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US Economy

Dealing with the pension tsunami:

http://www.newgeography.com/content/001751-a-tsunami-approaches-the-beginning-great-deconstruction

A Tsunami Approaches: The Beginning of the Great Deconstruction
by Robert J. Cristiano 09/05/2010

In the distant horizon, a giant wave is building. There are some who recognized the swell and raised the alarm. There are others who deny the possibility of such a wave. Most remain blissfully unaware. The wave is building and when it reaches our shores, it will hit with the force of a tsunami.

The wave is propelled by government spending and crested with unfunded pension obligations. The Pew Center on the States wrote in The Trillion Dollar Gap (February 2010), “A $1 trillion gap exists between the $3.35 trillion in pension, health care and other retirement benefits states have promised their current and retired workers as of fiscal year 2008 and the $2.35 trillion they have on hand to pay for them.”

Like any tsunami, the wave began long ago and very far out to sea. Thirty years ago the vast majority of union workers were in the private sector. Public employees in unions reached parity with private sector members by 2009. This was aided in part by campaign contributions from the unions to elect Democratic Party candidates and generous pay packages and retirement plans passed by those same politicians in return.

By 2010, the general public received a series of shocks. The first shock was the jobless recovery of the Great Recession that cost 8 million jobs. Most of the job losses occurred in the private sector yet the majority of the $800 billion Stimulus Bill went to “save and create” public sector employment. The second shock was learning that civil servants earned twice that of private workers. According to the Bureau of Economic Analysis, Federal workers received average pay and benefits of $123,049 while private workers made $61,051 in total compensation. The third shock was revelation of incredible retirement plans doled out by politicians since 1999. In 2002, California passed SB 183 that allowed police and safety workers to retire after 30 years on the job with 3% of salary for each year of service, or 90% of their last year’s pay. During the Great Recession, fireman began retiring with $150,000 pensions at age 52 despite a life expectancy approaching 80. In Orange County CA, lifeguards, deemed safety workers, retired with $147,000 annual pensions. The Orange County sheriff, recently convicted of witness tampering, will receive $215,000 annually while in jail. Bob Citron, the Treasurer of Orange County who pushed the county into bankruptcy in the 1990s, receives a pension of $150,000 per year. A tsunami of anger and resentment is building.

As the wave approaches, economists issue thick reports with ominous names like “The Gathering Storm” (Reason Foundation) advising us that the pension obligations we have created are unsustainable. They report cities and states cannot economically allow workers to retire at 52 when they have a life expectancy of 26 years of retirement. They simply cannot pay for these pensions with existing revenue. Services will go down and taxes will go up to pay for these generous pension obligations. Orange County’s CEO, Thomas G. Mauk, predicted that pension requirements in 2014 will take 84% of the county’s law enforcement payroll. It is already 50% today. To exacerbate the problem, The Great Recession forced most states into budget deficits as their revenues decline. For FY2010, every state except Montana and North Dakota has projected a budget deficit. (RedState 3/21/2010).

California once again leads the nation with a $26 billion budget deficit plus an unfunded pension obligation of $500 billion. Its current financial structure is clearly unsustainable. It has an operational structure that in ungovernable with often duplicative agencies, some collecting less in tax revenue than the agencies spend on collection. Wikipedia lists 500 existing public agencies for the State of California. California can no longer afford such a luxury. It must deconstruct these bloated inefficient government agencies, and rid itself of their chairman, staff, offices, cars, pensions and the overhead that such excess represents. A $26 billion dollar deficit is not something that can be corrected with a wage freeze or job furloughs. Bold leadership can lead California to deconstruct its 500 agencies down to 100 functional organizations. California is a classic example of what must change in the coming Great Deconstruction.

One Orange County city has already taken bold steps to correct its $10 million deficit. It may be a model for other cities and states across the country. Internally, it has decided it will not replace any city worker that dies, retires, moves or quits. The city will simply out source the employment to an outside service company and eliminate healthcare requirements and unsustainable pensions. Building inspectors will be out sourced as will city plan checkers, librarians and meter maids. Only essential services like top executives and cops will remain on the city payroll. The city staff will eventually decrease from 220 to approximately 35 personnel. This is the essence of deconstruction.

At the state and local level, the Great Deconstruction has already begun albeit delayed by an infusion of federal stimulus dollars and grants in 2009 and 2010. The federal government must deconstruct as well. It must happen, if only because the revenue is no longer there to sustain all of these often well-intentioned programs. The federal government will not be immune from fiscal reality.

In this sense, the election in November will be a referendum on the very sustainability of our system of government. One party will continue to borrow and spend in order to maintain the 500 agencies in California and the abundance of federal programs. They have not said how long they will be able to borrow money to sustain their system. The other party will try to simply turn off the spigot - now. Either way, one day the money will run out and the inevitable deconstruction will occur.

***************************************************
The Great Deconstruction is a series written exclusively for New Geography. Future articles will address the impact of The Great Deconstruction at the national, state, county and local levels.

Robert J. Cristiano PhD is the Real Estate Professional in Residence at Chapman University in Orange County, CA and Director of Special Projects at the Hoag Center for Real Estate & Finance. He has been a successful real estate developer in Newport Beach California for twenty-nine years.

Other works in The Great Deconstruction series for New Geography
An Awakening: The Beginning of the Great Deconstruction – June 12, 2010
The Great Deconstruction :An American History Post 2010 – June 1, 2010
The Great Deconstruction – First in a New Series - April 11, 2010
Deconstruction: The Fate of America? – March 2010
 
The same sequence of events will probably take place in Canada as well. Either we start a controlled drawdown of spending today or an uncontrolled cession of programs will be forced on us with the negative consequences noted:

http://divasforgeeks.blogspot.com/2010/09/dear-public-pensioners.html

Dear Public Pensioners...

I bear you no ill will.  As a matter of fact, as a fellow citizen I am pretty sympathetic to your plight as regards our governments' ongoing economic melt downs.

But as a friend I feel it incumbent upon me to explain a few realities to you.  See... businesses, people, and yes even governments too, that spend way, way, way more money than they make do this thing called "going broke."

When that happens the creditors of the "broke" entity take what is called "a bath."  That means that under the bankruptcy laws of the United States of America they are paid a fraction of what they are owed.  Because well, there just ain't enough money to go around, other wise the government, business or person wouldn't be "broke."

There is one small difference when governments go "broke" though.  Then instead of bankruptcy law we have to rely on our Congress our Senate and fifty state legislatures to figure out who gets paid and who takes "a bath."

Those decisions will be made as follows.  The least politically powerful people will be screwed first and hardest.  The most politically powerful people will be screwed last and least.

All that means that grandma and grandpa, and the physically disabled as well, had better not be too reliant upon their government checks for food.  Next will come, I am sorry to say, public employees.  After them, the fat cats and wheeler dealers ( that's right, public employees, the people that organized your unions) will take their bath.  But you can bet it won't be as hot or as thorough as the bath you're going to take.  Last and least will come the elected officials who will, amazingly, emerge from the whole mess completely unscathed.  That's how it's going to work.  I don't tell you this because I dislike you.  I tell you because I figure maybe you can use the warning to plan ahead, and buy lots of canned goods and a wood stove.
 
Here, reproduced under the Fair Dealing provisions (§29) of the Copyright Act from the Globe and Mail are a pair of point and counterpoint articles reflecting on the future of the US economy.

First the point – the US’ traditional propensity for creative destruction and risk taking has died, a victim of the ‘great recession:’

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/world/americas/the-day-risk-died/article1703386/?cmpid=rss1&utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed:+TheGlobeAndMail-Front+(The+Globe+and+Mail+-+Latest+News)
The day risk died
For many, the day the Lehman Brothers collapsed was the day risk-taking died. But what’s the US without its appetite for rolling the dice?

Joanna Slater

New York — From Saturday's Globe and Mail

Exactly two years ago, Lehman Brothers, one of Wall Street's most storied investment banks, was fighting for its life. In the days that followed, regulators and bankers worked frantically to save the 158-year-old firm. They failed, and in the early hours of Monday, Sept. 15, it filed for bankruptcy.

The result was chaos. The Dow Jones Industrial Average tumbled 4.4 per cent in a day. By Tuesday, the bread-and-butter funds used by Americans as a substitute for bank accounts threatened to collapse. The same day, the government rescued the giant insurer American International Group, as it, too, tottered on the edge. On Wednesday, the stock market plunged again, by almost 5 per cent.

Within a week, Wall Street was unrecognizable, its marquee firms gone, swallowed or radically transformed in an effort to survive.

By the end of September, some of the nation's largest banks had begun to crumple.

There are many ways to tally the casualties of the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression: hundreds of failed banks; millions of people out of work; trillions of dollars in home values and retirement savings vaporized.

But two years after the stunning events of September, 2008, there is another entry to the list. Those dark days and the months that followed saw institutions that appeared solid vanish overnight; cherished certainties about investing and the economy were swept away. The end result is that Americans, once enamoured with taking risks, are now shunning them. And when the world's great dice-rollers stay away, there are global consequences.

Across the US, the appetite for taking chances is in retreat. Individuals are saving more, spending less and hunkering down in more conservative investments. Companies, too, are demonstrating an abundance of caution, amassing record piles of cash but hesitating to spend it or to hire workers.

Such behaviour is, on one level, a much-needed tonic to the years that preceded the crash, where Americans borrowed and spent in a mode that might be described as blind to risk.

But something is also lost when the world's most stubbornly optimistic gamblers turn reluctant. In order for the current sluggish recovery to become robust, economists say, some of them will have to come back to the table.

Others suggest that the current environment squelches some of the productive craziness that has helped to make Americans prosperous over time. John Gartner, a psychologist who teaches at Johns Hopkins University, has argued that, thanks to successive waves of immigration, the US has more than its share of “hypomanic” personalities – energetic, grandiose types with a propensity for taking risks.

Such temperaments are fixtures in US history, from industrialist Andrew Carnegie to auto pioneer Henry Ford, from the dot-com evangelists of the late 1990s to the real-estate buccaneers of recent years. The downside is a built-in weakness for market bubbles, but the upside is entrepreneurial activity and innovation.

“Right now, we're in the ‘why did we listen to these idiots?' period,” Mr. Gartner says. Once enough time has passed, that will change. “We will fall for it again – in a good way and a bad way.”

