Ignorance or Lies? The single worst economic scare-mongering bullshit ever encountered.

J.D. Tuccille, the Libertarians, and surprisingly, the highly respected University of Pennsylvania’s Penn Wharton School may have set a world record for utter nonsense and wrongheaded scaremongering

Moving on from the “ticking debt time bomb” that never explodes, we have arrived at “20 Years to Disaster.”

Don’t you love predictions of 20 years? They are so safe. You can’t be proved wrong. Twenty 20 years from now, the world will have changed many times, and anyway, no one will remember what you said.

Aside from the idiocy of making a 20-year economic prediction, the entire premise of the article is wrong.

20 Years to Disaster
The United States has about 20 years for corrective action after which no amount of future tax increases or spending cuts could avoid the government defaulting on its debt.”
J.D. TUCCILLE | 11.6.2023 7:00 AM

For decades, budgetary experts have warned that the U.S. federal government is backing itself—and the country—into a corner with expenditures that consistently exceed revenues, driving the national debt ever higher.

What Tuccille, the Libertarians, and the Wharton School seem not to understand is that federal deficits are absolutely necessary for economic growth.

You have seen this graph many times:

GRAPH I

Federal “Deficits” (red) and Gross Domestic Product (blue) rise in parallel.

And this graph:

GRAPH II.

Before every recession (vertical gray bars), federal deficits (blue) decline. Then, to cure the recession, the government increases federal deficit spending.

The latest red flag is raised by the University of Pennsylvania’s Penn Wharton Budget Model (PWBM), which says that the federal government has no more than 20 years to mend its ways. After this time, it will be too late to remedy the situation.

Every time the federal government “controls” (i.e. cuts) spending, we have recessions if we are lucky and depressions if we are not as fortunate:

U.S. depressions come on the heels of federal surpluses.

1804-1812: U. S. Federal Debt reduced 48%. Depression began 1807.
1817-1821: U. S. Federal Debt reduced 29%. Depression began 1819.
1823-1836: U. S. Federal Debt reduced 99%. Depression began 1837.
1852-1857: U. S. Federal Debt reduced 59%. Depression began 1857.
1867-1873: U. S. Federal Debt reduced 27%. Depression began 1873.
1880-1893: U. S. Federal Debt reduced 57%. Depression began 1893.
1920-1930: U. S. Federal Debt reduced 36%. Depression began 1929.
1997-2001: U. S. Federal Debt reduced 15%. Recession began 2001.

Having learned nothing from history, Tucille, the Libertarians, and Wharton continue the same old ignorance about federal deficit spending: They equate personal finances with our Monetarily Sovereign government’s finances, not recognizing the massive differences between the two.

While monetarily, non-sovereign entities like you and me need to run balanced budgets over the long term, or we’ll face bankruptcy, the federal government must never run a balanced budget and never will face bankruptcy.

20 Years to Control Spending

“Under current policy, the United States has about 20 years for corrective action after which no amount of future tax increases or spending cuts could avoid the government defaulting on its debt whether explicitly or implicitly (i.e., debt monetization producing significant inflation)” Jagadeesh Gokhale and Kent Smetters, authors of the October 6 Penn Wharton Budget Model brief, write in summarizing their findings.

“Unlike technical defaults where payments are merely delayed, this default would be much larger and reverberate across the U.S. and world economies.”

To say that the above is 100% bullshit would be to insult bullshit. Here’s why:

    1. The federal government, being Monetarily Sovereign, has the infinite ability to create its sovereign currency, the U.S. dollar. It has infinite dollars with which to pay its bills. It never needs to default.
    2. Despite concerns about “debt monetization” (aka “money printing’) causing inflation, this never has happened to any nation in world history. All inflations have been caused by shortages of crucial goods and services, most often oil and food.
    3. Many years of massive U.S. federal deficits didn’t cause today’s inflation. Only when COVID caused shortages of oil, food, computer parts, shipping, metals, lumber, labor, etc., did inflation arise. Now, the government’s massive spending to prevent and cure recession continues while inflation ebbs. The massive federal spending has helped cure the shortages and thus cure the inflation.

