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US Economy

This article Do we really have a revenue problem? illustrates why spending is the problem for the US.

Look at the second chart.  Join the far left and far right endpoints of the revenue line.  Notice that the line does not fall much below the long-term "wiggle" with the "bubbles" ignored; I suppose the long-term average for 2011 would not lie more than $300B to $500B above the actual revenue.  Also note that the chart is in adjusted (2010) dollars, which illustrates conclusively that the US is essentially awash in revenue.  Finally, note the spending line.  In 2006 their spending was above the bubble peak, and well above the long-term baseline.  In 2011, they have jacked up their spending even further, while revenues fell back to and most likely below the long-term baseline.  Spending is the problem.
 
"When the Government doesn't work; we must build ourselves another Government like the Declaration of Independence says to when the old one ain't working – just – just a little farther out West." -JFK movie. That's my .02 cents worth.
 
Sadly, no amount of charts, historical data or anecdotal evidence will sway people wedded to the idea that there is always more tax revenue to be had, somewhere.

This is really more about "class warfare" than rational economics; and the envy driven desire to strip away the gains and property of the wealthy will probably be a force which will never be abated so long as humans reamain human. Since the really wealthy know how to shelter their wealth or can engage in crony capitalism (or join the ruling oligarchy), then the brunt will end up falling on the middle class who have less ability to shelter their wealth and much less time to do so (having to earn a living).

Class warfare is a dangerous weapon, however. The wealth has been shifting for decades, and now government employees with job security, generous pay, benefits and pensions will be the targets, since they now have visibly become the wealthy segment of the middle class. (A recent National Post article points out that if government employees were paid the same wages as their private sector counterparts, there would be an annual wage saving of $19 billion/year in Canada). How long before voters turn upon them?
 
Warren Buffet will save America.  Too bad he is too old to be Pres!  Long live Warren!
 
An older article but worth repeating, the scale and scope of the problem is simply beyond imagination (to give you an idea, the actual debts and liabilities are almost three times the accumulated stock of wealth in the United States)

http://www.nationalreview.com/articles/print/229942

The Other National Debt
This article originally appeared in the June 21, 2010, issue of NR.

About that $14 trillion national debt: Get ready to tack some zeroes onto it. Taken alone, the amount of debt issued by the federal government — that $14 trillion figure that shows up on the national ledger — is a terrifying, awesome, hellacious number: Fourteen trillion seconds ago, Greenland was covered by lush and verdant forests, and the Neanderthals had not yet been outwitted and driven into extinction by Homo sapiens sapiens, because we did not yet exist. Big number, 14 trillion, and yet it doesn’t even begin to cover the real indebtedness of American governments at the federal, state, and local levels, because governments don’t count up their liabilities the same way businesses do.

Accountants get a bad rap — boring, green-eyeshades-wearing, nebbishy little men chained to their desks down in the fluorescent-lit basements of Corporate America — but, in truth, accountants wield an awesome power. In the case of the federal  government, they wield the power to make vast amounts of debt disappear — from the public discourse, at least. A couple of months ago, you may recall, Rep. Henry Waxman (D., State of Bankruptcy) got his Fruit of the Looms in a full-on buntline hitch when AT&T, Caterpillar, Verizon, and a host of other blue-chip behemoths started taking plus-size writedowns in response to some of the more punitive provisions of the health-care legislation Mr. Waxman had helped to pass. His little mustache no doubt bristling in indignation, Representative Waxman sent dunning letters to the CEOs of these companies and demanded that they come before Congress to explain their accounting practices. One White House staffer told reporters that the writedowns appeared to be designed “to embarrass the president and Democrats.”

A few discreet whispers from better-informed Democrats, along with a helpful explanation from The Atlantic’s Megan McArdle under the headline “Henry Waxman’s War on Accounting,” helped to clarify the issue: The companies in question are required by law to adjust their financial statements to reflect the new liabilities: “When a company experiences what accountants call ‘a material adverse impact’ on its expected future earnings, and those changes affect an item that is already on the balance sheet, the company is required to record the negative impact — ‘to take the charge against earnings’ — as soon as it knows that the change is reasonably likely to occur,” McArdle wrote. “The Democrats, however, seem to believe that Generally Accepted Accounting Principles are some sort of conspiracy against Obamacare, and all that is good and right in America.” But don’t be too hard on the gentleman from California: Government does not work that way. If governments did follow normal accounting practices, taking account of future liabilities today instead of pretending they don’t exist, then the national-debt numbers we talk about would be worse — far worse, dreadfully worse — than that monster $14 trillion–and–ratcheting–upward figure we throw around.

