The $200-Trillion Debt Which Cannot Be Named
The Daily Bell
The scary
real U.S. government debt ... Boston University economist Laurence
Kotlikoff says U.S. government debt is not $13.5-trillion (U.S.),
which is 60 percent of current gross domestic product, as global
investors and American taxpayers think, but rather 14-fold higher:
$200-trillion 840 per cent of current GDP. "Let's get
real," Prof. Kotlikoff says. "The U.S. is bankrupt."
Writing in the September issue of Finance and Development, a journal
of the International Monetary Fund, Prof. Kotlikoff says the IMF
itself has quietly confirmed that the U.S. is in terrible fiscal
trouble far worse than the Washington-based lender of last
resort has previously acknowledged. "The U.S. fiscal gap is
huge," the IMF asserted in a June report. "Closing the
fiscal gap requires a permanent annual fiscal adjustment equal to
about 14 percent of U.S. GDP." This sum is equal to all current
U.S. federal taxes combined. The consequences of the IMF's fiscal
fix, a doubling of federal taxes in perpetuity, would be appalling
and possibly worse than appalling. ~ Globe and Mail (Canada)
Dominant
Social Theme: What? That can't be. Let's not talk about it.
Free-Market
Analysis: These numbers cited by Laurence Kotlikoff have been
all over the Internet for a while now but have not been much reported
by the mainstream press. No surprise there, but we are a bit shocked
that the Globe and Mail chose to pick them up. Was it a slow news
day? The story itself has been around since August.
Because the
Globe and Mail has covered it, so shall we. Here is our question:
Given these numbers, how can banks and institutions purchase US
fixed-income securities, let alone the dollar? What sense does it
make? These large institutions, with fiduciary responsibility, are
basically buying a bankrupt product. And it is not just the US.
The entire Western world (maybe with the exception of Germany) is
pretty much either flat broke or worse than broke.
For us, this
shows as much as anything else how controlled the system really
is. It's just a fiction and has little resemblance to reality. Institutions
are said to flee to the "safe-haven" of the US dollar
when they are nervous. But as Kotlikoff shows, the safe-haven is
nothing of the sort. When one adds up all of the various commitments
that the US has made abroad and at home (to its own citizens) the
debt begins to add up to the monstrous, impossible number Kotlikoff
arrives at.
So we ask:
Can't bond buyers at large institutions add? How are they comfortable
buying the bonds of a bankrupt entity? And why has it taken until
2010 for a mainstream economics professor to measure the "real
debt" of the US and speak out about it? Heck we've known this
for years now! If the Western monetary system were a person, it
would long ago have been declared clinically insane and shipped
off to an asylum. What is worse is the conspiracy of silence about
the "real" US debt, which we have to assume parallels
at least partially the debt of other Western nations. The whole
of the West is busted, pretty much and the "austerity"
plans being put in place are just more window-dressing, albeit of
a very nasty sort.
Of course there
are several ways out of this dilemma. Probably the easiest one is
inflation verging on hyperinflation. If the US prints enough dollars-from-nothing
(as Bernanke seems intent on doing) perhaps the dollar will lose
so much value that the growing debt will be partially erased. Of
course this basically debases the goods and services that people
currently count on. The services will remain as a kind of legal
fiction funded but not worth anything.
Another more
controversial way to get rid of the "real" debt would
simply be for the US to devalue or to announce that it was not going
to honor current accumulated debts. Of course this would do nothing
to reduce further debt burdens (though it would certainly anger
debt-holders) and this is why Professor Kotlikoff predicts
that many of the promises made by the US to its citizens will not
be met. The article excerpted above informs of us following:
He opposes
further stimulus spending because it will simply increase the
debt. But he does suggest reforms that would help most
of which would require a significant withering away of the state.
He proposes that the government give every person an annual voucher
for health care, provided that the total cost not exceed 10 percent
of GDP. (U.S. health care now consumes 16 percent of GDP.) He
suggests the replacement of all current federal taxes with a single
consumption tax of 18 per cent. He calls for government-sponsored
personal retirement accounts, with the government making contributions
only for the poor, the unemployed and people with disabilities.
The solutions
offered by Kotlikoff would surely revamp the social contract that
the US has with its citizens. But this is what is taking place in
Europe as well. It turns out that the welfare state is a mathematical
impossibility. Ludwig von Mises was correct. Those that practice
socialism eventually bankrupt themselves.
Of course throughout
most of the 20th century, von Mises (and the Austrians generally)
were ignored by mainstream Western economics. Keynesian economics,
monetarist economics, econometrics and even supply-side economics
all got a broad hearing and received various levels of approbation
from various social strata. But free-market economics was given
short shrift. Except for the von Mises Institute, there were few
supporters for its stiff dose of truth-telling. But look at where
that has left the US and the West.
The 20th century
as we have often noted was a true Dreamtime. People were convinced
by the dominant social themes of the power elite that government
was going to take care of them. As the century wound down the claims
became more extravagant. Government workers especially won the right
to stop working and collect pensions after only 20 or 25 years,
and retirements became bigger and more gaudy as public sector unions
pressed for more and more benefits.
