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Federal Deficit Reality

Discussions about the economic and financial ramifications of PEAK OIL

Re: Federal budget defecits - do they matter?

Unread postby mekrob » Sun 19 Mar 2006, 20:45:18

As far as the foreign debt is concerned, I believe only 2 trillion of our debt is to foreigners. 1 trillion was accumulated by the first 42 presidents and the second by Bush in 5 years. I'm probably wrong on this because I got it from a Congressman on CSPAN. He probably just fudged the numbers to make his point, but still, a good portion of our debt is to foreigners.
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Re: Federal budget defecits - do they matter?

Unread postby DantesPeak » Sun 19 Mar 2006, 21:04:17

While the US debt directly held by official foreign institutions is around $2 trillion, that doesn't count private foreign investment of trillions $ more.

So the US could not in any way manage to sell so much debt without foreigners. Which leads us back, like in many other debates here, to the US dollar world trade regime and what lengths the US will go to keep that going.

pup55 - great post, but it's frequently overlooked that the 'liberal' Clinton made the most progress on reducing the deficit compared to 'conservative' administrations.

At this point, since the US is running a huge deficit at the peak of an economic (if not also energy) cycle, we must expect that the situation will be only worse in the future when recession arrives.
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Re: Federal budget defecits - do they matter?

Unread postby TommyJefferson » Sun 19 Mar 2006, 22:12:31

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('pup55', 'S')orry for the diatribe and history lesson. Others may wish to comment.


Dang. That was a good summation.
Conform . Consume . Obey .
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Re: Federal budget defecits - do they matter?

Unread postby LadyRuby » Sun 19 Mar 2006, 22:44:16

They don't matter. Until they do.

Getting Serious about the Twin Deficits

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'O')verview:

Twenty years ago, the United States was the world’s largest creditor nation, unsurpassed in its ownership of assets outside of its borders, even after deducting what foreigners owned inside its borders. Yet over the past two decades, America has been transformed into the world’s largest debtor nation.

The focus of Getting Serious About the Twin Deficits by Menzie D. Chinn, a professor of public affairs and economics at the Universityof Wisconsinat Madison, who served as a senior economist for international financial issues on the president’s Council of Economic Advisers during the Clinton and George W. Bush administrations, is on the economic consequences of inaction with respect to the fiscal and current account deficits. “The longer we wait,” the report explains, “the greater the likelihood of a global financial and economic disruption. Even absent a discrete crisis, hewing to the current course raises the chances of stagnant economic growth, if not recession, in the future.” The report also shows that there may well be other ramifications.

“A striking cautionary note regarding America ’s current path is provided by Britain ’s loss of military and political primacy in the twentieth century; that development followed a shift from creditor to debtor status. Similarly, a prolonged decline in the dollar’s value and increasing indebtedness will erode America ’s dominance in political and security spheres. These trends threaten the dollar’s role as the global currency that facilitates international trade and finance, something the United States has gained immeasurably from over the years. A weaker dollar also reduces American leverage in international financial institutions such as the World Bank and International Monetary Fund (IMF). Finally, a diminished U.S. currency means that each dollar’s worth of military and development assistance has less impact at precisely the time when the nation faces the greatest challenges. Those threats we ignore at our own peril.”
'

Or this:

Global: Twin Deficits at the Flashpoint?

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '.')..Never before has the world’s dominant economic power lived this far beyond its means. Most believe that America is special -- that it deserves special dispensation from current account, debt, and saving adjustments. Just as history is littered with the remnants of other such new paradigms, I continue to believe that the United States will have to pay a steep price for its imbalances. As America’s twin deficits move inexorably toward the flashpoint, there is a growing risk that its external financing terms could take a sudden turn for the worse. The dollar, US equities, and credit markets strike me as most vulnerable to such a development.
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Re: Federal budget defecits - do they matter?

Unread postby aldente » Mon 20 Mar 2006, 01:12:40

Texas_T, also never forget the 'psychology of debt' and the way debt makes the ultimate tool to steer and control the masses. It is the perfect way to keep em' quiet - nobody brags about debt.

I don't blame those who utilize this tool since there is probably no other way to keep it all together.
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Re: Federal budget defecits - do they matter?