The casino is closed

To get a sense for the average American's appetite for risk, it helps to pay a visit to a favourite casino: the stock market. So far this year, Americans have yanked $45-billion (US) out of mutual funds that invest primarily in US stocks, according to the Investment Company Institute. In the same period, they have plowed $185-billion into bond mutual funds.

The continued retreat from stock funds is not what you would expect to see at this point in time, notes Brian Reid, chief economist at the ICI, given that the market bottomed last year and the economy has pulled out of its tailspin.

It's “anomalous,” he says, but not exactly surprising. Investors have experienced two massive busts – first in technology stocks and then the 2008 crash – over the past decade. The end result is that U.S. stocks have effectively gone nowhere since 2000.

For now, America's long love affair with risk shows no signs of being rekindled. Indeed, the country appears caught in a vicious cycle where little growth in jobs reinforces the caution of consumers, who are reluctant to spend, which makes companies hesitate to hire.

In a recent discussion with analysts, John Chambers, chief executive officer of tech giant Cisco Systems, remarked how the company's customers had become unusually cautious. Even though they saw improvements in their own businesses, he said, they were not at all confident the trend would continue.

Breaking out of the loop of precautionary behaviour will be difficult, Doug Cliggott, chief equity strategist at Credit Suisse, noted in a report last month. A central feature of today's environment, he wrote, is “an acute sense of uncertainty – about future economic growth, about the security of our savings and the value of our assets, and about our governments' ability to keep their promises.”

Liquidate or perish

Kevin Hussey, a telecom executive and father of three who lives in Ashburn, Va., remembers that after Lehman Brothers collapsed, he chalked up some of the turmoil to overreaction. He traded in and out of some stocks, looking for bargains.

But as that fall stretched into spring, the economy tanked. Friends began losing jobs and weren't finding new ones. “You just kind of looked around at the landscape and understood that we're here for the long haul,” Mr. Hussey, 35, says. “Most of us planned for a rainy day, not a flood, and we're knee-deep right now.”

He took money out of stocks and placed it in safer investments. He doubled the amount of cash put aside in case he found himself out of work, enough to last a year. He made extra mortgage payments because he didn't want to be saddled with too much debt. The crisis, he says, was a wake-up call.

Ron Munn, a 69-year-old retiree from Green Valley, Ariz., remembers that as US banks began to totter in September, 2008, he decided that he had had enough. He sold all of his stock holdings – then about two-thirds of his portfolio – and now holds only bonds and cash.

He jokes that he's a “big sissy,” but he adds that he sleeps peacefully at night. Speaking of his conservative holdings, he says: “The return on them is terrible, but at the same time there's less risk.”

And in his situation, taking chances is exactly what he can't afford. “In retirement, if you lose it, it's goodbye Charlie,” he says. “You might find yourself a greeter at Wal-Mart.”

One of the striking aspects of the new sobriety is the way it cuts across generations. While it might be logical to expect people nearing retirement age to watch their step, the same isn't necessarily true of people in their 20s and 30s. Yet that's exactly what recent surveys of investors seem to indicate they are doing.

In a poll of affluent Americans conducted earlier this summer by the Bank of America, more than half of the individuals 18 to 34 years old described their tolerance for risk as “low.” The only other age group that demonstrated a similar amount of caution was people 65 and older.

A lost generation

Such pessimism is leading some to wonder whether the current cohort of investors will be a kind of “lost generation,” with a long-lasting distaste for risk-taking. This has happened before, particularly among Americans with first-hand experience of the Great Depression.

Scott Kays, a financial adviser in Atlanta, recalls that his father, who lived through the Depression, did not touch stocks for his entire working life. His mother, meanwhile, told him never to invest in the stock market except what he could afford to lose.

Unlike his parents, Mr. Kaye sees investing in stocks as a “very calculated risk.” But he adds that the US may very well be in the middle of a period where, for 15 to 20 years, the stock market more or less treads water.

Some experts say the current changes in behaviour – moving to more conservative investment strategies, cutting back on consumption – are happening on the margin and do not reflect a massive shift in the public mood.

Amar Bhide, a professor at Tufts University, has argued that risk-taking by consumers is a central feature of American life and a key input in the country's capacity to innovate. The failure in the housing bust came from a different quarter, he says.

“What is worrisome is not that people have become reckless – Americans have always been reckless – it's that the restraint, which ought to come through the banking system, was lost.”

When Mr. Bhide calls Americans “reckless,” he means it in a positive sense – a notion that tomorrow will be better than today; a willingness to try or buy or invest in something new, even when the risks and potential returns are nebulous.

That attitude is alive and well today, he notes, citing as one example the way that millions of iPads went flying off the shelves soon after they were introduced, even during a time of economic stress. “It's not clear to me what the heck it does,” he says of Apple's new device. “It's not the same as buying a $200,000 house, but it is nonetheless a risk.”

Joanna Slater is The Globe and Mail's New York bureau chief.

Now the counterpoint – never count America out:

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/world/americas/dont-worry-about-the-usa-there-will-always-be-another-gordon-gekko/article1703492/?cmpid=rss1
Don't worry about the USA – there will always be another Gordon Gekko
Rather than fear failure, Americans embrace it as a cost of doing business

Kevin Carmichael

Washington — From Saturday's Globe and Mail

Forget New York University economist Nouriel Roubini, Canada's David Rosenberg and the other prophets of doom who have become famous because their bearish world views allowed them to see trouble brewing in the years ahead of the 2008 financial meltdown.

The secret to why there will be another financial crisis sooner than any of the world's policy-makers care to admit lies with Laura Dimon, the second of three girls born to Wall Street titan Jamie Dimon, all of whom are now in their 20s. During testimony at the congressionally appointed Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission in January, Mr. Dimon sought to explain the origins of the deepest recession since the Great Depression by recounting a conversation with one of his children, whom New York magazine later identified as Laura.

“My daughter called me from school one day and said, ‘Dad, what's a financial crisis?'” Mr. Dimon began. “Without trying to be funny, I said, ‘It's the type of thing that happens every five to seven years.' She said, ‘Then why is everybody so surprised?'”

At this point, Mr. Dimon broke his mini-narrative and told his inquisitors the same thing he told his daughter: “We shouldn't be surprised.”

Mr. Dimon's tutorial might sound like a lesson in fatalism. It's more than that. What he passed on to his middle child was what separates U.S.-style capitalism from the type practised in Europe, Japan and Canada. Rather than fear failure, Americans embrace it as a cost of doing business. A nation that allowed Sylvester Stallone to make six Rocky movies knows that the path to glory means getting knocked down in the middle rounds. This is why Mr. Dimon and his counterparts at the other big banks come across as so frustratingly blasé about the damage they caused. They have been bloodied, but they know they will get back up.

In interviews this year about his upcoming sequel to 1987's Wall Street, director Oliver Stone has expressed dismay and bewilderment over the number of young people who have told him that his protagonist, Gordon Gekko, an extreme vulture capitalist who ends the first film in jail, inspired them to careers in finance.

But the notion that adrenalin can be turned to gold is alluring. America's financial elite believes risk is reward, not only for them, but for the greater economy, which grows because of their unique ability to get money to those who know how to put it to good use. If they overreach every five to seven years, well, chances are the innovations they have financed and the pension funds they have enriched still are better off than they would have been otherwise.

Finance ministers and central bankers have overcome technocratic dilemmas, assuaged regional jealousies and fought off an aggressive bank lobby to keep their promise to overhaul financial regulations. By agreeing to force banks to hold bigger reserves and putting stricter limits on lending, authorities have laid the groundwork for a sounder financial system.

However, they stopped short of containing what ultimately caused the financial crisis: greed. Capital requirements and leverage ratios will slow bankers and traders, but these measures won't shackle them. Wall Street will keep pushing because it's bred in the bone. London, Tokyo, Shanghai and Toronto will try to keep up because they will lose business if they don't. Eventually, someone, or many at once, will push too far.

There are ways to shackle the urge to go a step too far. Paul Volcker, the former chairman of the Federal Reserve, pushed hard to forbid commercial banks from seeking profit by trading. Simon Johnson, a professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and former chief economist at the International Monetary Fund, is adamant that big banks should be shrunk to such a size that their failure wouldn't jeopardize the entire financial system. Sebastian Mallaby, a journalist and author of the first extensive history of hedge funds, points out that nothing has been done to curb the incentive for shareholders to demand greater returns from bank managers

In November, the Group of 20 economic powers will settle on an impressive package of regulatory changes. But a better gauge on how long we have until another financial crisis will come later this month. Mr. Stone's Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps opens in theatres on Sept. 24.

Kevin Carmichael is the Report on Business's Washington correspondent.

On balance, I side with Carmichael; America remains the most creative and productive society on earth – perhaps the only really creative society on earth – and it is the kind of creativity that creates wealth.

But, while not as big a “sissy” as Ron Munn, a 69-year-old retiree from Green Valley, AZ (the fellow mentioned in the Liquidate or perish section of the first article) my portfolio has been carefully rebalanced: it has fewer stocks and more bonds – returns/yields are down but so, by a big factor, is risk. Equally, I am undertaking some major home renovations: I will get a tax break by selling some “losers” and I will enhance the value of my real property. I’m the same age as Mr. Munn and I have the same concerns; perhaps I’m a bit more optimistic.

I would advise (it’s free advice and it’s worth what you are paying for it) young people to heed the words of Scott Kays, a financial adviser in Atlanta (in the A lost generation section of the first article) and treat your investments as a “very calculated risk” with the emphasis on calculated and risk. His mother was right: if you cannot afford to lose it all then do not enter the stock market – buy bonds. But bonds will not give you the returns that young people need to prepare for their futures – you can and should take risks while you are young but make sure that you study and take good advice so that the risks you do take are well calculated.
 
You should post the previous in "Soldiers squander disability payouts" and sent the articles to VAC, because it just proves the point.
 
Busting the greatest bubble of all:

http://www.nationalreview.com/exchequer/246709/entitlement-bubble-bust-going-be-nightmare

The Entitlement Bubble: The Bust Is Going to Be a Nightmare
September 16, 2010 4:00 A.M.
By Kevin D. Williamson

In the course of arguing that our real national debt is around $130 trillion — as opposed to the official number of $14.7 trillion — I have frequently encountered the argument that I’m wrong to include unfunded entitlement liabilities in the total. Here’s a typical example from the comments to this post:

    Kevin Williamson, expected spending 75 years in the future, based on current policies and projects that are certain to change anyway, is NOT debt. No amount of calling it “debt” or calling it “our REAL debt” changes that fact. Project funding gaps are not debt. DEBT is debt.

