The trade war of ignorance

THE TRADE WAR

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America: “Take that, China”
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China: “Take that America”

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Imagine this: You own a large fresh-water lake and all the land around the lake. You live in a house on the shore, and you alone freely can draw endless fresh water from the lake to meet all your needs.

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Imagine that you own this lake and all the land around it.

Your children, who do not live on the lake, grow crops and do some manufacturing. They sell their crops and their manufactured goods to your neighbors, and in payment they receive . . .

. . . Water!

That’s right. In return for your children’s labor and expenses, they receive water, which you can obtain from your own lake, and simply give to your children, at virtually no cost.

Crazy, isn’t it? But wait, it gets crazier.

Since you have unlimited water, and your neighbors need water, you are able to buy food, clothing and manufactured goods from them, and pay your neighbors in the endless water you can draw from your lake.

One day, you become angry at one of your neighbors for not buying enough of your children’s crops and manufactured goods. You want him to buy more from them and to give your children even more water — the same water you could give them at no cost.

Image result for pouring water into a lakeSo to punish your neighbor for not buying enough of your children’s labor, and sending them more water, you take some of the water he gives your children, and you pour it back into the lake!

That’ll show him!

You may think this story is insanity, but what I just have described is the U.S. trade war with China.

The U.S. government, unlike state and local governments, unlike the euro nations, and unlike you and me, is Monetarily Sovereign.

That means the U.S. government has the unlimited ability to create infinite U.S. dollars at the touch of a computer key.

In the above parable, U.S. dollars correspond to the unlimited water you freely can draw from your lake.

China pays for our exports with U.S. dollars, which to the U.S. government are nothing more than water. But the Trump administration is angry at China for not buying enough of our products and sending us more dollars (water).

So the Trump administration decides to “punish” China by levying an import duty on Chinese goods, which is exactly like pouring our children’s water back into your lake.

For every export, there must be an import. When the U.S. exports goods and services, it imports the dollars that pay for the export.

The U.S. does not need to import dollars. 

Remember the above parable as you read excerpts from a story that appeared in THE WEEK Magazine:

China is getting Trumpy
By Jeff Spross

President Trump rails against Chinese manufacturing for stealing U.S. jobs.

In retaliation, he’s used tariffs to cut down on the goods Americans import from China — and, by extension, bulk up the “Made in America” goods they buy.

Translation: Trump is angry at the Chinese for not buying enough of your children’s products (in exchange for water).

So he takes some of your children’s dollars (water) in tariffs (pours it back into your lake).

Meanwhile, Trump’s critics paint this as an absurd and destructive quest; they assert that our economic entanglement with China is good for the United States.

It’s good for the United States because we receive valuable goods, made by the sweat of Chinese labor and valuable assets, and all we give them is the dollars that cost us nothing to produce.

Ironically enough, unlike Trump’s U.S. critics and despite what it says abroad, China’s government has its own downright Trumpian plan to get Chinese consumers to buy more Chinese-made products.

Quite literally, the plan is called “Made in China 2025.” The Chinese government — whose economic policy is a weird hybrid of market liberalization and communist-style state ownership and central planning — announced the plan back in 2015.

Basically, it’s a 10-year industrial strategy to increase China’s ability to manufacture high-tech products like superconductors, computer chips, and airplanes.

China wants to consolidate those supply chains within its own borders, so its consumers can buy more of those types of goods from domestic producers. Sound familiar?

Yes, very familiar.

Like the U.S. government, China’s government is Monetarily Sovereign. It has the unlimited ability to create the Chinese renminbi. It never can run short of renminbi.

It can pay millions of Chinese workers billions of renminbi to manufacture everything locally. It has the financial ability to consolidate all supply chains locally.

And/or, it can use the foreign exchange markets to obtain unlimited dollars, and buy whatever it wants to buy from the U.S.

China is caught in the “middle income trap.”

Most of what it exports to the world is low-cost manufactured goods — think clothes, shoes, or consumer electronics — which are low cost because the workers who make them aren’t paid a lot.

Meanwhile, it imports a lot of  high-tech products, which are much more expensive.