The reason for worrying about accumulating deficits and the resulting growing debt, the authors explain, is that “government debt reduces economic activity by crowding out private capital formation and by requiring future tax increases or spending cuts to accommodate future interest payments.”

1. The historical fact that increasing government deficit spending increases economic activity (See Graph I, above) seems lost on the Wharton authors.

Mathematically, GDP = Federal Spending + Nonfederal Spending + Net Exports

2. There is no historical example of “crowding out of capital formation.” In fact, the federal money added to the economy increases the funds available to the private sector for capital formation.

3. Future tax increases are not necessary because federal taxes do not fund federal spending:

A. All federal tax dollars are destroyed upon receipt by the U.S. Treasury. The tax dollars come from the M2 money supply measure, but when they reach the Treasury, they become part of no money supply measure. The reason: The Treasury’s money supply, being infinite, cannot be measured.

B. Even if the federal government collected zero tax dollars, it could continue spending forever. It has the infinite ability to create spending dollars.

C. The purposes of federal taxes are not to fund federal spending but rather:

a. To control the economy by taxing what the government wishes to discourage and giving tax breaks to what the government wishes to reward.

b. To assure demand for and acceptance of the U.S. dollar by requiring taxes to be paid in dollars.

c. To fool the public (and presumably Wharton economists) into believing federal benefits require federal taxes. (This last purpose is promulgated by the rich to discourage the populace from demanding benefits that would narrow the Gap between the rich and the rest.)

If debt gets too big, lenders can’t be paid back, credibility is shot, the dollar loses value, and the economy tanks.

This is the oft-claimed “ticking time bomb” that never seems to explode. There never has been and never will be a time when the federal debt “gets too big” to be paid.

Again, the Wharton economists demonstrate they don’t understand the differences between a Monetarily Sovereign government and a monetarily non-sovereign government.

Alan Greenspan: “A government cannot become insolvent with respect to obligations in its own currency. There is nothing to prevent the federal government from creating as much money as it wants and paying it to somebody. The United States can pay any debt it has because we can always print the money to do that.”

Ben Bernanke: “The U.S. government has a technology, called a printing press (or, today, its electronic equivalent), that allows it to produce as many U.S. dollars as it wishes at essentially no cost.
Scott Pelley: Is that tax money that the Fed is spending?
Ben Bernanke: It’s not tax money… We simply use the computer to mark up the size of the account.

Statement from the St. Louis Fed: “As the sole manufacturer of dollars, whose debt is denominated in dollars, the U.S. government can never become insolvent, i.e., unable to pay its bills. In this sense, the government is not dependent on credit markets to remain operational.”

“It would be an unfettered economic catastrophe,” economists Joseph Brusuelas and Tuan Nguyen predicted earlier this year of such a scenario. “Our model indicates that unemployment would surge above 12% in the first six months, the economy would contract by more than 10%, triggering a deep and lasting recession, and inflation would soar toward 11% over the next year.”

Strange how history says exactly the opposite. Following many years of massive federal spending, unemployment was at historical lows. The reason: Federal spending stimulated GDP growth, which required more labor.

So long as investors believe federal officials will eventually balance their books, you have a grace period as debt grows—that is until the debt burden is so enormous that it crushes economic activity.

History shows that balancing the federal books creates recessions and depressions.

The so-called “debt burden” is not debt, and it’s not a burden. It’s deposits into Treasury security bills, notes, and bond accounts which are owned by the depositors.

It’s not debt because the government never touches the dollars in those accounts. The government creates dollars at will. It has no need to borrow dollars, and indeed, the U.S. federal government never borrows dollars.

To “pay off” the debt (that isn’t debt), the government merely returns the dollars in the accounts to their owners. This is no burden at all.

