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Balancing Budget Now Won't Solve U.S. Debt Woes
There are no morals in politics. There is only expedience. A scoundrel may be of use to us just because he is a scoundrel." Whoever is stage-managing the remains of the Bush presidency must know his Lenin. Here's George W. Bush speaking Feb. 5: "By keeping taxes down, we actually generate strong revenues to the Treasury. . . . I strongly believe Congress needs to listen to a budget which has no tax increase, and a budget, because of fiscal discipline, that can be balanced in five years." This after the most bankrupting presidential budgeting in the history of the nation. But even deceit pays short-term dividends.The president was celebrating a budget deficit of $248 billion, down from the record $413 billion two years earlier. He was promising a budget surplus of $61 billion by 2012, three years after he leaves office -- so long as a slew of fantasist assumptions fall in place, like Iraq becoming a Garden of Eden by 2010 and the Social Security and Medicare benefits owed baby boomers didn't exist. Assuming, in sum, that Dr. Seuss came back from the dead to write the history of the next decade ("If I Ran the Zoo, the Sequel").
Let's assume that all of Bush's projections were to come true and a surplus was realized in 2012. According to his playbook, the story either ends there or reverts to the old ploy of more tax cuts. But the story neglects one detail: The national debt. During the Bush years, the debt grew from $5.7 trillion to $8.8 trillion, a 54 percent increase. By the time Bush leaves office, it'll have grown past $10 trillion. In other words, Bush will have saddled the country with almost more debt than all previous presidents combined, including Ronald Reagan, the last champion of Republican fiscal discipline.
So what? There's always been debt. There'll always be debt. True. But the debt depends on people willing to finance it. As of today, $5 trillion of the debt is held by the public -- individual Americans, banks and, increasingly, governments like China, Saudi Arabia, the European Union. At any point those governments could choose to invest elsewhere. If that happens, Americans, already the biggest debtors on the planet, have to make up the difference. Simply put, when Bush spends $2 billion a week on his wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, he's borrowing that money not only from China or Saudi Arabia, but from future Social Security and Medicare recipients, too. The Social Security trust fund, which is generating a surplus, literally lends the money to the Treasury. Government-to-government loans like that have added up to $3.8 trillion.
Balancing the budget will fix none of that any more than a household can stave off bankruptcy just by paying the interest on a mass of debt: Sooner or later a small interest rate rise or a mild economic shock collapses the arrangement. Only vast surpluses in the $200 to $300 billion range over several decades can pay down the national debt and stave off a flight of investors that would collapse the domestic economy. That's why the Clinton administration never proposed massive tax cuts when it reversed previous Republican administrations' Decade of Debt and started running surpluses in the late 1990s. Clinton knew that if the country was to meet its obligations to coming retirees and stay fiscally sound enough for investors to keep their money here, modest surpluses alone wouldn't do. Debts had to be paid. That means big budget surpluses year after year.
Bush built his economic promises on two lies: That tax cuts would "generate strong revenues to the Treasury" -- demonstrably false, considering the near doubling of the national debt. And that balancing the budget was the end game. Why, then, did his administration report last week once again that Medicare and Social Security are heading for bankruptcy by 2019 and 2041 respectively, even as the administration keeps badgering Congress to make permanent the tax cuts that amplified bankruptcy? Because the true end game is to use bankruptcy as a means of ending government programs socially beneficial to tens of millions while rigging the tax code to benefit the nation's wealth and dividend class -- its richest 1 percent and overwhelming profiteers of the Bush years.
None of that is inevitable, especially if the Bush tax cuts of 2001 and 2003 are mostly reversed (preserving the tax cuts for those making $200,000 or less, as Democrats are proposing, is still needlessly generous). But so long as scoundrels run the zoo, collapse is a matter of years, and America's experiment with mass prosperity a matter of history.
Pierre Tristam is a News-Journal editorial writer. Reach him at ptristam@att.net or through his personal Web site at www.pierretristam.com .