Unread postby dhfenton » Mon 20 Mar 2006, 08:40:27

The greatest untruth about deficit spending is the old " we're only borrowing from ourselves" line. If the debt of the individual is not the same as the debt for the national government. The debt of the national government will eventually come due, and up to this point all we've done is borrowed again when it comes due. But, what are we going to do when the money "borrowed" from social security comes due? The money congress has been stealing for generations will no longer be there, and there will be people waiting for checks each month. The government will have to borrow more to repay this. This debt is held by countries and individuals all over the world. We are not borrowing from ourselves, we are borrowing from many other people who have a real expectation of getting paid when the debt comes due. The concept that endless borrowing somehow puts a nation in a position of strength is crazy. The dollar must suffer, and at some point it will lose in relation to other currencies. The theory is that at that point the U.S. will be able to substantially increase exports because our goods will be cheaper internationally. Then all the debt will be cheaper and easier to repay. The problem is that the dollar has been artificially held above its real value for years; because , in part, it is the most widely recognized international currency, and the banking system depends on it so much. At what point does it collapse? That's anyones guess; but , and oil crisis is definitely one scenario where the system could break down, and the dollar could be toast.
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Re: Federal budget defecits - do they matter?

Unread postby pup55 » Mon 20 Mar 2006, 22:23:29

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')he debt of the national government will eventually come due


I'm surprised that the libertarians that haunt this forum have not jumped on this. But, one of the root causes of the problem is the expectation that the government, especially the federal government, is the protector of last resort. If we are stupid, and do not save for retirement, the government is expected to pay us a nice pension. If we get hit by a hurricane, we expect the government to come along and pluck us off of our rooftop and give us a $2000 debit card. If our crop dries out, we expect the government to come along and give us a nice farm subsidy. If we get laid off, we expect the government to give us a nice check for awhile. If we are running a huge corporation, we expect the governmetn to give us an occasional tax break for one reaon or another,or at the most extreme, save our business from bankruptcy, or protect us from our foreign competitors. If we want to build a factory, we look for the government to give us some land somewhere, and a nice subsidy. Of course, the politicians are more than happy to encourage us to believe this, and in fact brag about how much money they can get the US government to spend in their districts. This is also why all of this patriot act, homeland security stuff is being allowed to happen.

Well, all of this stuff costs money. Howard Ruff was, I think, the one that stated that people have basically figured out how to vote themselves benefits out of the federal treasury. As long as this is true, we will continue to have spineless politicians that want to spend but not tax, and we will continue to have the problem, unless there is a rash of courageous government, which is unlikely without a near-revolution.

Now, the Europeans reading this, especially the scandinavians, will just laugh at the above rant, because they have the philosophy that the government really should do all of the above and much more. Give health care to everybody. Give everybody six weeks of vacation, a baby allowance, etc. etc. but the difference is, that they expect to be taxed for the priveledge because they do not expect the money for this to grow on trees. Some of this is extracted in the form of excise taxes on things they want to discourage the use of, such as alcohol and gasoline, and some is the "progressive" tax on the high wage earners. They complain about it all the time, and they also complain occasionally about the lack of motivation to get up and go to work in the morning, but for the most part, they make it work, and a lot of them, not all, like it.

One of the theories behind the current insane US spending policy is that it is a deliberate effort to bankrupt the government for various reasons, one of which being that it will force us to cut back on a lot of the discretionary spending and force us to rethink a lot of this. It remains to be seen if this will be the final outcome. I personally find it hard to believe that they are that well organized. I think probably the most likely explanation is the best, namely they are stupid, and honestly believe that it will work.

In any case, the problem goes back to the fudamental attitude of the people toward government spending and taxation. How much blood will have to be spilled before the tax policy is aligned with the spending policy?


$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 't')he 'liberal' Clinton made the most progress on reducing the deficit compared to 'conservative' administrations


I left out Clinton deliberately because I do not know what to make of him.. He was elected in the first place due to the rabid anti-deficit, anti-NAFTA Ross Perot taking 20% of the vote away from George I. Also, most of the surplus happened in his second term, after four-plus years of declining interest rates, and unsustainably low oil prices. Also, some of the economic expansion was due to the one-time-only electronics and communications boom. Also, after 1994, when Gingrich and the Contract with America people started to take over the congress, he did not have the ability to do a lot of free spending. The argument can be made that he got lucky, and was at least smart enough not to screw it up, and he wisely (?) chose to spend his time in office in other activities. If others have a different opionion, please feel free to post it.
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Re: Federal budget defecits - do they matter?

