This is a pretty decent article
on the intricacies of public finance and made pretty easy to understand. The
reader needs to be able to get his perceptions turned upside down though. What
is important is to understand that much as passes for financial wisdom or at
least self evident is wrong.
If it helps, it is enough to
remember that a dollar bill is created by an act of government, sent forth as expenditure
in a multiple of ways and it is then taxed back at sometime in the future. This dynamic process produces the money
supply.
The potential for messing this up
out of ignorance and greed is breathtaking and wise management is obviously
hard to come by. Just how many
politicians do you think actually get it?
There is plenty to fix in the
present economy and done well the US economy is quite capable of
expanding at a rate well in excess of four percent until full employment is
achieved. Right now we need a couple of
years of eight percent growth to overcome the disaster visited on us two years
ago.
Cheney Was Right About One Thing: Deficits Don’t Matter
by Ellen Brown
Global Research, April 27, 2011
“Deficit terrorists” are gutting governments and forcing the
privatization of public assets, all in the name of “deficit reduction.” But deficits aren’t actually a bad
thing. In today’s monetary scheme, in
which most money comes from debt, debt and deficits are actually necessary to
have a stable money supply. The public
debt is the people’s money.
Former Vice President Dick Cheney famously said, "Deficits don't
matter." A staunch Republican, he
was arguing against raising taxes on the rich; but today Republicans seem to
have forgotten this maxim. They are bent
on stripping social programs, privatizing public assets, and gutting unions,
all in the name of "deficit reduction."
Worse, Standard & Poor’s has now taken up the hatchet. Some bloggers are calling it blackmail. This private, for-profit rating agency, with
a dubious track record of its own, is dictating government policy, threatening
to downgrade the government’s long-held triple AAA credit rating if Congress
fails to deal with its deficit in sufficiently draconian fashion. The threat is a real one, as we’ve seen with
the devastating effects of downgrades in Greece ,
Ireland
and other struggling countries. Lowered
credit ratings force up interest rates and cripple national budgets.
The biggest threat to the dollar’s credit rating, however, may be the
game of chicken being played with the federal debt ceiling. Nearly 70 percent of Americans are said to be
in favor of a freeze on May 16, when the ceiling is due to be raised; and Tea
Party-oriented politicians could go along with this scheme to please their
constituents.
If they get what they wish for, the party could be over for the whole
economy. The Chinese are dumping U.S.
Treasuries, and the Fed is backing off from its “quantitative easing” program,
in which it has been buying federal securities with money simply created on its
books. When the Fed buys Treasuries, the
government gets the money nearly interest-free, since the Fed rebates its
profits to the government after deducting its costs. When the Chinese and the Fed quit buying
Treasuries, interest rates are liable to shoot up; and with a frozen debt
ceiling, the government would have to default, since any interest increase on a
$14 trillion debt would be a major expenditure.
Today the Treasury is paying a very low .25% on securities of 9 months
or less, and interest on the whole debt is about 3% (a total of $414 billion on
a debt of $14 trillion in 2010). Greece
is paying 4.5% on its debt, and Venezuela
is paying 18% -- six times the 3% we’re paying on ours. Interest at 18% would add $2 trillion to our
tax bill. That would mean paying three
times what we’re paying now in personal income taxes (projected to be a total
of $956 billion in 2011), just to cover the interest.
There are other alternatives.
Congress could cut the military budget -- but it probably won’t, since
this option is never even discussed. It
could raise taxes on the rich, but that probably won’t happen either. A third option is to slash government
services. But which services? How about social security? Do you really want to see Grandma
panhandling? Congress can’t agree on a
budget for good reason: there is no good place to cut.
Fortunately, there is a more satisfactory solution. We can sit back, relax, and concede that
Cheney was right. Deficits aren’t
necessarily a bad thing! They don’t
matter, so long as they are at very low interest rates; and they can be kept at
these very low rates either by maintaining our triple A credit rating or by
borrowing from the Fed essentially interest-free.
The Yin and Yang of Money
Under our current monetary scheme, debt and deficits not only don’t
matter but are actually necessary in order to maintain a stable money
supply. The reason was explained by
Marriner Eccles, Governor of the Federal Reserve Board, in hearings before the
House Committee on Banking and Currency in 1941. Wright Patman asked Eccles how the Federal
Reserve got the money to buy government bonds.
“We created it,” Eccles replied.
“Out of what?”
“Out of the right to issue
credit money.”
“And there is nothing behind it, is there, except our government’s
credit?”
“That is what our money system is,” Eccles replied. “If there were no debts in our money system,
there wouldn’t be any money.”
That could explain why the U.S. debt hasn’t been paid off
since 1835. It has just continued to
grow, and the economy has grown and flourished along with it. A debt that is never paid off isn’t really a
debt. Financial planner Mark Pash calls
it a National Monetiztion Account.
Government bonds (or debt) are “monetized” (or turned into money). Government bonds and dollar bills are the yin
and yang of the money supply, the negative and positive sides of the national
balance sheet. To have a plus-1 on one
side of the balance sheet, a minus-1 needs to be created on the other.
Except for coins, all of the money in the U.S. money supply now gets into
circulation as a debt to a bank (including the Federal Reserve, the central
bank). But private loans zero out when
they are repaid. In order to keep the
money supply fairly constant, some major player has to incur debt that never
gets paid back; and this role is played by the federal government.