Beyond the official federal debt, there is another $2.5 trillion or so in state and local debt, according to Federal Reserve figures. Why so much? A lot of that debt comes from spending that is extraordinarily stupid and wasteful, even by government standards. Because state and local authorities can issue tax-free securities — municipal bonds — there’s a lot of appetite for their debt on the marketplace, and a whole platoon of local special-interest hustlers looking to get a piece. This results in a lot of misallocated capital: By shacking up with your local economic-development authority, you can build yourself a new major-league sports stadium with tax-free bonds, but you have to use old-fashioned financing, with no tax benefits, if you want to build a factory — which is to say, you can use tax-free municipal bonds to help create jobs, so long as those jobs are selling hot dogs to sports fans.

Also, local political machines tend to be dominated by politically connected law firms that enjoy a steady stream of basically free money from legal fees charged when those municipal bonds are issued, so they have every incentive to push for more and more indebtedness at the state and local levels. For instance, the Philadelphia law firm of Ballard, Spahr kept Ed Rendell on the payroll to the tune of $250,000 a year while he was running for governor — he described his duties at the firm as “very little” — and the firm’s partners donated nearly $1 million to his campaign. They’re big in the bond-counsel business, as they advertise in their marketing materials: “We have one of the premier public finance practices in the country, participating since 1987 in the issuance of more than $250 billion of tax-exempt obligations in 49 states, the District of Columbia, and three territories.” Other Pennsylvania bond-counsel firms were big Rendell donors, too, and they get paid from 35 cents to 50 cents per $1,000 in municipal bonds issued, so they love it when the local powers borrow money.

So that’s $14 trillion in federal debt and $2.5 trillion in state-and-local debt: $16.5 trillion. But I’ve got some bad news for you, Sunshine: We haven’t even hit all the big-ticket items.

One of the biggest is the pension payments owed to government workers. And here’s where the state-and-local story actually gets quite a bit worse than what’s happening in Washington — it’s the sort of thing that might make you rethink that whole federalism business. While the federal government runs a reasonably well-administered retirement program for its workers, the states, in their capacity as the laboratories of democracy, have been running a mad-scientist experiment in their pension funds, making huge promises but skipping the part where they sock away the money to pay for them. Every year, the pension funds’ actuaries calculate how much money must be saved and invested that year to fund future benefits, and every year the fund managers ignore them. In 2009, for instance, the New Jersey public-school teachers’ pension system invested just 6 percent of the amount of money its actuaries calculated was needed. And New Jersey is hardly alone in this. With a handful of exceptions, practically every state’s pension fund is poised to run out of money in the coming decades. A federal bailout is almost inevitable, which means that those state obligations will probably end up on the national balance sheet in one form or another.

“We’re facing a full-fledged state-level debt crisis later this decade,” says Prof. Joshua D. Rauh of the Kellogg School of Management at Northwestern University, who recently published a paper titled “Are State Public Pensions Sustainable?” Good question. Professor Rauh is a bit more nuanced than John Boehner, but he comes to the same conclusion: Hell, no. “Half the states’ pension funds could run out of money by 2025,” he says, “and that’s assuming decent investment returns. The federal government should be worried about its exposure. Are these states too big to fail? If something isn’t done, we’re facing another trillion-dollar bailout.”

The problem, Professor Rauh explains, is that pension funds are used to hide government borrowing. “A defined-benefit plan is politicians making promises on time horizons that go beyond their political careers, so it’s really cheap,” he says. “They say, ‘Maybe we don’t want to give you a pay raise, but we’ll give you a really generous pension in 40 years.’ It’s a way to borrow off the books.” The resulting liability runs into the trillions of dollars.