About that, a few things.

The first and most obvious thing is that in much of the real world, liabilities of that type are defined as debt, as your favorite corporate accountant will tell you. One of the reasons that American companies started filing all those unhappy financial restatements after the passage of Obamacare was that they had a whole lot of new, measurable, real-world financial liabilities, and they are obliged to include those in their disclosures. As one of our commentators answered the above criticism:

    Many promises to pay are categorized as debt according to GAAP and accounting body authorities. If government were required to report like public companies a lot of the promises would show as debt. So if you don’t believe that GAAP correctly classifies debt and that the thousands of SEC filings are wrong it’s your prerogative, but you’d better keep your day job and not become a CPA or one responsible to produce SEC financials.

Maybe you object to the word “debt,” but it’s still $100 trillion or so on the wrong side of the balance sheet.

But there is a more important reason to worry about the entitlement shortfall. To understand it, it’s helpful to take a look back at the housing meltdown and its effect on the current economy. While it is true that a shocking number of homeowners currently are upside down on their mortgages, it’s also true that a lot of homeowners experienced only “paper losses” — they bought houses for $100,000, saw the value rise to $200,000, and then watched as it fell back down to $100,000 (to take a simplified example). People often pretend that these paper losses are meaningless: If the money never hit your checking account, the argument goes, you haven’t really lost anything. (And it’s not just households; I recently heard the same argument made about the Harvard endowment fund and its “pretend losses.”)

Here’s the problem: Those “paper losses” were preceded by “paper profits,” meaning people thought that they had an extra $100,000 in assets, and they made consumption, borrowing, investment, saving, and working decisions accordingly. The simplest illustration: Your $100,000 house, which is paid for, has gone up to $200,000 on the market at the top of the bubble. If you took out a $50,000 home-equity loan against 100 percent equity in your (at the time) $200,000 house, you still had $150,000 of equity, no mortgage, $50,000 in cash, and a $50,000 equity loan to pay off. If the market value of your house crashes back to $100,000, you still have no mortgage, $50,000 in cash, and a $50,000 loan to pay off, and the same house; you haven’t really lost anything (other than opportunity cost), since the house is still worth what you paid for it; and you only make your paper losses real if you sell the house while the market is down.

But anybody who thinks your financial situation hasn’t changed is nuts. Your equity debt has gone from 25 percent of the value of your house to 50 percent. Your credit profile has changed. Any other debts have just become significantly larger relative to the value of your biggest asset. (And your other assets, like your 401(k), probably are not in great shape, either.)

Whatever you’d planned to do with that $50,000, you probably are going to think twice about doing. If it was straight-up consumption, you’ll probably forgo the bass boat and pay back your loan. If it was for home improvements, why sink another $50,000 into a house that’s worth half of what it was, making a $150,000 investment in a $100,000 house? Your economic decisions will change.

But it’s not just you. The bigger problem — bigger because it’s harder to solve — is that somebody was planning to sell you that bass boat and those home improvements. You can buy one bass boat, but the guy at Bob’s Bass Boats doesn’t manufacture them one at a time. He’s counting on selling hundreds or thousands of bass boats to guys like you (that is, guys who are cashing in some of the gains from their residential real-estate investments). The suppliers and contractors and workers who stock and run Bob’s factory, the container ships that bring components from around the world, the people who service them — the whole system gets thrown into disarray. The capital Bob invested in factory tooling and whatnot is lost or radically devalued, and he has to make new investments to create whatever products he is going to sell in the new economic environment, e.g., less-fancy bass boats, or maybe paddle boats. (Or, if the Democrats continue to spend us into penury, those little inflatable floaty things for your arms.) The Austrian economists call that problem “malinvestment” — capital has been dedicated to uses that appeared productive but are not actually viable — and they blame them for recessions.

The problem with the business cycle under this analysis, you’ll notice, is not the bust — it’s the boom. That’s when the bad investment decisions are made, largely because political influence in the markets (housing policy, tax breaks, artificially cheap money and other interest-rate subsidies, risk subsidies, etc.) distorts economic calculation.


Which brings us back to the entitlements. It’s easy to say: Well, we’ll just raise the retirement age, or cut benefits, or means-test them, or raise taxes on the wealthy who receive them (which amounts to means-testing, but Democrats like that version better). And, yes, that probably is what we will do, eventually. But that does not get us out of the economic pickle: People have been making decisions for years and years — decisions about saving, investing, consuming, working, and retiring — based at least in some part on what are almost certainly faulty assumptions about what sort of Social Security, Medicare, and other benefits they will receive when they retire. When those disappear, a lot of consumption is going to have to be forgone — and a lot of capital dedicated to producing those goods and services for consumption will be massively devalued. Businesses will have to retrench, probably in a way that is more disruptive and more expensive than the housing-bubble recession necessitated.

This is the boom. The bust is going to be a nightmare.

– Kevin D. Williamson is deputy managing editor of National Review and author of The Politically Incorrect Guide to Socialism, to be published in January.
 
Toxic debt continues to plague the economies of the world, the US is simply the largest. Failing to purge this load of non performing debt is what crippled the Japanese economy at the end of the 1980's, they have had a deflationary 20 years because of that (remember when Japan was set to become the largest economy in the world and overtake the United States/Rule the Universe?)

The amount of private debt is pretty impressive (although nowhere near the monster unfunded liabilities problems of Civil Service union pensions, Medicare/Medicaid and Social Security, or the new debt monster of Obamacare), and will take a long time to digest at the current rate. A short sharp shock of defaults will probably be very painful in the short run, but free up a lot of unproductive capital assets and lead to a reinvigorated economy:

http://www.lesjones.com/2010/09/22/scariest-economic-fact-ive-seen-lately/

Scariest Economic Fact I’ve Seen Lately
Wednesday, September 22nd, 2010 | Economics | ShareThis
When the economic downturn began, consumer debt started declining. The conventional explanation was that consumers were tightening their belts. Taking on less debt. Repaying what they owed. Here’s a typical positive take on that news from December, 2009:

Consumers are strapped in a tight financial spot — this observation has appeared in many macroeconomic commentaries for several months.  There is good news from the Fed regarding this matter.  The Fed’s estimate of financial obligations of households for the third quarter shows a decline in the financial burden, stemming from lower interest rates and a reduction of consumer debt.  During the first quarter of 2008, the household financial obligation ratio stood at 18.86% of disposable income, which fell to 17.76% in the third quarter of 2009.

It turns out that the belt-tightening interpretation may not have been true in the least. If the data below is correct 99% of the reduction in consumer debt was due not to repayment of loans, but to non-repayment. The debts didn’t go away because they were paid off. They went away because they were written off as hopeless.

Wall Street Journal Blog - Defaults Account for Most of Pared Down Debt

There are two ways, though, that the debts can decline: People can pay off existing loans, or they can renege on the loans, forcing the lender to charge them off. As it happens, the latter accounted for almost all the decline. Our own analysis of data from the Fed and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. suggests that over the two years ending June 2010, banks and other lenders charged off a total of about $588 billion in mortgage and consumer loans.

That means consumers managed to shave off only $22 billion in debt through the kind of belt-tightening we typically envision. In other words, in the absence of defaults, they would have achieved an annualized decline of only 0.08%.

If you ask me why I’m pessimistic about the economy the answer is simple. There’s too much debt that will never be repaid. Home mortgages, commercial real estate, consumer and business credit - there’s an ocean of debt that is going to default. Those defaults will have tremendous economic consequences and will stunt economic growth until the bad debt works its way through the system.
 
Finally, some out of the box thinking. How well this plan will work in the US is an open question, but a similar plan in Canada might work very well given the much smaller size of our debt in both relative and absolute terms:

http://pajamasmedia.com/blog/can-we-privatize-the-national-debt/?singlepage=true

Can We Privatize the National Debt?
South Carolina's Jim Pratt, running against James Clyburn, is proposing such a plan.
October 10, 2010 - by Adakin Valorem
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Our national debt is at $13.5 trillion and growing. At current Treasury rates of around 2%, each billion dollars of debt costs around $20 million in annual interest payments. That means taxpayers are on the hook for $270 billion each year, with no reduction in principal.

With Treasury bonds paying only 2% interest, how do you suppose we are going to be able to attract buyers for all of our Treasury bonds? Obama’s answer is to “monetize” the debt — have the Federal Reserve buy Treasury bonds on the open market. But where does the Federal Reserve get its funds? They print it.

Simply printing money is only a short-term solution. Eventually, most of the foreign owners of our bonds are going to start noticing that the value of our inflated dollars are sinking faster than the 2% interest being paid. Pretty soon, the market is going to demand higher and higher interest rates in order to attract investors to our devaluating paper promises. And what do you think the cost to taxpayers will be when interest rates return to their historic rates of 4% to 6%? Suddenly that cost to taxpayers could easily become a trillion dollars each year.

Is there an alternative solution? Yes, and it’s exactly what a GOP candidate in South Carolina’s 6th Congressional District is proposing.

Instead of creating a VAT tax, or raising the rates on “the rich,” or simply ignoring the problem and following the historic path of places like Argentina, where it took a grocery sack full of cash to buy a Big Mac, why not simply eliminate the government’s debt obligation?

Why not do what real family households do when they are asset rich and cash-flow poor? Why not simply sell off some assets and pay down the debt? We all can banter back and forth over how much the national debt is, but does anyone have any idea what the nation’s assets are worth?

In 1995, the Claremont and Cato Institutes estimated the nation’s asset value at around $55 trillion. That was 15 years ago, when there were far fewer dollars in circulation diluting asset value. If we can assume a current asset value of, say, $60 trillion, then resolving a $10 or $12 trillion debt shouldn’t be that difficult.

Recall the S&L banking failure of the early 1990s. The Fed created the Resolution Trust Corporation (RTC) to liquidate billions in bank REO assets and was wildly successful.

What if we had a congressional “BRAC-” like committee that was given the task of selecting which military bases to close after the collapse of the former Soviet Union? Our new “BRAC” could choose one dollar out of every six dollars worth of federal assets and have Congress approve the sale and let a new RTC handle the liquidation.

Since there isn’t enough cash in M-1 or M-3 to facilitate the sale of that size, why not simply allow the “seller” to finance the sales of these assets? That way, in banking terms, we would convert the government’s “non-performing” assets into mortgages which could then be used to collateralize securities that are then exchanged or swapped for our outstanding Treasury bond instruments.

