From 2010.
The phrase "Tea Party" is synonymous these days with
the politics of spending cuts. The big one is the
compulsory health insurance law. Tea Party people want it
repealed. Yet in the grand scheme of things fiscal, that
law is a drop in the teacup.
In my previous report, "A $600+ Billion Spending Cut,"
I suggested a sure-fire way to cut a big chunk of spending
out of government budgets: local, state, and federal. Stop
funding all education. The typical voter reads this and
thinks: "But that would end all progress." There is no
constituency for such an across-the-board spending cut.
The Tea Party has not recommended it.
There are other cuts possible -- much larger cuts: end
both Social Security and Medicare. Same response, only
louder.
This is why Keynesianism is always popular with a
majority of voters. Voters have accepted the Keynesian
premise: government spending is a productive thing. So, in
a financial crisis, there is never any effective resistance
to new emergency spending programs. On the other hand,
there is well-organized resistance by favored special-interest groups against cutting existing programs at all
times. This process is the basis of the government's
spending ratchet. Spending by the national government
keeps increasing. So does the national debt.
Yet this acceptance of ever-more Federal spending may
be changing, as economists say, "on the margin" -- or as
politicians say, "on the fringe." The Tea Party movement
is the indication of a change of opinion.
THE DREAM OF A MAGICAL FIX
The Tea Party gets a lot of media attention these
days. Two Republican Party primaries on June 8 got
coverage because of victories by Tea Party candidates:
South Carolina and Nevada.
This coverage cheers me. My first recorded vote was
for Barry Goldwater in 1964. I read John T. Flynn's book,
The Roosevelt Myth, at age 16 in 1958. I know about
deficit spending. I know this: it is popular politically.
Why? Because it is a way to defer spending cuts. The
voters really do believe that something will turn up, so
that they will not have to pay off the Federal debt. They
don't know what, but something. So does Congress.
To make tax cuts for higher income voters without
making unpopular spending cuts is the dream of Republican
politicians. To make tax cuts for the middle class -- the
working poor pay only Social Security's FICA tax -- without
making unpopular spending cuts is the dream of Democrat
politicians.
In the Reagan era, the President tried to achieve this
by promising rising revenues as a result of reductions in
the income tax rates in all brackets. Unfortunately, he
neglected to veto any major spending bills that were placed
on his desk by Congress. The economy also got hit by a
major recession in 1981-82 as a result of a slowdown in
Federal Reserve inflation. In 1983, the Federal deficit
went above $200 billion.
Also in 1983, Social Security technically went
bankrupt. The President assembled the Greenspan
Commission, which recommended FICA tax hikes. The
President signed a law implementing the Commission's
recommendations. In 1986, the President signed another tax
increase, called TEFRA. The deficit increased anyway.
What Reagan faced was piddling compared to what Obama
faces. The Federal deficit is obviously out of control.
This means that Federal spending is out of control. Do we
have legitimate hope that spending will be brought under
control in time to avoid a crisis in the capital markets?
No.
I see how far down the road that the West has traveled
when it comes to debt: government debt, corporate debt, and
household debt. I look at the zones of modern life that
have become dependent on ever-larger quantities of
government debt. Then I look at which programs that Tea
Party politicians say they will vote to cut. Well, "look
at" is not quite correct. "Look for" is more like it.
NON-SHOPPING LISTS
Let's see their non-shopping lists. Let's see what
cuts the Tea Party candidates will recommend. Put
differently, let's see which entrenched constituencies for
government subsidies they are willing to write off. Let's
see which cuts will be so substantial -- enough to balance
the Federal budget, let alone run a surplus -- that their
very advocacy in public will bring out voters to support
the candidates the Democrats run.
The Democrats are not political fools. They know
how their bread is buttered . . . and where. So do the
Establishment Republicans. All that the Democrats'
candidates need to say is this: "Where do you intend to cut
Federal spending? Be specific. Publish this as a campaign
document. How do you intend to reduce the deficit?"
The Tea Party candidate is the equivalent of the dude
who is dressed in his best East Coast wardrobe, who steps
out of an Arizona stagecoach in a 1948 Western. The guys
sitting around the saloon spot their mark. "Let's have a
little fun with the dude!" They pull out their six-guns.
They start shooting at the dude's feet. "Dance, dude!"
The dude dances, unless he's Gregory Peck.
We are going to find out this fall how many Tea Party
candidates there are whose role model is Gregory Peck.