Ground Zero for the state-pension meltdown is Springfield, Ill., and D-Day comes around 2018: That’s when the state that nurtured the political career of Barack Obama is expected to be the first state to run out of money to cover its retirees’ pension checks. Eight years — and that’s assuming an 8 percent average return on its investments. (You making 8 percent a year lately?) Under the same projections, Illinois will be joined in 2019 by Connecticut, New Jersey, and Indiana. If investment returns are 6 percent, then 31 U.S. states will run out of pension-fund money by 2025, according to Rauh’s projections.

States aren’t going to be able to make up those pension shortfalls out of general tax revenue, at least not at current levels of taxation. In Ohio, for instance, the benefit payments in 2031 would total 55 percent of projected 2031 tax revenues. For most states, pension payments will total more than a quarter of all tax revenues in the years after they run out of money. Most of those pensions cannot be modified: Illinois, for instance, has a constitutional provision that prevents reducing them. Unless there is a radical restructuring of these programs, and soon, states will either have to subsidize their pension systems with onerous new taxes or seek a bailout from Washington.

So how much would the states have to book to fully fund those liabilities? Drop in another $3 trillion. Properly accounting for these obligations, that takes us up to a total of $19.5 trillion in governmental liabilities. Bad, right? You know how the doctor looks at you in that recurring nightmare, when the test results come back and he has to tell you not to bother buying any green bananas? Imagine that look on Tim Geithner’s face right now, because we still have to account for the biggest crater in the national ledger: entitlement liabilities.

The debt numbers start to get really hairy when you add in liabilities under Social Security and Medicare — in other words, when you account for the present value of those future payments in the same way that businesses have to account for the obligations they incur. Start with the entitlements and those numbers get run-for-the-hills ugly in a hurry: a combined $106 trillion in liabilities for Social Security and Medicare, or more than five times the total federal, state, and local debt we’ve totaled up so far. In real terms, what that means is that we’d need $106 trillion in real, investable capital, earning 6 percent a year, on hand, today, to meet the obligations we have under those entitlement programs. For perspective, that’s about twice the total private net worth of the United States. (A little more, in fact.)

Suffice it to say, we’re a bit short of that $106 trillion. In fact, we’re exactly $106 trillion short, since the total value of the Social Security “trust fund” is less than the value of the change you’ve got rattling around behind your couch cushions, its precise worth being: $0.00. Because the “trust fund” (which is not a trust fund) is by law “invested” (meaning, not invested) in Treasury bonds, there is no national nest egg to fund these entitlements. As Bruce Bartlett explained in Forbes, “The trust fund does not have any actual resources with which to pay Social Security benefits. It’s as if you wrote an IOU to yourself; no matter how large the IOU is it doesn’t increase your net worth. . . . Consequently, whether there is $2.4 trillion in the Social Security trust fund or $240 trillion has no bearing on the federal government’s ability to pay benefits that have been promised.” Seeing no political incentives to reduce benefits, Bartlett calculates that an 81 percent tax increase will be necessary to pay those obligations. “Those who think otherwise are either grossly ignorant of the fiscal facts, in denial, or living in a fantasy world.”

There’s more, of course. Much more. Besides those monthly pension checks, the states are on the hook for retirees’ health care and other benefits, to the tune of another $1 trillion. And, depending on how you account for it, another half a trillion or so (conservatively estimated) in liabilities related to the government’s guarantee of Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, and securities supported under the bailouts. Now, these aren’t perfect numbers, but that’s the rough picture: Call it $130 trillion or so, or just under ten times the official national debt. Putting Nancy Pelosi in a smaller jet isn’t going to make that go away.

– Kevin D. Williamson is deputy managing editor of National Review, in whose June 21, 2010, issue this article first appeared.
 
Obama's going to win this one, and he should.

Boehner is a good man with good ideas but the is hamstrung by the juvenile delinquent Neanderthals in the Tea Party.