For example: I buy a federal office building for $5,000,000. I put, say, 10% down, and the seller (the Fed) finances the remaining $4,500,000 balance at a point above current Treasury bond rates.

Let’s say that your pension fund owns $4.5m worth of Treasury bonds. The Fed could then trade my mortgage for the pension fund’s Treasury bonds. The fund would get my monthly payments (at a point above whatever they were getting) and the Fed guarantees (underwrites) that mortgage providing the same security that was had when the fund purchased the Treasury bonds.

Instantly, the interest payments due on that $4.5m is no longer a federal government obligation, since the payments would be coming from the mortgagor instead of Washington. Repeat that scenario over several years for a trillion bucks worth of assets, and suddenly we’ve trimmed billions off the federal budget, each and every year! We can sell off a trillion bucks worth of assets each year until the federal debt is gone.

From a dynamic point of view, we would now have a multi-trillion dollar mortgage security industry, which in itself would generate trades, commissions, and taxes where none exist today. Another dynamic point would be the local property tax revenue that would be generated from these former federal assets that would now be in private hands. Ten trillion in newly taxable assets would generate almost $200 billion in new property taxes for local and state governments. That’s more than the budget of the Departments of Energy, Commerce, Agriculture, Education, and HUD combined. That windfall in local property taxes could easily replace the funding paid to the states by these federal agencies.

Right now there is a GOP candidate running for House Majority Whip James Clyburn’s seat in South Carolina’s 6th Congressional District. Jim Pratt (www.jimprattforcongress.com) has proposed just such a solution to our nation’s long-term debt situation. If elected, Mr. Pratt would propose the above solution as an alternative to saddling our children and grandchildren with our skyrocketing debt burden.

The big problem for his campaign — aside from Clyburn’s $3 million in campaign funds — is that the state’s GOP leadership has distanced themselves from Mr. Pratt partially due to his endorsements from local Tea Party and 9/12 group affiliates. In addition, they don’t want to “rock the boat” in a district that is majority African-American, especially since it was our state’s GOP legislators that carefully gerrymandered the district so as to separate black and white families that live in the same neighborhoods, just so they can preserve their surrounding Republican congressional districts.

That leaves Pratt out there flapping in the breeze, and leaves the rest of America stuck with James Clyburn’s checkered history as a rubber stamp for Democratic leadership. Pratt needs America’s help if he is to win this election and pursue his objectives: “privatizing the national debt,” reforming our tax code by implementing the FairTax, and phasing in a Chilean/Galveston-style Social Security reform.

Adakin Valorem is a real estate investment analyst for the federal government.
 
I have alluded to this before, but this, reproduced under the Fair Dealing provisions (§29) of the Copyright Act from the Globe and Mail, is a rather disturbing look the the insidious growth of corruption in the USA:

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/report-on-business/commentary/barrie-mckenna/corrupt-canada-were-small-time-compared-with-us/article1751953/
Corrupt Canada? We’re small-time compared with U.S.

BARRIE MCKENNA

From Monday's Globe and Mail
Published Sunday, Oct. 10, 2010

Okay, let’s all take a deep breath.

There’s no hard evidence that Quebec is Canada’s most corrupt province. And in spite of what you may think, the federal government isn’t a cesspool of bribery, cronyism and influence-peddling either.

Canadians should never be complacent or cynical. Left unchecked, corruption has a nasty way of working into the fibre of a society. Buying access, government jobs or contracts is intolerable, wherever it occurs.

But look at the rest of the world, including right next door, and Canada is remarkably clean.

The country routinely ranks in the top 10 of the least corrupt nations in the world, according to Transparency International’s Corruption Perception Index. Canada tied Australia in ninth spot in the 2009 ranking, just behind many of the Scandinavian countries. The U.S. was well back in 18th spot.

Canada also stacks up well compared with its closest rivals in the World Bank’s 2010 report on Worldwide Governance Indicators. The country scores a 97 per cent for its control of corruption – significantly better than all other Group of Eight countries. The United States  rates an 85 per cent.
Maybe it’s time for some perspective.

Consider the recent plea deal by Paul Magliocchetti, once one of the most powerful lobbyists in Washington. Last month, the 64-year-old quietly confessed to illegally funnelling $380,000 (U.S.) in campaign cash from defence contractors to a handful of members of Congress who control the Pentagon budget. He admitted to using a network of family members, friends and employees of his now defunct PMA Group lobbying outfit as proxies to get around campaign contribution rules.

In 2007 and 2008 alone, Mr. Magliocchetti’s clients won more than $200-million in government contracts.

A lot of people will pay to play in the murky world of U.S. defence contracting, and Mr. Magliocchetti was a player. That’s corruption on a grand scale.

All the ingredients for systemic corruption are firmly in place. Members of Congress need a steady flow of cash to finance their elections, which occur every two years in the House of Representatives (every six for Senators). Think big money. Between Jan. 1, 2009, and June 30, 2010, Senate candidates spent $311-million, more than any other 18-month period since at least 1991-92, according to the Federal Election Commission.

Unlike Canada, where the government and its agencies are solely responsible for procurement, members of key congressional committees can direct, or “earmark,” money to special pet projects, even companies. Until recently, lawmakers didn’t even have their fingerprints on these backroom deals.

The confluence of politicians who need money and companies eager for big contracts is irresistible. To make matters worse, lawmakers and their staffs can move with few restrictions from the halls of Congress to the lobbying shops on K Street, and sometimes back again, cementing this unholy alliance.

Eliminating the temptations has proven very difficult, despite several rounds of campaign finance reform. Critics want Congress to go further, by limiting total contributions from companies that receive earmarked contracts.

So far, Congress has balked. Lawmakers might rightly argue that it’s akin to unilateral disarmament. After all, there’s still no limit on the cash that candidates can raise and spend.

By comparison, our corruption seems, well, small-time.

That doesn’t mean we should ignore the recent Canadian scandals, including political meddling in the appointment of Quebec judges and allegations of corruption in the awarding of a $9-million (Canadian) renovation project for Parliament Hill.

Clearer rules and more transparency would help. The federal government already has pretty restrictive lobbying rules, including an independent arbitration process to handle allegations of abuse. The Harper government recently moved to tighten them further by barring MPs and senators from working as lobbyists for five years after leaving office and expanding lobbying reporting requirements.

The lesson of the Quebec judges scandal is to immunize bench appointments from the people who finance and run political campaigns.

That’s all reasonable and good.

But let’s not overreact. Governments would be unwise to overregulate a system that, by and large, is already clean.

The risk is that government becomes even more bogged down in rules and red tape that needlessly slows the work it does.

Here’s something to be thankful for on this Thanksgiving Day: It could be much worse, and the proof is right next door.


Why does it matter?

First: These is substantial, clear evidence that there is a direct relationship between honesty in government (transparency more or less requires or, at least induces honesty) and prosperity. Look at the top ten. There isn’t a poor country in the lot. Iceland is in the midst of pulling itself out of a financial mess but, unlike, say, Portugal, Italy, Greece and Spain, it didn’t lie to its own people about the problem: thus there is considerable public support for the kinds of efforts the Icelanders will have to make to ensure their own recovery.

Second: There is equally substantial and equally clear evidence that corruption (lack of transparency) constrains economic growth: consider China and India. If China ever gets an open, honest administration (local, provincial and national) it will, likely and quickly, become the globe's sole hyperpower – easily displacing the USA and EU combined in every important measure of power.

But there are two points in McKenna’s column that matter:

1. Canada, although cleaner than the USA, has no room for complacency; and

2. Knee-jerk regulation is not the best or, usually, even a good way to address some of the systemic issues that bedevil the USA. The problem, for the USA, China and Canada – all of which already have plenty of laws on the books – is enforcement and enforcement is, in large measure, an attitudinal problem with the national elites. So long as the most influential Americans, Chinese and Canadians tolerate or, worse, benefit from corruption there will be too little pressure to enforce the (largely adequate) laws all, including China, by the way, have on the books.   
 
Politics infuences economies (but we knew this already, didn't we...):

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/10/22/AR2010102202786.html

Think this economy is bad? Wait for 2012.
By Greg Ip
Sunday, October 24, 2010; B03

We're barely two years past the banking crisis, still weathering the mortgage crisis and nervously watching Europe struggle with its sovereign debt crisis. Yet every economic seer has a favorite prediction about what part of the economy the next crisis will come from: Municipal bonds? Hedge funds? Derivatives? The federal debt?

I, for one, have no idea what will cause the next economic disaster. But I do have an idea of when it will begin: 2012.

Yes, an election year. Economic crises have a habit of erupting just when politicians face the voters. The reason is simple: They are born of long-festering problems such as lax lending, excessive deficits or an overvalued currency, and these are precisely the sort of problems that politicians try to ignore, hide or even double down on during campaign season, hoping to delay the reckoning until after the polls close or a new government takes office. Perversely, this only worsens the underlying imbalances, making the mess worse and the cost to the economy -- in lost income and jobs -- much higher.

Election-year prevarication has a storied history in the United States. In the summer of 1971, President Richard Nixon imposed wage and price controls in hopes of suppressing inflation pressure until after the 1972 election. He succeeded, but the result was even worse inflation in 1973 and a deep recession starting that fall.

During the 1988 presidential campaign, Vice President George H.W. Bush and Democratic nominee Michael Dukakis largely ignored the mounting losses in the nation's insolvent thrifts for fear of admitting to taxpayers the price of cleaning them up. The delay allowed the losses and the price tag to grow, and the burden of bad loans hamstrung the economy into the early 1990s.

Go back to 1932 for an even more dramatic example: After defeating Herbert Hoover that year, Franklin D. Roosevelt refused during the four-month transition to say whether he'd support the lame-duck administration's policy for fixing the banks and keeping the dollar linked to gold. Depositors fled banks and investors dumped the dollar, resulting in another wave of bank failures that vastly worsened the Depression.

But perhaps the most poignant example of election-year myopia came in 2008. After agreeing to an ad hoc bailout of Bear Stearns that March, then-Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson knew he needed authority and money to deal with such situations. But he didn't ask Congress for either, reasoning that lawmakers would never approve something so contentious just months from a presidential election. (He was probably right.) So when Lehman Brothers foundered that fall, Paulson, with no orderly way to wind the company down, let it fail.