The purpose of T-securities is not to provide spending money to the government but rather to give the world with a safe, interest-paying place to store unused dollars. This makes the dollar an attractive international medium of exchange.

“Even with the most favorable of assumptions for the United States, PWBM estimates that a maximum debt-GDP ratio of 200 percent can be sustained,” the authors add. “This 200 percent value is computed as an outer bound using various favorable assumptions: a more plausible value is closer to 175 percent, and, even then, it assumes that financial markets believe that the government will eventually implement an efficient closure rule.” (That’s a mix of tax and spending changes to curtail deficits and debt.)

As we have demonstrated numerous times, the Debt/GDP ratio is meaningless. It tells nothing about the current or future health of an economy. It predicts nothing; it evaluates nothing. It is 100% meaningless.

That is why economists who don’t understand the fundamentals of Monetary Sovereignty love to quote it.

The 20-year countdown assumes that investors remain optimistic about the willingness and ability of U.S. officials to bring spending in-line with tax revenues. “Once financial markets believe otherwise, financial markets can unravel at smaller debt-GDP ratios,” according to the PWBM analysis.

We suspect financial markets understand history better than the economists at Wharton. We suspect they know that when the federal government spends more, stock prices rise.

As federal deficit spending has increased, the value of corporate stock has risen.

As PWBM points out, “Financial markets demand a higher interest rate to purchase government debt as the supply of that debt increases… Forward-looking financial markets should demand an even higher return if they see debt increasing well into the future. Those higher borrowing rates, in turn, make debt grow even faster.”

That’s already happening.

Increasing Costs and a Looming Deadline
To finance trillions of dollars in spending beyond what incoming revenue can support, the US Treasury is now issuing more debt in the form of Treasury securities than global financial markets can readily absorb,” Yahoo! Finance’s Rick Newman wrote on October 30.

“That forces the borrower—the US government—to pay higher interest rates, which in turn pushes up borrowing costs for consumers and businesses in much of the Western world.”

Again, the Wharton experts misunderstand Monetary Sovereignty and the realities of federal financing.

The federal government does not finance spending by borrowing (“issuing debt.”) It finances spending by creating dollars, ad hoc.

It can allow as much or as little in T-security deposits as it wishes. If the public fails to invest as much as the Federal Reserve wishes (to stabilize the dollar), the Fed merely uses its infinite money creation ability to fill the gap.

Federal spending never is constrained by the public’s desire to own T-securities.

As for interest rates, the Fed sets them not to attract depositors but to control inflation. If the Fed smells inflation, it raises rates. If the inflation scare passes, the Fed lowers rates. This has nothing to do with any need for deposits into T-security accounts.

(Sadly, raising interest rates, far from moderating inflation, exacerbates it by raising prices. The only thing that moderates inflation is federal spending to ease shortages of critical goods and services.)

Just when the U.S. federal government hits that magic unsustainable debt-to-GDP ratio of between 175 and 200 percent depends on investor confidence and how much the markets charge to finance more borrowing. PWBM estimates it will happen between 2040 and 2045—if we’re lucky.

The notion of a “magic, unsustainable debt-to-GDP ratio” is utter nonsense. Japan already has exceeded that meaningless ratio.

The U.S. Treasury concedes that “since 2001, the federal government’s budget has run a deficit each year. Starting in 2016, increases in spending on Social Security, health care, and interest on federal debt have outpaced the growth of federal revenue.”

The 2001 Clinton surplus caused the 2001 recession.  See Graph I.

Options for Fixing the Mess
In September, PWBM explored three policy options to render fiscal policy less disastrous: increasing taxes on high incomes, reforms to Social Security and Medicare that reduce payouts and increase taxes, and a mix of tax increases and spending cuts.

Increasing taxes on high incomes would help narrow the Gap between the rich and the rest, which would be a good thing. It would do nothing to improve the federal government’s already infinite ability to pay its creditors.