Of course there must be spending cuts - big, painful cuts to entitlements that are as deeply ingrained in the USA as our equivalents are here in Canada, but they must be pared down, by the trillions. But there must be some more revenue, too, and it is there that Obama has captured the high ground and outflanked the amateurs from the Tea Party. Americans don't like the super rich; they don't like the bankers who flew to DC is private jets; they don't like 'big oil;' nor do they like any of the "super rich." It is true and fair to call the rich 'job creators,' but it is lousy politics when unemployment is stuck at 9% or more. In fact Republicans should, as I think Boehner wants to do, embrace "close the loopholes." It is a good, or at least not too bad, plan. Obama is offering 4 dollars in cuts for every dollar in new revenue found by closing tax loopholes. The smart move would be to bargain him up to 5 or 6 or even 7 to 1; the dumb move, the dumbass Tea Party move is to tell him "no."

There is, now, a slightly better chance (than on Sunday) that the US will be politically paralyzed and will default on its debt and when Americans take stock of that disaster they will, correctly, blame the Republicans and they will return Obama in 2012 and then another Democrat in 2016 - all because of the dimwits in the Tea Party.

Jesus wept.

 
Yeah, I agree, I love the timing on his calling their bluff......they can't help but take the blame....no matter which way it goes, he's just won his second mandate..... :nod:
 
>But there must be some more revenue, too, and it is there that Obama has captured the high ground and outflanked the amateurs from the Tea Party.

But there are actually two ways to increase revenue: increase the slice of the pie, or increase the size of the pie.  The "amateurs" want to increase the size of the pie by adopting appropriate policies (ie. reduce and eliminate what lies at the heart of the "regime uncertainty" buzzword that has lately become popular).  A major component of the deficit squeeze is due to revenue collapse (which is true in Canada also).  Trying to solve the problem by taking a larger slice of a smaller pie means the slice will have to be very much larger - it is difficult.  Even most Democrats seem to agree with the conventional economic wisdom that increasing taxes under current circumstances will militate against increasing the revenue base (and the increased slice will doubtless trigger responses which shrink the pie, thus negating part of the increased slice).  Finally, nearly everyone's long term strategy is to assume a sudden recovery (insert hoped-for miracle here) to something like the prior revenue base followed by historical rates of growth.

So: course of action "A" is both difficult and harmful and does not promote the long-term strategy.  Course of action "B" has plenty of suggestions on deck (ie. we know what could be done, therefore it is relatively "easy"), is helpful, and supports the long-term strategy.  Yet "A" is the one that supposedly educated and intelligent people all over the leftosphere believe is a prudent course of action to increase revenue while those who favour "B" are fools, idiots, ideologues, etc, etc.  I think the roles are reversed.

Selection and maintenance of the aim, and main effort: grow the revenue base; it is the vital ground.
 
Brad Sallows said:
>But there must be some more revenue, too, and it is there that Obama has captured the high ground and outflanked the amateurs from the Tea Party.

But there are actually two ways to increase revenue: increase the slice of the pie, or increase the size of the pie.  The "amateurs" want to increase the size of the pie by adopting appropriate policies (ie. reduce and eliminate what lies at the heart of the "regime uncertainty" buzzword that has lately become popular).  A major component of the deficit squeeze is due to revenue collapse (which is true in Canada also).  Trying to solve the problem by taking a larger slice of a smaller pie means the slice will have to be very much larger - it is difficult.  Even most Democrats seem to agree with the conventional economic wisdom that increasing taxes under current circumstances will militate against increasing the revenue base (and the increased slice will doubtless trigger responses which shrink the pie, thus negating part of the increased slice).  Finally, nearly everyone's long term strategy is to assume a sudden recovery (insert hoped-for miracle here) to something like the prior revenue base followed by historical rates of growth.

Conventional economic wisdom actually doesn't say that at all.

It does say that all tax hikes are not the same - and that tax hikes which lower household discretionary spending are problematic.  Restoring some form of estate tax and taxing the "rich" who the American public are getting increasingly fed up with it seems is less likely to have an impact - particularly if the tax structures can be set up in such a way as to spur investment of the funds  - to get money off the sidelines and into the economy as it were.  If businesses invest a bit in getting going again, and employment increases, then demand will follow - it's kind of a Mexican standoff, but if a tax system can incent a move, then the engine might just turn over.

Ideally, we want to put money in the hands of the "working" and "middle" class, because they're the ones that spend it.
 