He then proposed the Troubled Assets Relief Program to deal with the resulting chaos, but the House, gripped by an election-year aversion to bailouts, voted it down. The defeat sent markets into a tailspin. Lawmakers changed their minds and passed the TARP, but the intervening panic worsened the economic pain.

Elections are even more of a trigger for crises in other countries. When Greece's national election campaign began in September 2009, the government claimed that the budget deficit was more than 6 percent of gross domestic product, high but manageable. Yet shortly after the socialist government took power, it revealed that the deficit was in fact closer to 12.5 percent. The previous government, it turned out, had been issuing optimistic forecasts and hiding some of its spending. As foreign investors' confidence in Greece evaporated, interest rates on its debt soared. To avoid default, it was forced to seek a bailout from the International Monetary Fund and the European Union. The Greek economy will probably shrink at least 3 percent both this year and next.

Mexico's financial crises regularly coincide with presidential elections. In early 1982, the government knew that its deficit was too large and that its currency was overvalued. Investors were pulling their money out, draining the nation's foreign currency reserves. Government officials hoped to postpone action until after the July election, and the Federal Reserve helped by making short-term dollar loans to Mexico designed solely to make its reserves appear larger.

"We were trying to buy time until the election and new government. We failed," recalls Ted Truman, a Fed official at the time. Money continued to flee, and a month after the election, Mexico announced it couldn't repay its bank loans, triggering the Latin American debt crisis, a severe recession and what many called the region's "lost decade."

A similar dynamic brought on Mexico's election-year "tequila crisis" of 1994, which forced a massive and sudden devaluation of the peso and required tens of billions of dollars in international assistance.

Even when a government tries to do the right thing, electoral politics make it difficult. During the 1997 Asian financial crisis, South Korea negotiated a $55 billion loan from the International Monetary Fund, the World Bank and others to avoid defaulting on its private bank loans; in return, it promised reforms such as closing weak banks. But confidence evaporated and the currency plunged when the leading opposition candidate in that year's presidential election attacked the agreement.

A similar situation occurred in the election to succeed Brazil's President Fernando Henrique Cardoso, who had brought stability to his country during the 1990s after decades of inflation and default. When it became apparent that his handpicked successor would lose in 2002 to leftist challenger Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, Brazil's stock markets and currency plunged, and the government lost the ability to issue long-term bonds. Inflation and interest rates shot up, hammering the economy.

These countries actually offer an uplifting lesson: The damage wrought by the crises helped build support for solutions. In Korea in 1997 and Brazil in 2002, populist challengers ultimately embraced their predecessors' reform plans. Greece's socialists campaigned last year promising to raise public salaries, invest in infrastructure and help small businesses. But they are now undertaking painful reforms, such as raising retirement ages and injecting more competition into protected industries such as trucking.

Of course, these countries are relatively young democracies with legacies of economic mismanagement. It couldn't happen here anymore, right? Think again. Yes, this year the United States passed the sweeping Dodd-Frank Act, seeking to make financial crises a thing of the past. But there are countless problems that can develop into disasters (think Foreclosure-Gate). And Dodd-Frank is useless if the next crisis involves our tattered government finances.

Which brings us to 2012.

Let me take a stab at what the next crisis will be. Our deficit, as a share of GDP, is at a peacetime record, and the debt is climbing toward a post-World War II record. Thoughtful economists agree on the response: Combine stimulus for our fragile economy now with a plan to slash the deficit and stabilize the debt when the recovery is more entrenched.

Yet the approaching November midterms have made it impossible to advance a serious proposal for doing that. Congress has been unable to pass a budget, and the government is operating on a short-term "continuing resolution." President Obama's plan for reining in the national debt consists of appointing a bipartisan commission that won't report until after the midterms. Even if the commission can agree on a realistic plan to chop the deficit, the polarized state of Congress suggests slim odds of adoption.

With neither party able to muster the support to get serious about reducing the deficit, both may prefer to kick the problem down the road to after 2012, in hopes that the election hands one of them a clear mandate.

For now, there's enough risk of Japanese-style stagnation and deflation that U.S. interest rates could remain very low for a while yet. But if that risk fades, investors in U.S. Treasury bonds will want to know how we'll get our deficits and debt under control -- and could demand higher interest rates to compensate for the uncertainty. By then, though, the 2012 campaign may be upon us. The Republican nominee will assail Obama's fiscal record and promise a determined assault on the debt. Obama will respond by blaming George W. Bush and promising to unveil his own plan once he's reelected. Neither will commit political suicide by specifying which taxes they'll raise or which entitlements they'll cut.

Will investors trust them, or will they start to worry that the endgame is either inflation or default, two tried-and-true ways other countries have escaped their debts? If it's the latter, we'll face a vicious circle of rising interest rates and budget deficits, squeezing the economy and potentially forcing abrupt and painful austerity measures.

And if, instead, the markets continue to give us the benefit of the doubt, relieving our politicians of the need to act: Circle 2016 on your calendar.

Greg Ip is U.S. economics editor of the Economist and the author of "The Little Book of Economics: How the Economy Works in the Real World."
 
Fundimentals. If the United States (or anyone else for that matter) can either ramp up energy production massively or make huge gains in efficiency then GDP will also grow massively:

http://nextbigfuture.com/2010/10/approximate-per-capita-wealth-of.html#more

U.S. energy consumption in 2004 was estimated at 99.74 quadrillion Btus (1.05 × 10^11 GJ) (referred to as 'quads') from all sources (US DoE). Total GDP was estimated at $11.75 trillion in 2004 and US GDP per capita was estimated at roughly $40,100 in 2004 (CIA Factbook). Using a population of 290,809,777 (as per US Census Bureau). This would produce an Energy Intensity of 8,553 Btus (9 MJ) consumed to produce a single dollar of GDP (about 9,023 kJ/$).

The USA cut energy intensity in half over 55 years (1949-2004) from 1.55 to 0.7.
 
Economic news does not look good. This should be of concern to everyone, and the political repercussions will be intense as everyone tries to blame everyone else. I doubt anyone will be able to take effective action in this climate, unless we look to out of the box solutions like "State Compacts" or privatizing the debt. (Selling off large chunks of property owned by State and the Federal government would also have an effect; read The Mystery of Capital and contemplate the effect of releasing all that "dead" capital back into the productive economy...

http://blogs.forbes.com/investor/2010/11/05/look-at-the-real-numbers-the-recession-never-ended/

Look At The Real Numbers, The Recession Never Ended
Nov. 5 2010 - 11:13 am | 1,094 views | 0 recommendations | 4 comments
Posted by John Mauldin

70% GDP's growth came from growth in inventories

The gross domestic product number came in at a rather soft 2% growth, up slightly from last quarter’s 1.7%. From the standpoint of creating new jobs, 2% just doesn’t cut it. We need about 100,000 to 125,000 new jobs a month just to keep up with population growth and a 2% GDP will not give us half that, as we saw last quarter. Most economists say you need about 3.5% GDP growth to get solid job reports.

The prospect for getting that robust a number any time soon is not looking good, as the soft number mentioned above looks even softer when you delve into the details. Seventy percent of the total growth in GDP came from growth in inventories, up by over 40% from the second quarter. Normally a build in inventories is a positive, as it shows confidence on the part of businesses. But business confidence surveys have not been all that good, which suggests that businesses may be cautious, as this cycle does not seem to resemble past cycles.

(Well, except for Apple. Everyone’s going to get an iPad for Christmas. You haven’t got one? It is so way cool. My new favorite toy and fast becoming an indispensable business tool.)

How likely are we to see that same type of growth in inventories in the last quarter?

Not very, I think.

Sidebar: For the non-geek reader, when inventories are increasing, that is a “plus” for GDP. When those inventories are sold, that reduces GDP. That may seem backwards, but that is just the way the math works. So if inventories are sold in the fourth quarter (think Christmas sales), that will be a drag on the GDP numbers.

In every previous post-recession cycle, GDP growth would typically be around 5% at this time. But this is not a business-cycle recession; it’s a deleveraging, credit-crisis recession. Thankfully, those do not show up all that often, but sadly one has come home to roost in much of the developed world this decade. The aftermath of credit-crisis recession is a slow growth period of six to eight years, punctuated by more volatility and more frequent recessions.

What economists call the “final sales” portion of GDP has just been growing at less than 1% over the last 18 months. That is a lukewarm number, to say the least. That is not the stuff of a strong GDP.

And export growth is slowing, which rather surprises me, as the dollar has been weaker. If imports rise and exports do not rise as much, as has been the case, that is a drag on GDP. State and local governments reduced GDP by 0.2%, and this12 % of the economy is likely to be under continued pressure, not adding to GDP for quite some time.

It would not surprise me to see GDP growth be closer to 1% in the fourth quarter, unless we start to see evidence of more inventory building. That is not good for jobs, personal income, tax collections needed to cover deficits at all levels, or consumer confidence. My worry is, what if we get some kind of shock to our economic body when growth is so anemic?

Not Finer for the “99er”
I had dinner recently with David Rosenberg. He is beginning to look at the possible effects from what he calls the “99ers” going off extended unemployment benefits. I knew this was coming but had not really looked into the fine print. He wrote me later:

“The looming expiry of the emergency unemployment benefits in the U.S. poses a very large risk to aggregate personal income over the next few quarters. Currently, combined with state programs, someone who loses their job is entitled to 99 weeks of unemployment benefits (a “99er”). However, the extended benefits are set to expire on November 30, and our back-of-the-envelope calculations shows nearly a million 99ers will be cut off in December alone, with the remainder (about 3 to 4 million) falling off the rolls by April.

“Given that the average weekly unemployment check is about $300/week, this amounts to nearly $80 billion (annualized) loss of aggregate income over the next few quarters. This means that personal income could fall by 1.0% QoQ annualized for each of the next three quarters, starting in the fourth quarter. The 2% QoQ real GDP estimates penciled in for fourth quarter 2010 to second quarter 2011, will look far too optimistic if such a loss of income does occur. Given that material downside risk to growth going forward, we intend to do more detective work on this file.”

Government checks of one form or another are about 20% of total personal income in the U.S. Will the lame-duck Congress extend those benefits? Will they extend the Bush tax cuts? I recently spoke to with Suze Orman. She said she thinks they should raise the limit to $500,000 or $1 million. That higher number would be a reasonable compromise, in my humble opinion. Will the Republican Congress  agree when they come back?

I don’t want to get into the small-business person making $300,000 and living in a very volatile business climate where they feel the need to save rather than invest and create new jobs. These guys need all the working capital they can get. And let’s be clear, this year’s “profits” becomes next year’s working capital when you are a small business owner. Your credit line at the bank just isn’t cutting it anymore.


