Today our
national debt stands at $8.2 trillion, which represents about
$26,000 for every man, woman, and child in America. Interestingly,
the legal debt limit is only $8.18 trillion, a figure that was
reached a few weeks ago. This means the Treasury department must
ask Congress to raise the debt limit very soon, most likely as
part of a larger bill so it can be hidden from the American people.
Raising the
debt ceiling is nothing new. Congress raised it many times over
the last 15 years, despite the supposed surpluses
of the Clinton years. Those single-year surpluses were based on
accounting tricks that treated Social Security funds as general
revenues. In reality the federal government ran deficits throughout
the 1990s, and the federal debt rose steadily.
Former Federal
Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan made it easier for Congress to
obscure the extent of federal debt. He endorsed a change in the
law that redefined Social Security and veterans pensions. In reality
those obligations are debts, just like any other bill that must
be paid in the future. But Mr. Greenspan urged renaming these
obligations intergovernment accounts, which magically
changed them from debts to accrued liabilities. This
semantic shift frees up lots of room under the debt ceiling for
more borrowing.
Debt and
credit, wisely used, can be proper tools for individuals and businesses.
In a free society, however, we can never view expansion as a proper
goal for government. Unlike a private business, our federal government
should not be seeking out new ways to increase the scope of its
dubious services. Any government that consumes at
least 25% of the American economy and still can't balance its
books is a government that vastly overspends.
I disagree
with the supply-side argument that government debt doesn't matter.
The issue is not whether the Treasury has sufficient current income
to service the debt, but rather whether a government that spends
so much ultimately will destroy its own economy. Debt does matter,
especially to future generations that will be asked to pay for
our extravagance.
When government
borrows money, the actual borrowers big-spending administrations
and politicians never have to pay it back. Remember, administrations
come and go, members of congress become highly paid lobbyists,
and bureaucrats retire with safe pensions. The benefits of deficit
spending are enjoyed immediately by politicians, who trade pork
for votes and enjoy adulation for promising to cure every social
ill. The bills always come due later, however. Nobody ever looks
back and says, Congressman so-and-so got us into this mess
when he voted for all that spending 20 years ago.
For
government, the federal budget is essentially a credit card with
no spending limit, billed to somebody else. We hardly should be
surprised that Congress racks up huge amounts of debt! By contrast,
responsible people restrain their borrowing because they will
have to pay the money back. It's time for American taxpayers to
understand that every dollar will have to be repaid. We should
have the courage to face our grandchildren knowing that we have
done all we can to end the government spending spree.