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Government
Debt The Greatest Threat to National Security
by
Rep. Ron Paul,
MD
by Rep. Ron Paul, MD
Once
again the federal government has reached its “debt ceiling,” and
once again Congress is poised to authorize an increase in government
borrowing. Between its ever-growing bureaucracies, expanding entitlements,
and overseas military entanglements, the federal government is borrowing
roughly one billion dollars every day to pay its bills.
Federal
law limits the amount of debt the U.S. Treasury may carry, and the
current amount a whopping $7.4 trillion has
been reached once again by a spendthrift federal government. Total
federal spending, which now exceeds $2 trillion annually, once took
more than 100 years to double. Today it doubles in less than a decade,
and the rate is accelerating. When President Reagan entered office
in 1981 facing a federal debt of $1 trillion that had piled up over
the decades, he declared that figure “incomprehensible.” At its
present rate of spending, the federal government will soon amass
$1 trillion of new debt in just one year.
Government
debt carries absolutely no stigma for politicians in Washington.
The original idea behind the debt limit law was to shine a light
on government spending, by forcing lawmakers to vote publicly for
debt increases. Over time, however, the increases have become so
commonplace that the media scarcely reports them and there
are no political consequences for those who vote for more red ink.
It’s far more risky for politicians to vote against special interest
spending
Since
1969, the federal government has spent more that it received in
revenues every year. Even supposed single-year surpluses never existed,
but were merely an accounting trick based on stealing IOUs from
the imaginary Social Security trust fund. Remember that the total
federal debt continued to rise rapidly even during the claimed surplus
years. Since Congress is incapable of spending only what the Treasury
takes in, it must borrow money. Unlike ordinary debts, however,
government debts are not repaid by those who spend the money
they’re repaid by you and future generations.
The
federal government issues U.S. Treasury bonds to finance its deficit
spending. The largest holders of those Treasury notes our
largest creditors are foreign governments and foreign individuals.
Asian central banks and investors in particular, especially China,
have been happy to buy U.S. dollars over the past decade. But foreign
governments will not prop up our spending habits forever. Already,
Asian central banks are favoring Euro-denominated assets over U.S.
dollars, reflecting their belief that the American economy is headed
for trouble. It’s akin to a credit-card company cutting off a borrower
who has exceeded his credit limit one too many times.
Debt
destroys U.S. sovereignty, because the American economy now depends
on the actions of foreign governments. While we brag about our role
as world superpower in international affairs, we are in truth the
world’s greatest debtor. Like all debtors, we are not truly free.
China and other foreign government creditors could in essence wage
economic war against us simply by dumping their huge holdings of
U.S. dollars, driving the value of those dollars sharply downward
and severely damaging our economy. Desmond Lachman, an economist
at the American Enterprise Institute, states that foreign central
banks “Now have considerable ability to disrupt U.S. financial markets
by simply deciding to refrain from buying further U.S. government
paper.” Former Treasury secretary Lawrence Summers warns about “A
kind of global balance of financial terror,” noting our dependency
on “the discretionary acts of what are inevitably political entities
in other countries.”
Ultimately,
debt is slavery. Every dollar the federal government borrows makes
us less secure as a nation, by making America beholden to interests
outside our borders. So when you hear a politician saying America
will do “whatever it takes” to fight terrorism or rebuild Iraq or
end poverty or provide health care for all, what they really mean
is they are willing to sink America even deeper into debt. We’re
told that foreign wars and expanded entitlements will somehow make
America more secure, but insolvency is hardly the foundation for
security. Only when we stop trying to remake the world in our image,
and reject the entitlement state at home, will we begin to create
a more secure America that is not a financial slave to foreign creditors.
October
26, 2004
Dr. Ron
Paul is a Republican member of Congress from Texas.
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