Be Careful What You Wish For

Let’s look down the road. I think we will at best be in a Muddle Through Economy for the next two years. Unemployment is going to be above 8%, best-case, in 2012. If the Bush tax cuts are not extended, in my opinion it is almost a lock that we go into recession next year, unemployment goes to 12%, and underemployment gets even worse. That is not a good climate for Obama and the Democrats in 2012.

Republicans ran on promises that they will not cut Medicare and Social Security, but are going to reduce spending and get us closer to a balanced budget. But everyone knows that the only way to get the budget into some reasonable semblance of balance will be to either cut Medicare benefits or increase taxes.

There are only the two options. Yes, you can reform medical care, and I think much of Obamacare should certainly be repealed, but that does not get us anywhere close to dealing with the real issue, and that’s a fact. There are tens of trillions of unfunded liabilities in our future, which must be dealt with.

Let me be very clear on this. I am not really worried about the supposed $75 trillion in unfunded Medicare liabilities in our future. That is an impossible number. If something can’t happen it won’t happen. Long before we get to that apocalypse, we find a bond market that simply refuses to fund U.S. debt at anywhere near an affordable cost. Crisis and chaos will ensue. Remember the quote that led this letter?

    People only accept change when they are faced with necessity, and only recognize necessity when a crisis is upon them. – Jean Monnet

The simple reality is that if we the people of the U.S. want Medicare, in even a reformed and more efficient manner, we must find a way to pay for it. It will not be cheap. Raising income taxes on the “rich” is not enough. You have to go back and raise income taxes on the middle class, too. Oh, wait, that will be a drag on the economy and consumer spending. And in any event it will not be enough.

The only real way to pay for those benefits will be a value-added tax, or VAT. And while it could be introduced gradually, let there be no mistake that it will be a drag on economic growth. Government spending does not have a multiplier effect on the economy. It is at best neutral. What creates growth is private investment, increases in productivity, and increases in population. That’s it. Tax increases have a negative multiplier.

A significant VAT along with our current income taxes will give us an economy that looks more like the slow-growth, high-unemployment world of Europe. Can we figure out how to deal with that? Sure. But it is not growth-neutral.

Republicans in 2013 will be like the dog that caught the car. What do you do with it? The last time they (embarrassingly, we) really screwed it up. The defining political question of this decade will not be Iraq or Afghanistan, or the environment or any of a host of other problems. The single most important question will be what do you do with Medicare? Cut it or fund it? Reform it for sure, but reform is not enough to pay for the cost increases that will come from an increasingly aging Boomer generation.

There is no free lunch. At some point, you cannot run on “no cuts in Medicare” and “no new taxes” and be honest. At least not this decade. Maybe when we have cured cancer and Alzheimer’s and heart disease and the common cold at some future point, medical costs will go down, but in the meantime we have to deal with reality.
You may be able to fool the voters, but you will not be able to fool the bond market. Not dealing with reality will create a very vicious response. Ask Greece.

And that is the national conversation we must have with ourselves. There is a cost to government. There is a cost to extended Medicare benefits. (I am blithely assuming we deal with all the “easy” stuff like Social Security, and make real cuts in other areas.)

For my international readers, this is an issue that the entire developed world must deal with. We all have our problems created from years of very poor choices, overleveraging, and deficits. It will not be easy. I must admit to smiling when I see the protests in France over raising the retirement age from 60 to 62. Really? Amazing.

And while France causes me to smile and shake my head, the refusal on the part of the U.S. leadership to give more than lip service to solutions that might disrupt their slim majority of voters is maddening.

This election will change very little in real terms, the things that matter, like whether the U.S. economy can grow or will face a very real crisis and a true depression. That potential is in our future, and it is coming at us faster than you think.
 
Thucydides said:
Fundimentals. If the United States (or anyone else for that matter) can either ramp up energy production massively or make huge gains in efficiency then GDP will also grow massively:

http://nextbigfuture.com/2010/10/approximate-per-capita-wealth-of.html#more

It's also no surprise that the US hit domestic peak oil production in the 1970s, around the same time they went off the gold standard, began exporting much of their domestic manufacturing, and hit many of the problems they have now.

It's rather unfortunate that the bailout has essentially financed consumption and been obsessively tied to rebuilding a bloated housing market instead of focusing on some major structural problems which is dragging the US economy along and slowing the recovery. Canadians, for their part, have had the very mediocre EAP which seems to be more about putting up signs and less about developing new infrastructure.

And yes, of course politics and economics are linked - we've known this since the term "political economy" was coined. Economics in the classical sense is based off of rather faulty Enlightenment-era assumptions about social science and the essentially rational essence of human nature, which has proven to be false. People are not necessarily rational, especially in terms of long-term problem solving and especially in large groups, and this makes economics as a completely independent field very difficult to keep in its old paradigm.

Unfortunately, the west is having a very difficult time doign what it needs to do, which is to curtail retail spending and an emphasis on soft goods to rebuild the rotten heavy industrial core of the economy on a 21st-century model. Until this happens, we're going ot have to keep financing retail purchases - a very flimsy base for economic progress!
 
Elsewhere I posted a long article by Joseph Nye which cautioned us not to count America out of the global power game but which also raised a red flag about the US economy.

Here, reproduced, in three parts, under the Fair Dealing provisions (§29) of the Copyright Act from Foreign Affairs is another long article, also by some people who merit our attention, on that threat:

Part 1

http://www.foreignaffairs.com/articles/66778/roger-c-altman-and-richard-n-haass/american-profligacy-and-american-power
American Profligacy and American Power
The Consequences of Fiscal Irresponsibility

By Roger C. Altman and Richard N. Haass
November/December 2010

Summary:
The U.S. government is incurring debt at an unprecedented rate. If U.S. leaders do not act to curb their debt addiction, then the global capital markets will do so for them, forcing a sharp and punitive adjustment in fiscal policy. The result will be an age of American austerity.

ROGER C. ALTMAN is Chair and CEO of Evercore Partners. He was U.S. Deputy Treasury Secretary in 1993-94. RICHARD N. HAASS is President of the Council on Foreign Relations. He was Director of Policy Planning at the U.S. State Department in 2001-3.

The U.S. government is incurring debt at a historically unprecedented and ultimately unsustainable rate. The Congressional Budget Office projects that within ten years, federal debt could reach 90 percent of GDP, and even this estimate is probably too optimistic given the low rates of economic growth that the United States is experiencing and likely to see for years to come. The latest International Monetary Fund (IMF) staff paper comes closer to the mark by projecting that federal debt could equal total GDP as soon as 2015. These levels approximate the relative indebtedness of Greece and Italy today. Leaving aside the period during and immediately after World War II, the United States has not been so indebted since recordkeeping began, in 1792.

Right now, with dollar interest rates low and the currency more or less steady, this fiscal slide is more a matter of conversation than concern. But this calm will not last. As the world's biggest borrower and the issuer of the world's reserve currency, the United States will not be allowed to spend ten years leveraging itself to these unprecedented levels. If U.S. leaders do not act to curb this debt addiction, then the global capital markets will do so for them, forcing a sharp and punitive adjustment in fiscal policy.

The result will be an age of American austerity. No category of federal spending will be spared, including entitlements and defense. Taxes on individuals and businesses will be raised. Economic growth, both in the United States and around the world, will suffer. There will be profound consequences, not just for Americans' standard of living but also for U.S. foreign policy and the coming era of international relations.

THE ROAD TO RUIN

It was only relatively recently that the United States became so indebted. Just 12 years ago, its national debt (defined as federal debt held by the public) was in line with the long-term historical average, around 35 percent of GDP. The U.S. government's budget was in surplus, meaning that the total amount of debt was shrinking. Federal Reserve officials even publicly discussed the possibility that all of the debt might be paid off.

At that time, the United States had no history of excessive federal debt. This was not surprising since, on fiscal matters, it has always been a conservative nation. The one exception was the special and sudden borrowing program to finance U.S. participation in World War II, which caused debt to briefly exceed 100 percent of GDP in the mid-1940s, before beginning a steady return to traditional levels.

But over the first ten years of this century, a fundamental shift in fiscal policy occurred. When the George W. Bush administration took office, it initiated, and Congress approved, three steps that turned those budget surpluses into large deficits. The 2001 and 2003 tax cuts, which will reduce federal revenue by more than $2 trillion over ten years, had the biggest impact. But adding the prescription-drug benefit to Medicare also carried a huge cost, as did the war in Afghanistan and, even more so, the war in Iraq.

These steps were also accompanied by the outbreak of an especially partisan period in American politics. In Congress, the Democratic center of gravity moved left, and the Republican one moved right. This caused the historically bipartisan support for fiscal restraint to vanish. In particular, both the individuals and groups working to lower taxes and those working to expand entitlements were strengthened.

These anti-tax and pro-spending forces joined with President George W. Bush to terminate the strict budget rules of the 1990s. The result was a swelled deficit. Because there was no longer a requirement that any spending increase or tax cut be paid for by a corresponding and deficit-neutralizing budget action, the giant tax cuts were not offset. The "hard cap" on nondefense domestic discretionary spending (which limited increases in such spending to the rate of inflation) also disappeared.

The consequences were predictable. Federal spending grew at two and a half times the rate it did during the 1990s. Two large rounds of tax cuts substantially reduced the ratio of federal revenue to GDP. The overall budget shifted dramatically, from a surplus representing one percent of GDP in 1998 to a deficit equal to 3.2 percent of GDP in 2008. Public debt per capita rose by 50 percent, from $13,000 to more than $19,000 over this period. The eight years of the Bush administration saw the largest fiscal erosion in American history.

Then, on top of this, the financial and economic crisis struck in 2008, and the United States confronted the possibility of a 1930s-style depression. Washington correctly chose to enact a large stimulus program and rescue tottering financial institutions. So far, such efforts have worked, at least to the degree that a depression was averted. A recovery (albeit one that is halting and weak by historical standards) is under way. But the gap between spending and revenues has widened much further. Revenues, which had averaged 20 percent of GDP during the 1990s, fell to nearly 15 percent, while spending reached 25 percent in 2009. The deficit for fiscal year 2009 hit a staggering $1.6 trillion, or nearly 12 percent of a GDP of just over $14 trillion. In nominal terms, it was by far the largest in U.S. history. The deficit for 2010, at $1.3 trillion and nine percent, was nearly as huge.

