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Deficits Make You Poorer
by
Rep. Ron Paul,
MD
by Rep. Ron Paul, MD
Most
Americans are vaguely aware that Congress has run up huge deficits
in recent years, but the numbers involved are so large that its
hard to grasp what our governments indebtedness really means
to us as individuals. The total federal debt is quickly approaching
$8 trillion, courtesy of an administration that borrows roughly
one billion dollars every day to pay its bills.
Ultimately,
the U.S. government will either repay its debts or default on them.
We need only look at the Argentine debt crisis of 2001 for an example
of what happens when a government fails to make even minimum payments
to creditors. The Argentine economy virtually collapsed, and the
value of her money tumbled. This is something most Americans cannot
fathom, especially a political class that mistakenly thinks it cant
happen here.
Repaying
trillions of dollars will not be easy, however. Interest payments
alone already consume nearly 10% of the annual federal budget, and
Congress shows no sign of abating its spending appetite anytime
soon. In fact, present spending rates will produce single-year deficits
of $1 trillion in coming years unless the public finally gets fed
up and demands an end to it.
When
the federal government spends more each year than it collects in
tax revenues, it has three choices: It can raise taxes, print money,
or borrow money. While these actions may benefit politicians, all
three options are bad for average Americans.
Deficits
mean future tax increases, pure and simple. Deficit spending should
be viewed as a tax on future generations, and politicians who create
deficits should be exposed as tax hikers. The federal government
still consumes more of the private economy than it ever has except
during World War II, despite the administrations anti-tax
rhetoric.
Deficits
mean more monetary inflation. Deficit spending necessitates the
creation of more fiat dollars by the Federal Reserve to keep the
government afloat. Congress knows it can always fall back on the
Fed money machine, which of course encourages more deficit spending.
Its a vicious cycle that ultimately makes every dollar you
have worth less.
Deficits
mean more borrowing overseas, which threatens U.S. sovereignty.
Never before has the American economy depended so much on the actions
of foreign governments and central banks. China and other foreign
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.
Every dollar the federal government borrows makes us less secure
as a nation, by making America beholden to interests outside our
borders.
The
economic situation today is reminiscent of the 1970s. The economic
malaise of that era resulted from the profligacy of the 1960s, when
Congress wildly expanded the welfare state and fought an expensive
war in southeast Asia. Large federal deficits led to stagflation
a combination of high price inflation, high interest rates,
high unemployment, and stagnant economic growth. I fear that todays
economic fundamentals are worse than the 1970s: federal deficits
are higher, the supply of fiat dollars is much greater, and personal
savings rates are much lower. If the federal government wont
stop spending, borrowing, printing, and taxing, we may find ourselves
in far worse shape than 30 years ago.
March
15, 2005
Dr. Ron
Paul is a Republican member of Congress from Texas.
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