Unread postby seahorse2 » Tue 21 Mar 2006, 12:42:40

Deficits don't matter now, bc they don't matter to the people financing them - the foriegners. So, borrow borrow borrow - why not? Its the American way. When the foriegners finally decide they do matter, then, it doesn't matter to the US Government, it will simply hyperinflate its way out of the debts and everyone starts all over again -including those foriegners that were stupid enough to loan the US all the money. After everyone goes broke, the US will still have the biggest machineguns on the block and lots of firepower in the Middle East - so, that brings us all back to, deficits don't matter to the U.S.

In fact, I will go further here and say that everytime the US raises its debt limit, we should all follow suit.
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Re: Federal budget defecits - do they matter?

Unread postby JonathanR » Wed 29 Mar 2006, 08:37:14

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('seahorse2', 'D')eficits don't matter now, bc they don't matter to the people financing them - the foriegners. So, borrow borrow borrow - why not? Its the American way. When the foriegners finally decide they do matter, then, it doesn't matter to the US Government, it will simply hyperinflate its way out of the debts and everyone starts all over again -including those foriegners that were stupid enough to loan the US all the money. After everyone goes broke, the US will still have the biggest machineguns on the block and lots of firepower in the Middle East - so, that brings us all back to, deficits don't matter to the U.S.

In fact, I will go further here and say that everytime the US raises its debt limit, we should all follow suit.


But if hyper-inflation leads to civil war, the government just might have to bring a lot of that firepower home.
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Re: Federal budget defecits - do they matter?

Unread postby Doly » Wed 29 Mar 2006, 10:18:57

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('seahorse2', 'W')hen the foriegners finally decide they do matter, then, it doesn't matter to the US Government, it will simply hyperinflate its way out of the debts and everyone starts all over again -including those foriegners that were stupid enough to loan the US all the money.


And suddenly nobody has any interest in doing any sort of trade with the US, and the US becomes a banana republic.

If you think you can run out of credit and not suffer dire consequences the next time you try to borrow, think again.
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Re: Federal budget defecits - do they matter?

Unread postby seahorse2 » Wed 29 Mar 2006, 11:37:57

No matter what the US does, it seems like its going to be a mess. But it seems ultimately there are two choices, deflation or hyperinflation. Deflation seems to bring upon a bond default (bc US wouldn't have tax revenues to cover its bonds). So, what will the US do?

Keep in mind that Cheney once said deficits don't matter. Since he's in office, we have to take him at his word. I assume this means they will keep spending like crazy. And, why not? If the US tries to make the serious serious cutbacks necessary, it would bring the economy down - deflation. It would tank the US economy and the world economy which depends on massive US spending. So, why not just keep printing money?

Further, why would the US ever allow a default on its bonds? Might as well print your way out of the debt like has happened in history before. That's what I would do. That's why I say they don't matter, because I think hyperinflation is the route that will be taken, and what little I understand about Bernanke and now that the US won't publish M3 suggest deficits don't matter and it will print its way out of its obligations.
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Re: Federal budget defecits - do they matter?

Unread postby Odin » Mon 03 Apr 2006, 19:21:23

Isn't our debt only ~8% of our GDP? there are Western European budgets that are much worse that that, IIRC. What should realy be scaring us is the trade deficit. Tha obsession with the debt is a relic od pre-Keyensian thinking.
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Re: Federal budget defecits - do they matter?

Unread postby grillzilla » Mon 03 Apr 2006, 21:07:50

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '
')Isn't our debt only ~8% of our GDP?


a lot depends on how you compute the GDP and the debt.

go down to the bottom part of the linked page below to read how the numbers have been tweaked:


Gillespier

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The difference between Genius and Stupidity is that Genius has its limits.
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Re: Federal budget defecits - do they matter?

Unread postby jupiters_release » Mon 03 Apr 2006, 22:22:20

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('seahorse2', 'M')ight as well print your way out of the debt like has happened in history before. That's what I would do. That's why I say they don't matter, because I think hyperinflation is the route that will be taken, and what little I understand about Bernanke and now that the US won't publish M3 suggest deficits don't matter and it will print its way out of its obligations.


I guess you and most of the posters in this thread missed JoeCoal's links?

http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid ... 1010099392
http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid ... 8524208549
http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid ... 1923167501

The Federal Reserve Bank is a private corporation that creates money from nothing and loans it to our government with interest. The U.S. government has not printed its own currency since Abraham Lincoln made greenbacks, poor president was assisinated for it too.
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