The medium-term outlook is poor. The Congressional Budget Office forecasts $9.5 trillion of cumulative deficits through 2020 -- in other words, roughly $1 trillion per year. The deficit-to-GDP ratio should decrease briefly during the middle of this period, as modest economic growth boosts revenues. But as 2020 approaches, it will rise again, back to nearly six percent, the consequence of sharply higher entitlement costs and slow GDP growth. President Barack Obama's own budget shows this same trend -- the first time a U.S. president has ever projected deficits that go back up.

Federal debt is the dollar-for-dollar result of deficits, and it has essentially tripled over this past decade, from $3.5 trillion in 2000 (35 percent of GDP) to $9 trillion in 2010 (62 percent of GDP). The Congressional Budget Office now sees it reaching 90 percent by 2020.

End of Part 1
 
Part 2

THE BIGGEST BORROWER

It is important to understand the impact of all this debt. As it grows, interest rates inevitably rise. As they do, the U.S. government's annual interest expense -- the cost of borrowing money -- will rise from one percent of GDP to four percent or more. At that point, interest expense would rival defense expenditures. And it would exceed all domestic discretionary spending, a category that includes spending on infrastructure, education, energy, and agriculture -- in effect, anything other than entitlements and national security. The U.S. Treasury would need to borrow a staggering $5 trillion every single year, both to finance deficits and to refinance maturing debt.

Yet the real outlook for deficits and debt is much worse than these forecasts. For one thing, the debt that the United States effectively guarantees but that is not included in official totals is almost equal to the Treasury Department's stated $9 trillion total. In particular, the debt of government-sponsored enterprises is another $8 trillion. The biggest of these are the essentially bankrupt housing finance agencies, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. They have been placed into federal conservatorship, and for all practical purposes, their debt is equivalent to U.S. Treasury debt. The American taxpayer stands fully behind it.

State and local governments also owe huge amounts, on the order of $3 trillion. And again, Washington indirectly stands behind much or all of it. This sector is deeply distressed, with the largest state, California, recently issuing IOUs. Moreover, many state and municipal pension systems use an antiquated pay-as-you-go funding approach, which has left them underfunded by another $1 trillion.

The post-2020 fiscal outlook is downright apocalyptic, for two reasons. First, the aging of the U.S. population will drive sharp increases in health care costs (and at the same time, more Americans will be retired). Second, federal interest expense will rise exponentially, as the Treasury's borrowing costs grow with the debt. The Congressional Budget Office projects that official federal debt (excluding government-sponsored enterprises) could hit 110 percent of GDP by 2025 and 180 percent by 2035. Adjusting these forecasts for the inevitably slower growth that would accompany such quickly rising debt levels means hitting those stratospheric ratios sooner.

Why is this scenario so dangerous? One reason is that a large amount of federal borrowing would eat up the stock of private capital that is available to finance investment. A higher and higher percentage of personal savings would be diverted to purchasing government debt and away from productivity-enhancing investments in equipment and technology. This would shrink the base of productive capital and flatten GDP and family incomes. As more and more debt piled up, growth would slow and Americans' standard of living would fall.

In addition, interest expense would become so large as to crowd out whole categories of federal spending. Budgets for research, education, and infrastructure, to name but three examples, would inevitably decline in inflation-adjusted terms. Washington's capacity to respond to domestic crises, such as the recent recession, would also fade. All of this would further undermine families' incomes.

Another problem is the inherent instability associated with the world's largest economy being the world's biggest borrower. This has turned the global dynamic of savings and borrowing on its head. For decades, most developed nations generated current account surpluses, or near surpluses, consistent with their export and investment strength. The poorer nations, for their part, ran deficits, as they imported capital to finance development.

But today, the United States is the biggest borrower, and developing nations are its biggest lenders. The data are imperfect but suggest that the central banks of emerging countries have been adding between $700 billion and $900 billion to their dollar portfolios in each of the past three years. Most of these additions have taken the form of U.S. Treasury securities. In other words, these central banks are lending to the United States. The biggest lender by far has been China.

Some argue that the United States' ability to borrow such vast amounts is a strength, but that view is misguided. China and the other lenders have no strategic reason to continue holding U.S. dollars. And even though they would suffer losses if, for example, the dollar fell sharply, the consequences of a much weaker dollar would be far worse for the United States. The longer Washington borrows from these countries, the greater the likelihood that they will purchase fewer U.S. Treasuries or even stop adding to their holdings of them altogether. At that point, presumably, the terms of U.S. borrowing would become increasingly onerous, causing a rise in interest rates and thus further slowing down the U.S. economy.

But it is precisely because this fiscal outlook is so frightening that the very prospect of it could trigger actions that would interrupt what is in train. Two scenarios are the most likely. The desirable one would involve proactive intervention by U.S. politicians. Realizing the dangers, Obama and leaders in Congress would negotiate a deficit-reduction package that pulls the country out of its fiscal slide. Such an intervention happened in 1990 and again in 1993 but on a much smaller scale and in a less partisan age.

This time, politicians could take the initiative on their own, or more likely, be pressed to do so by an unhappy electorate. Recent polls indicate that public discontent over deficits and debt is sharply rising, but it is not clear that this translates into support for specific tax and spending changes. Indeed, the magnitude of the tax increases and spending cuts required makes such a voluntary deal unlikely. This judgment is only underscored by the fact that a sufficient number of Democrats and Republicans in Congress could not agree on the structure of the National Commission on Fiscal Responsibility and Reform -- a body created to identify fiscally sustainable policies. In the end, it had to be created by executive order. (The commission is due to report December 1, 2010.)

The more likely path, however, is a solution imposed on the United States by global capital markets. Such market forces have descended on Washington before, during the 1979 energy crisis, and have repeatedly rejected the financial policies of other countries over the ensuing 30 years, including those of the United Kingdom, Russia, Mexico, and, most recently, much of southern Europe.

There is no evidence of such an advancing storm today. Dollar interest rates are near record lows, and the currency itself is trading relatively calmly. Futures markets are not sending any disconcerting signals either. The weak outlook for growth and inflation, the euro's own troubles, the reserve status of the dollar, and the safe-haven character of Treasury bonds all may conspire to maintain this calm for some time, possibly for two or three years. But history strongly suggests that today's calm will not last in the face of the United States' disastrous fiscal outlook.

The events of 1979 are instructive. That was the time of President Jimmy Carter, stagflation, and the Iranian oil embargo. The value of the dollar had been slowly weakening over several months. Amid all that, Carter introduced his new budget, which contained a larger deficit than markets expected (although tiny by today's standards). That was the last straw. The dollar plunged, triggering an international financial crisis. Within one week, markets had forced the Federal Reserve to raise interest rates sharply and Carter to retract his budget, generating a U-turn in U.S. economic policy.

Despite the size of its economy and the reserve status of its currency, the United States was not immune from global financial rejection then. And it is not immune now. One way or the other, by action or reaction, there will be a profound shift in U.S. fiscal policy if the U.S. government continues to overspend. Deficits will be cut sharply through a combination of big spending cuts, tax increases, and, quite possibly, re-imposed budget rules. No category of spending or taxpayers will be spared.

DEBT AND CONSEQUENCES

It makes a big difference whether the new fiscal rectitude in the United States arises from domestic leaders making difficult decisions themselves or from international pressures imposing these decisions. The proactive approach would allow the United States to manage its transition into austerity, avoiding both severe disruption at home and a sudden reduction in its position abroad.

The forced result would be ugly and punitive. Collapsing confidence in Washington's ability to control its debt could trigger a dollar crisis among global financial markets, as there was in 1979, with the Federal Reserve compelled to raise interest rates way beyond what domestic needs alone would require. And the spending and tax adjustments might be sudden and indiscriminate, with little warning to the countless injured parties.

Furthermore, the absence of a proactive solution would expose the United States to exploitation by the foreign governments lending to it. Approximately 50 percent of U.S. Treasury debt is now held abroad -- 22 percent of it by China alone. In normal times, China would have a stake in U.S. economic success, both to prop up a large market for Chinese exports (central to avoiding the potentially destabilizing political effects of rising Chinese unemployment that would result from a decline in exports) and to maintain the value of its vast dollar holdings.

But what if times were not normal? During a crisis over Taiwan, for example, Chinese central bankers could prove more dangerous than Chinese admirals. A simple announcement that China was cutting back its dollar holdings could put huge pressure on the U.S. dollar and/or interest rates. This would be similar to the way the United States used economic pressure against the United Kingdom during the 1956 Suez crisis, when Washington refused to support an IMF loan to the British government unless it agreed to withdraw its military forces from Egypt. That threat worked, as an overextended United Kingdom could not sustain its currency against foreign pressure. What goes around could easily come around.

But the impact of the United States' skyrocketing debt will not be limited to the behavior of markets or central bankers. Federal spending will decrease once the inevitable fiscal adjustment occurs, and defense spending will go down with it. Long insulated from economic considerations, defense spending now stands at $550 billion a year. (It comes to $700 billion when the costs of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan are included.) This total represents some 15 percent of all federal spending and approximately five percent of GDP. The latter ratio is not high by historical standards; at the height of the Cold War, for example, defense spending amounted to a considerably higher percentage of GDP. But the defense budget will be cut because every category of spending (other than interest expense) will be cut. Politics will dictate that the pain be shared. In other words, cuts in entitlements and domestic discretionary spending will only be achievable if they are coupled with reductions in defense expenditures.

The good news is that total defense spending could be reduced by five percent or even ten percent without materially weakening the United States' security if (and admittedly it is a big if) the cuts are done intelligently and are applied to current operations as well as the procurement of weapons. The United States continues to develop and procure expensive advanced conventional combat arms beyond what is justified by its commitments, likely scenarios, and the gap in defense capabilities between it and potential adversaries. The United States spends more on defense than China, Russia, Japan, India, and the rest of NATO combined. The question is whether congressional politics (often distorted by the dispersing of weapons factories across different congressional districts) will allow the reductions to be done correctly.

Military operations need to be subject to cuts, too, if defense spending is to come down significantly without reducing the number of people in uniform. Together, the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan cost more than $150 billion a year. The combat role of U.S. forces in Iraq has ended, and only 50,000 troops remain there. Additional savings can be found as the U.S. military withdraws from Iraq. But there is a strategic argument for maintaining some U.S. forces in Iraq beyond December 2011, the date the two countries agreed would mark the end of any armed U.S. presence there. Such a presence would lessen the odds that Iraq's internal security situation would dramatically erode, and it would deter foreign intervention -- namely, by Iran. Nevertheless, the new fiscal order in Washington could require Iraq to pay for all or at least part of that presence, or go without it.