Redeye said:
Conventional economic wisdom actually doesn't say that at all.

It does say that all tax hikes are not the same - and that tax hikes which lower household discretionary spending are problematic.  Restoring some form of estate tax and taxing the "rich" who the American public are getting increasingly fed up with it seems is less likely to have an impact - particularly if the tax structures can be set up in such a way as to spur investment of the funds  - to get money off the sidelines and into the economy as it were.  If businesses invest a bit in getting going again, and employment increases, then demand will follow - it's kind of a Mexican standoff, but if a tax system can incent a move, then the engine might just turn over.

Ideally, we want to put money in the hands of the "working" and "middle" class, because they're the ones that spend it.


I don't agree:

1. Estate taxes mostly take useful money out of productive hands and put it into unproductive ones;

2. The "rich" are both too easy a target and too hard to define; politicians almost always target everyone except the really, super rich;

3. Closing a lot of tax loopholes, especially for small, unpopular segments of society, is politically smart - but not economically useful. That's why Obama is right, he doesn't care if he ever does the right things for the USA and its economy but he does want to serve his constituency;

4. The working and middle classes are simply a slow-through mechanism: their expenditures eventually get into the hands of the rich, who build and create jobs, etc. The best, in the long run the only way to put money in the hands of the working and middle classes is to create the political environment in which the "rich" (who are, very often just a subset of the middle class) want to build enterprises and create jobs for the working class. Governments don't, indeed cannot do that - at least not on the necessary scale.

 
To suggest, however, that the rich are a monolithic group, all of whom "create jobs" is rather false, I don't think you can find any research to support that.

A modest estate tax, while not really my preference overall, is still a way to capture some revenue if income taxes can't rise.  I like consumption taxes better, of course.

E.R. Campbell said:
I don't agree:

1. Estate taxes mostly take useful money out of productive hands and put it into unproductive ones;

2. The "rich" are both too easy a target and too hard to define; politicians almost always target everyone except the really, super rich;

3. Closing a lot of tax loopholes, especially for small, unpopular segments of society, is politically smart - but not economically useful. That's why Obama is right, he doesn't care if he ever does the right things for the USA and its economy but he does want to serve his constituency;

4. The working and middle classes are simply a slow-through mechanism: their expenditures eventually get into the hands of the rich, who build and create jobs, etc. The best, in the long run the only way to put money in the hands of the working and middle classes is to create the political environment in which the "rich" (who are, very often just a subset of the middle class) want to build enterprises and create jobs for the working class. Governments don't, indeed cannot do that - at least not on the necessary scale.
 
Redeye said:
...
A modest estate tax, while not really my preference overall, is still a way to capture some revenue if income taxes can't rise.  I like consumption taxes better, of course.


Advocating an estate tax puts you foursquare against Locke and, therefore, makes you an illiberal. An estate tax is a complete violation of the ancient, bedrock common law principle that "a man's home is his castle." The state has no right to seize a man's home on his death (but a legal creditor might) and it, equally, has no right to seize his other property either - not just because the poor bugger died and his neighbours are jealous of his heirs . It is theft, pure and simple, but because it is theft proposed by the political left it is all gussied up as a tax.
 
E.R. Campbell said:
Advocating an estate tax puts you foursquare against Locke and, therefore, makes you an illiberal. An estate tax is a complete violation of the ancient, bedrock common law principle that "a man's home is his castle." The state has no right to seize a man's home on his death (but a legal creditor might) and it, equally, has no right to seize his other property either - not just because the poor bugger died and his neighbours are jealous of his heirs . It is theft, pure and simple, but because it is theft proposed by the political left it is all gussied up as a tax.

All tax can be painted as theft in some form.  For the record, I'm not really a fan of estate taxes for precisely the reason suggested (part of my living is made helping people structure affairs to minimize the much more modest probate fees in Canada, after all) - but in a desperate situation where it's touch to find ways to increase revenue it has to be looked at - if even as a stop gap.  They'd be far better off with some form of national VAT type tax - a modest one at that, but it seems a non-starter in most discussions.
 
Redeye said:
All tax can be painted as theft in some form.
Wow! You should go into politics with a diversionary comeback like that!
 
