S&P States the Obvious
by
Ron Paul
Recently
by Ron Paul: Super
Congress A Gift to K Street
Listen
to Ron Paul.
Politicians
did not get much time to pat themselves on the back for supposedly
rescuing the economy with the debt limit deal last week. The ink
was barely dry when Standard & Poor's downgraded the US debt
ratings anyway, roiling world financial markets. Anyone who has
taken an honest look at the government's fiscal situation, taken
into account how Washington works and the direction it is going
would have a very difficult time arguing with S&P's decision,
although a strong case can be made that this was too incremental
a downgrade and that it took far too long for S&P to admit the
obvious.
Nonetheless,
the administration nitpicked over a $2 trillion "mistake."
S&P rejoined with the fact that $2 trillion here or there hardly
makes a difference in the time frame under discussion. That, if
nothing else, should tell you the magnitude of the problem. $2 trillion
has become a drop in the bucket.
S&P cited
Congress's inability to act like grownups and make necessary, meaningful
cuts, which is true. I must take issue however, with their suggestion
that tax increases are part of the answer. Taking capital out of
the private sector, where it can create real value in the form of
new jobs and products, and instead giving it to Washington to waste
and squander is not the solution. Tax increases may seem penny-wise
to some, but in reality they would be very pound-foolish. The government
currently takes in $2.2 trillion in taxes per year, which is far
too much already. It spends $3.7 trillion, which is ridiculous and
criminal. The problem is runaway government spending, not the American
people having too much money.
And yet we
can't even have a serious discussion about bringing our troops home
and ending our expensive occupations around the world things
the president used to claim to favor!
Even
without this downgrade, major investors are waking up to what lies
down the road for the United States in fiscal terms. China is showing
more signs of losing its taste for our debt. Others are following
suit. What we are about to see is the end of the dollar as the reserve
currency of the world. When that happens, we will no longer be in
a position to have pretend debates about things we probably should
spend a little bit less on we will be forced to implement
serious spending cuts as our sources of credit dry up. Of course,
we can try to postpone the day of reckoning by printing more money
but the resulting "inflation tax" will be far worse than
a reduction in government benefits.
Hyperinflation
devastates the middle class. After Weimar Germany hyper-inflated
their currency in the 1920s, an entire life savings couldn't buy
a postage stamp. The bank wouldn't even send customers a check for
all the money they had saved their whole lives. It wasn't worth
the paper it was printed on or the stamp to send it. This is what
is meant when it is said that the middle class gets wiped out. The
pieces for this to happen here are all falling into place, and have
been since 1971. The only way to avoid that sort of chaos now is
for Congress to immediately reduce federal spending and take the
Constitution seriously again. The welfare/warfare state will end
either way, but winding it down responsibly is a far better way
to do it.
See
the Ron Paul File
August
17, 2011
Dr. Ron
Paul is a Republican member of Congress from Texas.
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