Shrinking budgets are likely to have an even greater impact on the future of the U.S. role in Afghanistan. The war there is now more than twice as expensive as the war in Iraq, and the U.S. commitment to Afghanistan has been increasing. Obama has pledged to begin drawing down U.S. forces there this coming July, but the signs are growing that any initial drawdown in U.S. force levels may be a token one.

Unknown are the pace of any subsequent reductions and the scale of any residual force. But a U.S. military presence in Afghanistan at or close to 100,000 soldiers will cost around $100 billion a year. The coming fiscal austerity and the need to find cost savings in the defense sphere argue against maintaining that expense. Indeed, economic and strategic arguments both call into question the counterinsurgency approach of fighting the Taliban and the nation-building approach of investing heavily in the development of the Afghan government's capabilities and institutions. They suggest a more modest counterterrorism approach: going after the terrorists directly with drones, cruise missiles, and special forces, much as the United States is doing in Yemen and Somalia.

The new budgetary reality will also alter U.S. defense policy beyond these two conflicts. There will be fewer resources available to undertake wars of choice along the lines of Iraq and what has become a war of choice in Afghanistan. Nation building is a time-consuming, labor-intensive, and expensive exercise, and for these and other reasons, it is unlikely to be repeated on a scale approximating that of Iraq or Afghanistan for the foreseeable future. This does not mean that there will not be wars of choice -- a conflict with Iran is a possibility given its nuclear ambitions -- but rather that such wars will be both less common and more limited in their aims. Rarer still will be large-scale humanitarian interventions similar to those the United States conducted in Somalia and the Balkans in the 1990s.

The coming budgetary pressures will also affect spending on foreign aid, intelligence, and homeland security. The $30 billion foreign assistance account will be one target for cuts, as will the $15 billion State Department budget. Intelligence (estimated to cost more than $40 billion annually) and homeland security (above $50 billion annually) will also face increased scrutiny. The consequences of any reductions will vary. As with defense, when it comes to intelligence and homeland security capabilities, it matters less how much is cut than what is cut.

More than just financial resources will be affected. The United States' global influence, in all of its facets, will suffer. Washington's ability to lead on global economic matters, such as its recent urgings in the G-20 for more stimulus spending, will be compromised by the coming plunge into austerity. Similarly, the United States' voice within the IMF and other multilateral financial institutions will be weakened. Nor will Washington have the capacity to engineer direct financial interventions, as it did with the 1994 rescue of Mexico.

A related cost of the United States' debt has even greater consequences: the diminished appeal of the American model of market-based capitalism. Foreign policy is carried out as much by a country's image as it is by its deeds. And the example of a thriving economy and high living standards based on such capitalism was a powerful instrument of American power, especially during the Cold War, when the American model was competing with Soviet-style communism around the world.

Now, however, the competition comes from Chinese-style authoritarianism: a top-heavy political system married to a directed and hybrid form of capitalism. The recent stellar performance of China's economy in the midst of Western economic troubles has enhanced the appeal of its system. Reinforcing this trend is the reality that the U.S. approach (one associated with a system of little oversight and regulation) is widely seen as risk-prone and discredited after the recent financial crisis. If the United States is unable to address its own debt crisis and a solution is forced on it, then the appeal of democracy and market-based capitalism will take a further blow.

This shift in power from the United States, Europe, and Japan will accelerate the emergence of a nonpolar world, in which power is widely diffused among numerous states and nonstate actors. In particular, it will raise the global clout of the major emerging nations, including China, Brazil, India, and others. The relative position of the United States will inevitably decline, as will its ability to lead and shape international relations. No one else appears willing and able to assume this role. The result of reduced U.S. power will be a world that is messier and, in the end, less safe and less prosperous.

End of Part 2
 
Part 3

THE WAY AHEAD

How can the United States avoid a type of rejection by global financial markets that would cause a truly sharp decline in its global role? The answer is conceptually simple but, in domestic political terms, acutely difficult to implement.

The only way to stabilize the U.S. debt-to-GDP ratio is to move the budget into primary balance -- in other words, a position where revenues match spending, except for interest expense. Since the prospect of debt's reaching 90 percent of GDP by 2020 or sooner is far too risky, primary balance should be achieved well before that date, say, by 2015. This would mean that debt would likely peak at around 70 percent of GDP and gradually come down as deficits were cut and growth (ideally at more robust levels) was compounded.

That, however, will require reducing Washington's budget deficits by approximately $300 billion a year -- a large amount by any standard. What makes this plan even more challenging is the reality that it must occur in a time of high unemployment. Economics and politics may come together to argue for a comprehensive package: any stimulus, including tax cuts, provided for near-term economic growth must be paired with medium- and long-term reductions in the deficit. There should also be a place for policies -- such as expanding trade -- with the potential to augment growth and, as a result, increase revenues and employment without raising taxes or increasing the deficit. But the politics are difficult. And even if they could be overcome, the budgetary effect, while helpful, would not be enough to reduce the deficit substantially.

Realistically, a responsible budgetary trajectory cannot be achieved through spending cuts alone. Since interest expense cannot be reduced, and since entitlements for the truly needy should not be, a spending-only strategy would have a brutal effect on all other categories of spending. Both defense spending and all aspects of domestic discretionary spending would need to be reduced dramatically.

The only sound approach, then, is a mix of spending reductions and tax increases. It would be wise to rely on spending adjustments, including entitlement reform, for a substantial part of the total. The new British government, to provide one guideline, is aiming for a three- or four-to-one ratio of spending cuts to tax increases. Some would argue that such ratios rely too much on reducing spending, but whatever the ratio, raising taxes is unavoidable.

Unfortunately, the politics of tax policy have become deeply partisan in the United States, where tax increases are now debated in theological terms. In historical terms, this is odd, since federal income-tax rates were consistently higher throughout the twentieth century than they are now. During the 1960s, for example, the top bracket was nearly twice today's level. That said, there is no reason that tax increases should come about through income taxes alone; there are many other options, including introducing a value-added tax, adjusting business and investment-related taxes, restoring an estate tax, and reducing certain exemptions.

The bottom line is that it will be extraordinarily difficult to pass a deficit-reduction program of the required magnitude. Obama and congressional leaders appointed the Bipartisan Budget Commission several months ago to recommend a program for achieving primary balance in the federal budget. Whether its conclusions are well received will say much about the prospects for a proactive solution, as will the extent to which Obama makes deficit and debt reduction a priority in the run-up to the 2012 election.

AT HOME AND ABROAD

The United States is fast approaching a historic turning point: either it will act to get its fiscal house in order, thereby restoring the prerequisites of its primacy in the world, or it will fail to do so and suffer both the domestic and the international consequences. It is not completely surprising that the United States is at such a juncture; other great powers throughout history have seen their circumstances reduced. But the reasons for this situation are different from what many anticipated.

Just over two decades ago, the historian Paul Kennedy published his influential study of the rise and fall of great powers. His thesis of "imperial overstretch" was simple but important: the costs of carrying out an ambitious and expensive overseas policy can undermine the economic foundations of a state. His warning bears some relevance to the position of the United States today, in that the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq have contributed to the economic pressures it faces.

But imperial overstretch is not the real issue here. The combined cost of the two wars accounts for only 10-15 percent of the country's annual deficit and much less than that of its cumulative debt, and the principal reasons for questioning the Iraq war several years ago and for questioning the war in Afghanistan today are more strategic than economic. It is fiscal, economic, and political failures at home that are threatening the ability of the United States to exert the global influence that it could and should. In other words, it is not reckless American activity in the world that jeopardizes American solvency but American profligacy at home that threatens American power and security. The American people and their elected representatives postpone solving the country's debt addiction at their great peril.


In discussing the evident need to restrict military budgets and, consequently, military operations, Altman and Haass are following along a trail broken by Michael Mandelbaum about which I and Thomas Friedman have alluded in these fora.

But the big problem, which Altman and Haass also discuss, is the division in American politics. In the past 20 years or so the divide between left leaning Democrats and right wing Republicans has hardened. The Republicans want to stop spending on a few trivial thing but want to keep increasing the the military budget and they oppose all tax increases; the Democrats want to increase social spending and they, too, oppose most tax increases. Thus, there is no support for any meaningful spending cuts and, equally, no support for taxes. America's leaders want to spend more and earn less – which means borrowing.
 
US deficit calculator here: http://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2010/11/13/weekinreview/deficits-graphic.html

I solved the deficit with a plan based on 85% spending cuts and 15% tax increases (although I chose the tax reform route as much as possible.)

Funny, if I can solve the deficit in about 15 min....
 
Thucydides said:
US deficit calculator here: http://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2010/11/13/weekinreview/deficits-graphic.html

I solved the deficit with a plan based on 85% spending cuts and 15% tax increases (although I chose the tax reform route as much as possible.)

Funny, if I can solve the deficit in about 15 min....

Pretty funny, unless you consider that the US economy would probably spiral out of control with 85% spending cuts.
 
Without knowing Thucydides' methodology, the task isn't daunting.

US government spending is approximately $3.5 Trillion; receipts are about $2.4 Trillion leaving a deficit of something like $1.1 Trillion. He needed to find around $900 Billion in spending cuts and $200 Billion in tax increases to balance the budget. A simple 7% cut in discretionary spending, i.e. no cuts at all to payments on the interest on the national debt, social security, medicaid and medicare, will get you more than $900 Billion and I'm pretty sure the US, even DoD, could survive it.

Now the national debt is another problem and those 7% cuts cannot be repealed in the next budget; in fact, year after year, new cuts must be made and those mandatory programmes, all except interest payments on the debt, need to be 'reformed,' to make them affordable, too.
 
My methodology: http://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2010/11/13/weekinreview/deficits-graphic.html?choices=zx6ph018
 
An alternative methodology here.

The blogger and many coments note this calculator is very restrictive in the number of choices available, but even with these limitations, it is still possible to zero out the deficit without making drastic cuts to defense or rsdical tax increases (which would slow down the economy and make the problem far worse in the long run).

Since the sponsor is the NYT, we can assume the choices offered are reflective of what people of the Liberal Demcrat demographic they court are willing to put on the table, so there is lots of starting room here.
 
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