See, the debt isn't a probalm at all  >:D

http://www.whitehousedossier.com/2011/07/14/gops-big-debt-ceiling-card-obamas-birthday-bash/

GOP Debt Ceiling Ace in the Hole: Obama’s Birthday Bash
by KEITH KOFFLER on JULY 14, 2011, 12:09 PM
Oh boy, this is going to look bad.

The Republicans may not realize it, but they have an extra point of leverage in the debt ceiling talks: Barack Obama’s birthday.

It’s on Aug. 4. The president is turning 50. He’s decided to have a quiet celebration with family and a few close friends.

NOT.

Instead, the president is planning an extravagant fundraising bash Aug. 3 at the Aragon Ballroom in Chicago, including a birthday concert teeming with celebrities and – for couples contributing $35,800 – a private dinner with the president. All this just one day after the government is scheduled to run out of cash!

Undoubtably, the sight of so much money getting thrown around and dissolute stars crooning to Obama will make a stirring contrast with a federal government bankruptcy featuring unpaid government workers, seniors and soldiers wondering how they’ll afford the groceries, shuttered national parks, and angry investors trying to cash out their Treasury Bills.

If the government defaults, you can be sure the birthday bacchanal will do much more to harm Obama’s reelection prospects than help them. Maybe House GOP Majority Leader Eric Cantor, who has been refusing to back down while needling Obama to the extent that the president stomped out of a White House meeting yesterday, already knows this.

The excitement kicks off at 4 pm with a concert that may feature singer Jennifer Hudson and other A-List stars, according to the Chicago Sun-Times.

To show that hope and change is for everyone, a pauper section will be included for those contributing a measly $50. But the general admission ticket is $200, and the more you give, the more you get.

For $1,000, you can sit in the rich people’s area with easy access to alcohol. And for $10,000 you not only get a great seat, but a photo with The Birthday Boy.

Perhaps Timothy Geithner will be doing stand up comedy at a smaller room elsewhere in Chicago the same night, with all proceeds going to fund the federal government.

Evidently they either didn't think about the timing and optics, or just don't care
 
Plus the cost of the Air Force One package for this political event.

I doubt there is a new government project to ribbon cut in the local.
 
Any politician who went in this direction would need to screw up the sort of fortitude needed to "go over the top" in the Battle of the Somme (and a similar Canadian attempt would meet equal levels of resistance), but we are near the point where the only two choices are a controlled drawdown or an uncontrolled collapse:

http://opinion.financialpost.com/2011/07/15/lawrence-solomon-a-tea-party-budget/

Lawrence Solomon: A Tea Party budget
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Lawrence Solomon  Jul 15, 2011 – 8:45 PM ET | Last Updated: Jul 15, 2011 9:33 PM ET

Democrats like President Barack Obama want to restrain the U.S. government’s debt by increasing the debt ceiling, increasing government debt, increasing government spending, and increasing the government’s level of taxation. The improbable Democratic strategy: Hope that the taxes will pay down the debt without depressing the economy.

Republicans like House Speaker John Boehner want to restrain the U.S. government’s debt by increasing the debt ceiling, increasing government debt, increasing government spending, and decreasing the government’s level of taxation. The improbable Republican strategy: Hope that tax cuts and a slower increase in indebtedness will let the economy grow fast enough to outrun the increasing debt. 

These two improbable approaches to solving a debt crisis that all agree require drastic action are widely seen as prudent and sensible by others in government and by pundits of the left and right. What is seen as imprudent and senseless by both Democratic and Republican elites is the approach taken by Tea Party favourites such as Michele Bachmann. The Bachmann approach: Stop the borrowing, pay the interest on the existing debt to avoid a default, and then prioritize spending for the balance of the budget, starting with Social Security, medical, and military expenses.

What could be more sensible? Most agree that the debt not only threatens America’s Triple A credit rating but the country’s economy and its pre-eminence in the world. The current interest on the debt that everyone now fears — US$225-billion per year — is projected to more than triple to US$792-billion in a decade, a sum equal to today’s entire Medicare and Medicaid bill. Bachmann’s straightforward approach would quash these threats and spare Americans from becoming ever-more vulnerable to the vicissitudes of the financial markets. And it would be achievable merely by restoring a smaller federal government.