“Reforms” to Social Security and Medicare (i.e. cuts to benefits paid to those who need them most, while increasing taxes on those who can afford them least) also would do nothing to improve the federal government’s bill-paying ability.

The “mix of tax increases and spending cuts” would take spending dollars from the private sector and cause a recession or depression.  Remember this equation: GDP = Federal + Nonfederal Spending + Net Exports.

Spending cuts and tax increases would decrease Federal + Nonfederal Spending, which would reduce GDP, i.e. cause a recession or depression. Simple mathematics.

The authors predict entitlement reforms and a mix of tax increases and spending cuts would both stabilize the debt-to-GDP ratio, with entitlement reform allowing the greatest economic growth.

Hmmm. Giving the economy fewer Social Security and Medicare dollars and taking dollars from the economy by increasing taxes would “allow the greatest economic growth”???? Also, pouring water out of a bucket fills it??

The St. Louis Federal Reserve Bank has tax revenues hitting 19 percent of GDP last year—the highest share in two decades. The IRS may scream about a “tax gap” between what is owed and what it collects, and lawmakers may supercharge the tax agency with funds, but fixing the federal government’s spendthrift ways by squeezing taxpayers won’t just be unpopular—it’s a scheme that defies historical trends.

Spending cuts and entitlement reforms will also elicit resistance. But at least they’re within reach of lawmakers who could spend no more than they collect—or even to run surpluses to pay down debt.

Twenty years to fix the federal budget should be plenty of time. But brace yourself. The record so far suggests it won’t be enough.

The above is so staggeringly ignorant one scarcely can believe it was written by humans. Indeed, it must have been written by an Artificial Intelligence gone rogue. Cuts to federal spending and tax increases do the same: They take dollars out of the economy and cause recessions and depressions.

The Libertarian (aka anarchist) comments are not surprising. Anti-government ignorance is expected from them.

But, if this is the best to come out of Wharton, heaven help its students.

Rodger Malcolm Mitchell
Monetary Sovereignty

Twitter: @rodgermitchell Search #monetarysovereignty
Facebook: Rodger Malcolm Mitchell

……………………………………………………………………..

The Sole Purpose of Government Is to Improve and Protect the Lives of the People.

MONETARY SOVEREIGNTY

14 thoughts on “Ignorance or Lies? The single worst economic scare-mongering bullshit ever encountered.

  1. Rodger thanks! I wrote to Kent Smetters at Penn Wharton 2-3 years ago and explained, in several different ways, why their “crowding out” assumption is wrong. (If you look at the details of their dire forecast, it is ENTIRELY based on financial crowding out – that the sale of government securities will reduce private saving and therefore investment). He did not respond to my logic but instead replied “Private Saving plus Public Saving = Investment. Thus if Public Saving goes down (a higher deficit) then Investment must go down unless Private Saving increases by the amount of the deficit.” He added “That’s all you need to know”. I thanked him for responding and kindly explained how Deficits add to Private Saving dollar for dollar. I even supplied the actual data on financial saving provided by the BEA – which shows that private sector financial saving exactly matches public dissaving. I asked what he thought. No response. In subsequent followups of mine, I addressed the issue from several perspectives. No responses. So much for academic interest in ideas and respectful debate. Very frustrating. I do have an e-mail acquaintance with an economist who is on the advisory board of the Penn Wharton Model. I am going to write to him. Don’t hold out much hope but will let you know if any progress.

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    1. Charles, I’m guessing there is no response because he is terrified that he will discover all he has learned, all he believes, and all he has taught is garbage,

      I plan to write to him, too. Perhaps others will, too. Let’s terrify him enough to open his locked mind. He must stop teaching that garbage to innocent students.

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      1. I think he’ll stop teaching garbage when others like him do the same. Reminds me of the GOP sticking together for fear of looking traitorous and losing re-election. No one stepping out of line is what maintains the Gap. If anything, proving someone wrong causes ignorant pride to double down and/or go silent.