But this was
only part of it. In America, especially, people were led to believe
that if they saved and "invested" in the stock market,
they could do very well for themselves. They were led (promoted)
to believe (as the Chinese believe today) that real estate was a
good "investment" and that prices, while uneven, would
always head upwards sooner or later. It seemed to make sense, after
all, given that the demographics were fairly inexorable. Baby boomers
would continue to bid up securities and commodities because there
were so many of them. The Dow, one popular financial guru wrote,
was surely going to 20,000 and even 40,000 in a fairly short period
of time.
In the late
20th century, the power-elite-driven US financial/media complex
was in its heyday. There were hundreds of magazines and dozens of
TV programs all focused on explaining how to "invest"
and where money should be placed for maximum advantage. The game
was on. Millions of pages were printed explaining what mutual funds
were "hot" and what companies were high flyers. NONE of
this information, for the most part, ever mentioned real money
gold or silver or predicted that gold would rise fourfold
in the 2000s.
And now? Silence
has begun to descend upon the hyperactive financial-media complex.
Some of the most prominent business and investment magazines have
either gone of out of business or been sold for a nominal dollar-and-debt.
Baby boomers (and European pensioners) who until recently looked
at their balance sheets and believed that their financial goals
had been achieved are starting to realize that much of what they
counted on is increasingly ephemeral.
Their housing
valuations are impressive, but now banks will not necessarily lend
against home equity and their domiciles are increasingly illiquid.
Their stock portfolios were heavily damaged and somehow the current
stock market rises have not helped replenish the equity. Their pensions
from large corporate employers or from the state itself
seemed solid, and yet Europe is finding out that those pensions
can be rewritten and are not so certain after all.
What was the
point of it all? Some people became teachers and put up with the
increasingly ludicrous rules imposed by unions and the political
correctness demanded by peers. Others became police officers and
kept silent while their brethren-in-blue became increasingly cynical
and violent. Still others worked for the state and turned a blind
eye to the corruption and payoffs that went on all around them.
People worked in non-profits and soon realized that much of the
money that was supposed to go to needy clients never got there.
People worked in finance and accounting and soon realized that most
of their efforts involved increasingly useless record-keeping for
an ever-expanding authoritarian state.
We could go
on, and indeed we have mentioned all this before. Every part of
Western regulatory democracy in the 20th century was a kind of Dreamtime.
The elites spun magical fantasies that people, not knowing any better,
inhaled ecstatically. People like to believe that life is certain
and that social structures can guarantee wealth. But they cannot.
Only human action can provide one with any certainty and
then only if one has accumulated gold and silver during one's lifetime.
Ironically,
it has not, perhaps, turned out much better for Western elites.
This tiny group of people puffed up by arrogance and secret internal
narratives launched promotion after promotion during the 20th century.
The idea was to frighten the middle class especially into giving
up wealth and power to a specially created superstructure of global
bodies that had been created as appropriate repositories.
But in the
21st century, even the Western elites have not fared so well. The
Internet has stripped them of their anonymity and revealed their
promotional machinations. The economic crisis, which they intended
to use to create a one-world government, has become a problem as
well, causing people to turn to the Internet to see what has gone
wrong. The education that takes place every day is eroding the elite's
hold on government, economics, military power and, most importantly,
on the minds and psyches of the once easily-controlled masses.
Kotlikoff seems
to believe that once people understand what has happened to them
once they wake up from Dreamtime they will be amenable
in some sense to a rational re-ordering of their deflating dreams.
We think this is not necessarily an accurate perception. What he
apparently expects is that people will patiently rebuild a system
that has essentially served as a coffin for their hopes and goals.
His idea is that a civil society will restructure its methodologies
to deliver what is real and good and necessary.
But Western
Dreamtime was never about delivering anything. It was about fooling
the masses and the middle classes, draining them of wealth and power
in order to create a One-World Order. The system, fully perverted
early in the 20th century, was not set up to deliver anything; it
was set up to extract something most unfortunately the authenticity
that people are capable of bringing to their lives and work. Once
people realize just how badly they have been misled, we think a
growing number will want to reject what we have called "regulatory
democracy" outright. Thus, we think large-scale social cohesion
will be harder to come by; and authoritarian solutions levied by
a desperate power elite likely won't work either.
We have predicted
and continue to predict a gradual entropy could overcome
the rigid structures of modern nation-states, and larger political
entities may begin to fracture into smaller ones. Gold and silver
may come into circulation not via any economic or political mandate
but simply because precious metals have historically been the money
of choice absent government mandates against their circulation.
People may pursue more entrepreneurial vocations; the family farm
may return; the international corporation may fall on hard times.
Conclusion:
All this depends on how badly Dreamtime is fractured by the coming
realities and how angry people get about the wasting of their assets
and opportunities. No, we don't know what is coming next, but if
the Western elites cannot control society through its promotional
schemes due to an increasing lack of credibility the
ramifications are both significant and severe. People who have woken
up (whether they wished to or not) will eventually begin to discover
what it is to lead lives of significance and human action. Some
may not enjoy it.
Reprinted
with permission from The
Daily Bell.
October
29, 2010
Copyright
© 2010 The
Daily Bell
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