How would Bachmann do it? Today’s debt interest of US$225-billion remains manageable, amounting to but 10% of the US$2.2-trillion in taxes and other receipts that the government will be bringing in. After paying the interest, Bachman would use most of the almost US$2-trillion that remains to make the payments for Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid, and the various defence and veterans-related expenses. These expenditures would consume two-thirds of the federal government’s ready cash, much less once the fat is cut in these areas.

Then she would set out the priorities for the remainder of the government’s budget, both in terms of what new revenues to raise and what spending to cut. Bachmann hasn’t laid out her priorities because neither Republicans nor Democrats are now receptive. But here’s what it would take to balance the books.

First, scrap government departments that overlap with functions traditionally and primarily met at the state level, and that often do more harm than good. The country’s educational performance declined after the federal government imposed its educational priorities on the states, which have the prime responsibility for education. Scrap the Department of Education, a failed Carter-era experiment that had its roots in president Dwight Eisenhower’s desire to imbue the education system with Cold War thinking, and out goes a US$77-billion annual expense. Likewise, scrap all or parts of the Department of Energy, the Small Business Administration, the Federal Transit Authority, Federal Highway Administration, Housing and Urban Development and other federal areas that intrude on state and local responsibilities. Apart from the dollar savings from eliminating duplication and cancelling perverse projects, the quality of public services is likely to rise when the former federal functions move closer to home in state or local government, or become privatized and are delivered in the private sector.

This slimming-down exercise would not only slash the US$1.1-trillion deficit expected in 2012 by one-third to one-half, it would eliminate bureaucracy that burdens business, lowering costs to the overall economy and spurring its revival, in the process taking people off the welfare rolls and making them taxpayers that further shrink the deficit. And because the deficit would have declined dramatically, the growth in the federal debt would have slowed to a crawl.

Bachmann would then be able to wipe out the balance of the deficit through asset sales. The U.S. federal government holds assets that it values at some US$3.5-trillion, and assets worth trillions more to which it has never assigned a value. Many of those assets would have more value in private hands able to recognize the assets’ potential. A federal government sale of its mineral rights and associated lands alone could fetch enough to balance the budget. And/or it could sell businesses that in the United States are generally in private hands, such as power marketing authorities, as Bill Clinton proposed in 1996, and the Tennessee Valley Authority, America’s largest public power company. And/or Amtrak. And/or the postal service, which in other Western countries has been privatized.

And/or any number of the other businesses that the federal government has decided in recent decades to move into that neither add value nor are justifiable in an era that calls for far-reaching reforms to avert unthinkable financial consequences. Every sale would generate immediate cash plus ongoing personal and corporate tax revenue from the new and improved businesses to emerge.

The Bachmann approach has recently been dismissed by prominent Republicans such as Karl Rove, who point to an analysis by the Bipartisan Policy Center, which shows that the gap between the government’s receipts and outlays amounts to 40% of the federal budget, an unbridgeable gap.

But this organization’s analysis is based on the period from Aug. 2 — the drop-dead date when many fear the government will run out of funds — to the end of August, a truncated month that happens to paint an especially black picture of the U.S. shortfall. Nevertheless, the Bachmann approach, with a friendly amendment, still represents the most prudent path to fiscal integrity.

The friendly amendment? Extend the debt ceiling for a limited time, say one year, enough to get over the August hump and then complete the needed asset sales. After that limited period, the debt ceiling would revert to the level of today in a country that no longer stared into the abyss.

Financial Post
LawrenceSolomon@nextcity.com
Lawrence Solomon is executive director of Energy Probe.

And just in case someone posts that the problem is lack of revenue or George W Bush again:

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052702304203304576446332084493902.html?mod=WSJ_Opinion_LEADTop

The Obama Downgrade
The real reason the U.S. could lose its AAA rating.

So the credit-rating agencies that helped to create the financial crisis that led to a deep recession are now warning that the U.S. could lose the AAA rating it has had since 1917. As painfully ironic as this is, there's no benefit in shooting the messengers. The real culprit is the U.S. political class, especially the President who has presided over this historic collapse of fiscal credibility.

