.S. President Richard Nixon, coined an oft-repeated phrase: “Something that can’t go on, will stop.” True enough. Uncle Sam’s Ponzi scheme will stop. But it will stop too late.
    And it will stop in a very nasty manner. The first possibility is massive benefit cuts visited on the baby boomers in retirement. The second is astronomical tax increases that leave the young with little incentive to work and save. And the third is the government simply printing vast quantities of money to cover its bills.

    Worse Than Greece

    Most likely we will see a combination of all three responses with dramatic increases in poverty, tax, interest rates and consumer prices. This is an awful, downhill road to follow, but it’s the one we are on. And bond traders will kick us miles down our road once they wake up and realize the U.S. is in worse fiscal shape than Greece.
    Some doctrinaire Keynesian economists would say any stimulus over the next few years won’t affect our ability to deal with deficits in the long run.

    This is wrong as a simple matter of arithmetic. The fiscal gap is the government’s credit-card bill and each year’s 14 percent of GDP is the interest on that bill. If it doesn’t pay this year’s interest, it will be added to the balance.

    Demand-siders say forgoing this year’s 14 percent fiscal tightening, and spending even more, will pay for itself, in present value, by expanding the economy and tax revenue.

    My reaction? Get real, or go hang out with equally deluded supply-siders. Our country is broke and can no longer afford no- pain, all-gain “solutions.”

    (Laurence J. Kotlikoff is a professor of economics at Boston University and author of “Jimmy Stewart Is Dead: Ending the World’s Ongoing Financial Plague with Limited Purpose Banking.”

    http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2010-0...kotlikoff.html
    Outside of a dog, a book is man's best friend. Inside of a dog, it's too dark to read. -Groucho

  • #2
    Re: U.S. Is Bankrupt and We Don't Even Know

    Originally posted by Master Shake View Post

    (Laurence J. Kotlikoff is a professor of economics at Boston University and author of “Jimmy Stewart Is Dead: Ending the World’s Ongoing Financial Plague with Limited Purpose Banking.”

    http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2010-0...kotlikoff.html

    Kotlikoff live here:

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    • #3
      Re: U.S. Is Bankrupt and We Don't Even Know

      Some feel not only fiscally bankrupt...

      when you read about America in European newspapers, what you are likely to find is a tone bordering on pity. The U.S. is depicted as a fraying empire of obesity, ignorance, debt, gridlock, stagnation, and mindless war. Sure, the iPad is cool, but it is evidence of what America was, not what it will be again. The stories are not angry, accusatory, or even ideological. It’s worse: they are condescendingly elegiac. Stacy Herbert

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      • #4
        Re: U.S. Is Bankrupt and We Don't Even Know

        Originally posted by don View Post
        Some feel not only fiscally bankrupt...

        when you read about America in European newspapers, what you are likely to find is a tone bordering on pity. The U.S. is depicted as a fraying empire of obesity, ignorance, debt, gridlock, stagnation, and mindless war. Sure, the iPad is cool, but it is evidence of what America was, not what it will be again. The stories are not angry, accusatory, or even ideological. It’s worse: they are condescendingly elegiac. Stacy Herbert

        Yeah, well I say fuck those Eurotrash snobs and the horse they rode in on. We're much less fucked than they are.
        Outside of a dog, a book is man's best friend. Inside of a dog, it's too dark to read. -Groucho

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        • #5
          Re: U.S. Is Bankrupt and We Don't Even Know

          Joe McCarthy is rolling in his grave watching RT, which is always fun. Russia Today makes me laugh because it is so skewed in the other direction, yet it actually offers a pretty interesting perspective you can't get in other places. I love that if you squint hard enough you can see Russian spooks in the background. The whole thing is comical, it's a bad Russian copy of the American main stream media, yet they book pretty good gigs.

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          • #6
            Re: U.S. Is Bankrupt and We Don't Even Know

            Interesting how that cognitive dissonance thing works. Somehow we as a nation (the US) are in the worst imaginable hellish situation with no solution, due to namby-pamby left wing do-gooders and their silly spending. But nothing turns the story around like daring to compare us (again, the US) with those nasty Europeans. Suddenly, in comparison, we are in terrific shape, and certainly better off than those wankers.

            Honestly, I get confused. Which is it?
            "The test of our progress is not whether we add more to the abundance of those who have much it is whether we provide enough for those who have little." - Franklin D. Roosevelt

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            • #7
              Re: U.S. Is Bankrupt and We Don't Even Know

              Sorry, but I fail to see how Europe is worse than US? Hypothetically speaking PIIGS is only five states. In US there are fifty states and every state is generally like Greece or in even worse shape. US long term debt obligations (60 - 200 trillion???) are impossible to pay and therefore will be defaulted on sooner or later. In my opinion Europe is in a way better shape than US.

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              • #8
                Re: U.S. Is Bankrupt and We Don't Even Know

                Originally posted by Jeff View Post
                Interesting how that cognitive dissonance thing works. Somehow we as a nation (the US) are in the worst imaginable hellish situation with no solution, due to namby-pamby left wing do-gooders and their silly spending. But nothing turns the story around like daring to compare us (again, the US) with those nasty Europeans. Suddenly, in comparison, we are in terrific shape, and certainly better off than those wankers.

                Honestly, I get confused. Which is it?
                To an extent, we have had a free ride by being the owners of the world reserve currency. We have exported loads of inflation, and consumed everyone else's economic output in order to export more dollars for the growing global economy. Should/When that global dollar status go away - there will be few comparisons to our plight. That's when we see severe inflation, that's when we lose that free lunch - that's when we feel the true cost of energy - IMHO.

                Technically, we can never become bankrupt, unless some bureacratic idiot forgets to type some zeros. Sovereign solvency is not an issue the US faces - currency collapse is the issue the US faces.

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