That explains the need for a federal debt, but what about the “deficit”
(the amount the debt has to increase to meet the federal budget)? Under the current monetary scheme, deficits
are also necessary to avoid recessions.
Here is why. Private banks
always lend at interest, so more money is always owed back than was created in
the first place. In fact investors of
all sorts expect more money back than they paid. That means the debt needs to be not only
maintained but expanded to keep the economy functioning. When the Fed “takes away the punch bowl” by
tightening credit, there is insufficient money to pay off debts; people and
businesses go into default; and the economy spins into a recession or
depression.
Maintaining a deficit is particularly important when the private
lending market collapses, as it did in 2008 and 2009. Then debt drops off and so does the money
supply. Too little money is available to
buy the goods on the market, so businesses shut down and workers get laid off,
further reducing demand, precipitating a recession. To reverse this deflationary cycle, the
government needs to step in with additional public debt to fill the
breach.
Debt and Productivity
The U.S.
federal debt that is setting off alarm bells today is about 60% of GDP, but it
has been much higher than that. It was
120% of GDP during World War II, which turned out to be our most productive
period ever. The U.S. built the
machinery and infrastructure that set the nation up to lead the world in
productivity for the next half century.
We, the children and grandchildren of that era, were not saddled with a
crippling debt but lived quite well for the next half century. The debt-to-GDP ratio got much lower after
the war, not because people sacrificed to pay back the debt, but because the
country got so productive that GDP rose to meet it. (See charts.)
That could explain the anomaly of Japan , the global leader today in
deficit spending. In a CIA Factbook list
of debt to GDP ratios of 132 countries in 2010, Japan topped the list at 226%. So how has it managed to retain its status as
the world’s third largest economy? Its
debt has not crippled its economy because:
(a) the debt is at very low interest rates;
(b) it is owed to the people themselves, not to the IMF or other
foreign creditors; and
(c) the money created by the debt has been used to produce goods and
services, allowing supply and demand to increase together and prices to remain
stable.
The Japanese economy has been called “stagnant,” but according to a
review by Robert Locke, this is because the Japanese aren’t aiming for
growth. They are aiming for
sustainability and a high standard of living.
They have replaced quantity of goods with quality of life. Locke wrote in 2004:
“Contrary to popular belief, Japan has been doing very well
lately, despite the interests that wish to depict her as an economic mess. The illusion of her failure is used by
globalists and other neoliberals to discourage Westerners, particularly
Americans, from even caring about Japan ’s economic policies, let alone
learning from them. [And] it has been
encouraged by the Japanese government as a way to get foreigners to stop
pressing for changes in its neo-mercantilist trade policies.”
The Japanese economy was doing very well until 1988, when the Bank for
International Settlements raised bank capital requirements. The Japanese banks then tightened credit and
lent only to the most creditworthy borrowers.
Private debt fell off and so did the money supply, collapsing the stock
market and the housing bubble. The
Japanese government then started spending, and it got the money by borrowing;
but it borrowed mainly from its own government-owned banks. The largest holder of its federal debt is
Japan Post Bank, a 100% government-owned commercial bank that is now the
largest depository bank in the world.
The Bank of Japan ,
the nation’s government-owned central bank, also funds the government’s
debt. Interest rates have been lowered
to nearly zero, so the debt costs the government almost nothing and can be
rolled over indefinitely.
Turning the National Debt into a Public Utility
Locke calls the Japanese model “a capitalist economy with socialized
capital markets.” The national debt has
been “monetized” – turned into the national money supply. The credit of the nation has been turned into
a public utility.
Thomas Hoenig, President of the Kansas City Federal Reserve, maintains
that the largest U.S.
banks should be put in that category as well.
At the National Association of Attorneys General conference on April 12,
he said that the 2008 bank bailouts and other implicit guarantees effectively
make the too-big-to-fail banks government-guaranteed enterprises, like mortgage
finance companies Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.
He said they should be restricted to commercial banking and barred from
investment banking.
"You're a public utility, for crying out loud," he said.
The direct way for the government to fund its budget would have been to
simply print the money debt-free. Wright
Patman, chairman of the House Banking and Currency Committee in the 1960s,
wrote:
“When our Federal Government, that has the exclusive power to create
money, creates that money and then goes into the open market and borrows it and
pays interest for the use of its own money, it occurs to me that that is going
too far. . . . [I]t is absolutely wrong for the Government to issue
interest-bearing obligations. . . . It is absolutely unnecessary.”
But that is the system that we have.
Deficits don’t matter in this scheme, but the interest does. If we want to keep the interest tab very low,
we need to follow the Japanese and borrow the money from ourselves through our
own government-owned banks, essentially interest-free. “The full faith and credit of the United States ”
needs to be recognized and dispensed as a public utility.
Ellen Brown developed her research skills as an attorney practicing
civil litigation in Los Angeles .
In Web of Debt, her latest of eleven books, she turns those skills to an
analysis of the Federal Reserve and “the money trust.” She shows how this
private cartel has usurped the power to create money from the people
themselves, and how we the people can get it back. She is president of the
Public Banking Institute, http://PublicBankingInstitute.org, and has websites
at http://WebofDebt.com and http://EllenBrown.com.
1 comment:
Ok Explain it in terms a 5th grader could understand.
Government prints money-- is this even necessary or can we just add digits to the gov's bank account?
Government writes cheque and cheque bounces.
What does Government do?
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