Moody's and the boys are citing the risk of a default on August 2 as the proximate reason for their warning. But Americans should understand that the debt ceiling is merely the trigger. The gun is the spending boom of the last three years and the prospect that Washington lacks the political will to reduce it in the years to come.

On spending, it is important to recall how extraordinary the blowout of the last three years has been. We've seen nothing like it since World War II. Nothing close. The nearby chart tracks federal outlays as a share of GDP since 1960. The early peaks coincide with the rise of the Great Society, the recession of 1974-75, and then a high of 23.5% with the recession of 1982 and the Reagan defense buildup.

From there, spending declines, most rapidly during the 1990s as defense outlays fell to 3% of GDP in 2000 from its Reagan peak of 6.2% in 1986. The early George W. Bush years saw spending bounce up to a plateau of roughly 20% of GDP, but no more than 20.7% as recently as 2008.

Then came the Obama blowout, in league with Nancy Pelosi's Congress. With the recession as a rationale, Democrats consciously blew up the national balance sheet, lifting federal outlays to 25% in 2009, the highest level since 1945. (Even in 1946, with millions still in the military, spending was only 24.8% of GDP. In 1947 it fell to 14.8%.) Though the recession ended in June 2009, spending in 2010 stayed high at nearly 24%, and this year it is heading back toward 25%.

This is the main reason that federal debt held by the public as a share of GDP has climbed from 40.3% in 2008, to 53.5% in 2009, 62.2% in 2010 and an estimated 72% this year, and is expected to keep rising in the future. These are heights not seen since the Korean War, and many analysts think U.S. debt will soon hit 90% or 100% of GDP.

Congress is responsible for the way so much of this spending was wasted, resulting in little job creation and the slowest economic recovery since the 1930s. But in the U.S. political system, Presidents are supposed to be the fiscal adults. When they abdicate, the teenagers invite over their special interest friends and blow the inheritance.

The President is now claiming to have found fiscal virtue, but notice how hard he has fought House Republicans as they've sought to abate the spending boom. First he used the threat of a government shutdown to whittle the fiscal 2011 spending cuts down to very little. Then he invited Paul Ryan to sit in the front row for a speech while he called his House budget un-American.

Deputy editor Daniel Henninger and Joseph Rago of the editorial board analyzes President Obama's Friday press conference.

Now Mr. Obama is using the debt-ceiling debate as a battering ram not to control spending but to command a tax increase. We're told the White House list of immediate budget savings, the ones that matter most because they are enforceable by the current Congress, are negligible. His offer for immediate domestic nondefense discretionary cuts: $2 billion.

As for Mr. Obama's proposed entitlement cuts, they are all nibbling around the edges of programs that are growing far faster than inflation. He's offering few reforms that would make a difference in the long run. Oh, and ObamaCare is untouchable, despite its $1 trillion in new spending over the next several years, growing even faster after that.

So now we have the inevitable showdown over the debt limit, which must be raised to pay for all of this spending. And Mr. Obama is blaming Republicans for being irresponsible because they won't raise taxes in return for promises of modest future spending restraint. And some people even fall for it.

We've said we think it would be foolish of Republicans to walk into Mr. Obama's debt-limit trap and let him blame them for the financial fallout, including a possible credit downgrade. But this is not because we think they will deserve the blame. Even if this debt-ceiling crisis passes, the threat of a credit downgrade will continue and grow until Mr. Obama changes his policies, or Americans change Presidents.
 
>Even most Democrats seem to agree with the conventional economic wisdom that increasing taxes under current circumstances will militate against increasing the revenue base

>>Conventional economic wisdom actually doesn't say that at all.

There are taxes which render my statement incorrect as an absolute ("all taxes") rule.  But unless those taxes are capable of producing revenues which will appear as more than rounding errors, they are uninteresting.  If all the serious money is in income and sales taxes, then the point still has to be addressed: that increasing taxes will militate against increasing the revenue base.  If you prefer to substitute "increasing tax rates" for "increasing taxes" to distinguish between that and elimination of deductions, fine.  The problem still exists unless there is a way of producing revenue from taxation on a useful scale without unacceptably damaging economic growth.
 
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