© 2007 The Daytona Beach News-Journal
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6 Comments so far
Show AllOnly one solution, DUMP THE MILITARY! It is nothing but a giant welfare machine. With the cost of the wars it needs to justify its existence the current bill is over one trillion a year. Militarism is only a facet of American fascism. Workers have no rights, business is next to godliness, blame a minority group for any problems.
Unless America is willing to reign in the oligarchs, admit capitalism does NOT work, and end militarism, it is quite frankly doomed. Very similar to the predicament of the Romans (and every other empire). The simple fact is that you are not living in the decline of America, you are living in the fall. The only question is will you manage a soft landing like the British, or a crash like the Romans.
Each and every last single time Bush uses numbers instead of words to lie his butt off, he needs to be slam dunked!!!
Because Bush's expenditures, including the invasion of Iraq, are based on American being the initiator of expenditures, Bush can be characterized as leading the most reckless spending in US History.
Case in point number 1: we did not have to invade Iraq. A Nobel Prize winning economist puts that price tag at over TWO TRILLION DOLLARS. Then you have the 2003 Medicare Drug Benefits, or more precisely identified as corporate welfare to the insurance, drug and HMO corporations at 13 TRILLION DOLLARS to our unfunded long term fiscal commitments. Then you have the 800 percent increase in pork projects according to the bipartisan Citizens Against Government Waste. Then we have over 700 military bases worldwide, and has anyone asked why we need this worldwide commitment unless we think of ourselves like the neo cons as the American EMPIRE.
Tristam is of course right. With their poster boy Grover Norquist leading the right in its "drown government in a bathtub" mantra, the whole fiscal implosion of the nation's treasury is about enriching the already rich, and leaving everyone else to dry. With EPA not doing its job, we're also being poisoned more regularly; and with terrorism on an upswing THANKS to the pre-emptive Iraqi war strategy, some of us may have to think about those repurcussions... here's the PRIME example of compassionate conservatism, another Orwellian concoction that gets the sheep to follow along, while they no longer recognize the dangerous status of their pasture.
This isnt anything consevative. Conservatism of the republican revolution (my first lesson in the politics of high hopes and negative reality) premised all tax cuts on spending cuts. George Bush is a financial liberal if ever there was one. New welfare programs for the old huge boost in spending education. Same incompetence and graft as always.If anyone thinks the Bush admin's corruption is in anyway above the norm (for the US or the world) you aren't paying attention. The truth is we agree to leave those regimes alone in echange for holding debt. Dumping it would ineveitably mean war. Less disaster for us than them. We are, as suggested in the full-spectrum dominance doctrine exporting "security".
The current method of producing currency is the creation of
future guarantees of value, such as stocks, bonds, notes, currency,
etc., which are guaranteed by reserves of wealth.
Such a method of producing value, or the representation of,
using guarantees which are produced only by wealth, undermines labor
which, being ultimately the creator of all supply, is the true source
of value.
The physical reality is not that it takes wealth to create
wealth, but that it takes labor to produce wealth.
In the market, future guarantees of value which represent
value that is not there are vulnerable to shorting.
In a shorting war between two players, the side with the most
economic resources will win.
Because of self-interest, there is a limit to the degree that
capitalists players will act collaboratively, but there is no limit to
the degree that socialist players will act collaboratively.
Fully united, labor and consumers can democratically shape the
market for fair wages and prices.
The control is not in their hand, the control is in ours.
We must create a democratic system where labor and consumers can act
collectively and increase participation in this democratic system until
it becomes a size no longer vulnerable to the larger players in the
current capitalist economic system.
Because of globalization, and the ability of multinational players
to play the laborers of one country against the players of another, any
such democratic system must be worldwide.
When it becomes a size no longer vulnerable against the largest of
players, this democratic system must produce a new worldwide currency
based on labor, and backed by the collective labor of its members. The
management of this currency must be fully democratic.
This new currency must target and destroy all "wealth-based"
currencies via the principle of shorting. Begining with the smallest
and most vulnerable ones, and finishing with the biggest.
To be fair, such a system should be microdemocratic, allowing for each
person to vote directly on every issue, or to choose representation,
but allowing that representation to be changed at any time, and for
that representation to exist at any scale.
Follow the link:
http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article17627.htm