Unlike the 1948 Western, we will get to see if Mr. Peck is
gunned down 20 minutes into the movie, with the rest of the
film devoted to the final takeover of the county by Charles
Bickford.
OVER THE CLIFF
Three things are driving the West's economy toward a
cliff: government debt, bank leverage, and fiat money.
The increase in national government debt since early
2008 is unprecedented. This is because, in a recession,
politicians vote for bailouts, which increase the
government's deficit. Meanwhile, central banks buy assets
of any kind in order to flood the economy with newly
created fiat money, thereby saving the banking system.
This two-fold policy response -- deficits and fiat
money -- is promoted by all schools of economics except
Austrianism. The school of economics that is most
prominent today, and which gets good media publicity for
promoting the two-fold policy response, is Keynesianism.
Members of the other schools of thought meekly ratify what
the Keynesians promote openly, mumbling that "there is no
other choice in this crisis." The Austrians protest, but
until 2008, hardly anyone paid any attention to them or
their protest.
Keynesianism's solution to recessions is always the
same: to have the national government borrow money that
would have been lent to the private sector. The theory is
that when governments spend borrowed money, this increases
economic growth, because the government spends the money
rather than private producers and borrowers.
The Keynesian system rests on two unstated
assumptions, which are illogical and therefore never stated
plainly for the public to see.
1. Government spending of borrowed money that supports unemployed workers or funds corporate bailouts is economically productive and will restore economic growth and end the recession.When I state it this way, a normal person thinks: "This makes no sense. Why should government borrowing to pay people not to work and also to pay for government bailouts be productive, while allowing consumers and producers to choose their own level of debt is destructive?" So, non-Austrian School economists never go into print with the two assumptions. As well-paid designers of fine new wardrobes for emperors, they prefer not to let voters inside the weaving room.
2. Private sector spending of borrowed money enables consumers to buy what they want and also enables businesses to purchase capital goods, labor, and raw materials in order to produce consumer goods and services. This is economically wasteful and extends the recession.
The debt of the United States government is essentially risk-less. A 90-day U.S. Treasury bill is the closest thing in history to a risk- free investment. This debt is AAA-rated, and should be.With the Greek government's announcement on April 23 of the threat of non-payment of its debt, the Party Line has met a growing skepticism. It is possible for a Western government to default. The non-response of the Northern European politicians for two weeks was followed by a frantic weekend announcement of a bailout worth $900 billion. This was not the response of politicians who are in control. It was a Hank Paulson "the sky is falling" performance.
There is no possibility that Asian central banks will ever cease buying U.S. Treasury debt, let alone sell their existing portfolios. Asian manufacturers cannot possibly do without American consumers. This is why Asian central banks buy U.S. Treasury debt by inflating their own domestic currencies: to hold down interest rates in the United States, thereby enabling American consumers to borrow money to buy Asian goods, rather than letting Asians buy these goods. American consumers are vital to Asia. Asian consumers are not. Thus it has always been. Thus it will always be.
. . . This is how empires decline. It begins with a debt explosion. It ends with an inexorable reduction in the resources available for the Army, Navy, and Air Force. Which is why voters are right to worry about America's debt crisis. According to a recent Rasmussen report, 42 percent of Americans now say that cutting the deficit in half by the end of the president's first term should be the administration's most important task -- significantly more than the 24 percent who see health-care reform as the No. 1 priority. But cutting the deficit in half is simply not enough. If the United States doesn't come up soon with a credible plan to restore the federal budget to balance over the next five to 10 years, the danger is very real that a debt crisis could lead to a major weakening of American power.This sort of talk was beyond the fringe in 2007. It was far outside the bounds of acceptable discourse within the Davos-Bilderberg axis. It remains a fringe idea, but inside the circle, not outside.
The precedents are certainly there. Habsburg Spain defaulted on all or part of its debt 14 times between 1557 and 1696 and also succumbed to inflation due to a surfeit of New World silver. Prerevolutionary France was spending 62 percent of royal revenue on debt service by 1788. The Ottoman Empire went the same way: interest payments and amortization rose from 15 percent of the budget in 1860 to 50 percent in 1875. And don't forget the last great English-speaking empire. By the interwar years, interest payments were consuming 44 percent of the British budget, making it intensely difficult to rearm in the face of a new German threat.
Call it the fatal arithmetic of imperial decline. Without radical fiscal reform, it could apply to America next.
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Published on June 14, 2010. The original is here.
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