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  2. There will probably be no response for the simple reason that the author isn’t interested in addressing the larger public with a well-reasoned and well-documented argument. The economic gibberish in question is actually a job application for a conservative think-tank.

    Liked by 1 person

  3. Libertarian aka Austrian economics is nonsense, true, but it is also nonsense to say that there are no effects of high debt – either absolute or relative to GDP.
    It would be more correct to say that some of the effects of printed money can be offset to some extent by other policy actions, but this offset does not work forever.
    Equally, it is disingenuous to say “Federal spending generates economic growth”. The fact is that the number of printed dollars to generate a dollar of economic growth has been increasing – it is well into the double digits now. This is not a sustainable trajectory.
    I agree that federal spending, per se, is not necessarily always a bad practice. Use of printed money to direct economic action towards future growth does work, but it is also clear that poor use of printed money yields outcomes worse than not printing at all.

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    1. You reference “printed” dollars, which has little meaning. The vast majority of dollars are not printed.

      Federal Spending + Nonfederal Spending + Net Exports = Gross Domestic Product. Mathematically, federal spending increases economic growth. Increased Federal Spending affects all spending, which is what GDP measures.

      High “debt” is high deposits into T-security accounts, which by law also equals net federal deficits. Federal deficits are absolutely necessary for economic growth. When deficits decline, we have recessions, which are cured by increasing deficits.

      Deficit growth has been sustained since 1939, though every year, debt-nuts say it is “unsustainable” and a “ticking time bomb.” In 1939 the federal debt was about $40 Billion. Today, it’s nearly $30 Trillion. Yet we sustain.

      I do not know what “poor outcomes” you reference. Some people worry about inflation, yet there is no historical relationship between federal spending and inflation, which is caused by shortages of key goods, usually oil and food.

      If you wish, I’ll give you references for each of the bolded statements.

      Liked by 1 person

  4. No ‘BAU’?
    ‘Most’ ‘economic thinking’ is ‘short run’ and ‘redundant’? ‘It’ ignores the ‘supply side’? ‘Growth’ {and ‘civilisation’} depends upon ‘cheap’ F.F. – those so called ‘halcyon days’ are ‘over’. ?
    “The crisis now unfolding, however, is entirely different to the 1970s in one crucial respect… The 1970s crisis was largely artificial. When all is said and done, the oil shock was nothing more than the emerging OPEC cartel asserting its newfound leverage following the peak of continental US oil production. There was no shortage of oil any more than the three-day-week had been caused by coal shortages. What they did, perhaps, give us a glimpse of was what might happen in the event that our economies depleted our fossil fuel reserves before we had found a more versatile and energy-dense alternative. . . . That system has been on the life-support of quantitative easing and near zero interest rates ever since. Indeed, so perilous a state has the system been in since 2008, it was essential that the people who claim to be our leaders avoid doing anything so foolish as to lockdown the economy or launch an undeclared economic war on one of the world’s biggest commodity exporters . . . And this is why the crisis we are beginning to experience will make the 1970s look like a golden age of peace and tranquility. . . . The sad reality though, is that our leaders – at least within the western empire – have bought into a vision of the future which cannot work without some new and yet-to-be-discovered high-density energy source (which rules out all of the so-called green technologies whose main purpose is to concentrate relatively weak and diffuse energy sources). . . . Even as we struggle to reimagine the 1970s in an attempt to understand the current situation, the only people on Earth today who can even begin to imagine the economic and social horrors that await western populations are the survivors of the 1980s famine in Ethiopia, the hyperinflation in 1990s Zimbabwe, or, ironically, the Russians who survived the collapse of the Soviet Union.” ?
    https://consciousnessofsheep.co.uk/2022/07/01/bigger-than-you-can-imagine/
    https://www.facebook.com/cosheep

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