Quite often, this setup traps middle-income countries in perpetual trade deficits.  (They’re exporting cheap stuff and importing expensive stuff.)

The word “deficit” and the word “debt,” are the most misunderstood words in all of economics. Both have pejorative implications.

Consider “deficit.” No one likes to run a deficit. Everyone prefers a surplus. But, a federal deficit is an economic surplus. Money flows from the federal government to the economy.

Which is better? For the federal government, which already has infinite dollars, to run a dollar surplus, or for the economy, which can run short of dollars, to run a dollar surplus?

Similarly, a trade deficit can be viewed as a trade surplus: Goods flow from nation “A” to nation “B,” and money flows from nation “B’ to nation “A.”

So which nation runs the “deficit,” and which nation runs the “surplus”? If you are nation “A,” and you receive valuable goods in exchange for the water you freely take from your lake, are you running a surplus or a deficit?

Every day, you run a “deficit” with your grocer, your neighborhood restaurant, your pharmacist, your clothing store, etc. What if you could pay for all these “deficits” with the free water from your lake? Are you bothered by those deficits?

For a Monetarily Sovereign entity, there is absolutely nothing wrong with “perpetual trade deficits.” In fact, they are beneficial.

You receive valuable goods and services, created by the labor and assets of other nations, and you pay with a commodity that has no cost to you: Your own sovereign currency.

That trap drives them into exchange rate crises every so often.

For a Monetarily Sovereign nation,  there are no “exchange rate crises. They have absolute control over every facet of their currency, including the value of that currency. They are sovereign over the currency.

China’s largely managed to run a trade surplus with the rest of the world despite all this, albeit with the occasional dip into trade deficit.

Which is a testament to the intelligence and aggressiveness of Beijing’s macroeconomic and trade strategies.

Translation: China largely managed to use its valuable labor and resources to obtain renminbi, which it could have created without using any of its labor or resources.

That is no testament to “intelligence” and aggressiveness.”

But now the Chinese government would like to get the country out of the middle-income trap entirely.

They are in a trap created by ignorance, not by reality. Like the U.S., they easily could support “perpetual trade deficits,” i.e. buy endless goods in exchange for their endless sovereign currency.

Ironically, here in America, the Made in China 2025 plan isn’t the kind of thing that Trumpian critics of free trade or establishment champions of free trade want to see.

Critics of free trade want America to close its own trade deficit by selling more stuff to China, which is obviously in tension with China’s desire to produce more domestically.

And neither camp likes the idea of China providing more direct subsidies to its domestic companies, or continuing to grab technological know-how and intellectual property from the rest of the world.

The Trump administration actually released a report in 2018 concluding that aspects of Made in China 2025 were “unreasonable and discriminatory.” And other European countries have complained about it as well.

The only people who should complain about China’s “Made in China” efforts are the euro nations — nations like France, Germany, Italy, Portugal, et al, who do not have a sovereign currency.

They use the euro, which is the sovereign currency of the European Union (EU), not of any individual nations.

Euro nations do not have the unlimited ability to produce euros. They can, and often do, run short of euros, and they depend on the “charity” of the EU for survival.

Like you and me, the euro nations are monetarily non-sovereign. They need to export enough goods and services (i.e., import enough euros) to cover their shortfall of euros.

Similarly, all U.S. cities, counties, and states are monetarily non-sovereign. They use the U.S. dollar, which is the sovereign currency of the federal government. They can, and often do, run short of dollars, a problem that never can happen to the federal government.

As payback for Trump’s tariffs on Chinese exports, China jacked up tariffs on American exports.

Translation: To punish America, China raised taxes on its own people,the same thing Trump did to Americans to punish China.

Not surprisingly, China’s imports from the U.S. have fallen since 2018.

But China’s imports from the rest of the world fell by a comparable amount over the same period. It’s not that Chinese demand for foreign goods shifted from American producers to other countries — it’s that the demand just fell, period.

China is producing and paying for more goods and services internally, which being Monetarily Sovereign, it can do endlessly — as can America.

Both the European Central Bank and the International Monetary Fund have noted the shift, while France’s central bank came right out and said “the recent trade deceleration is closely linked to the shift of China’s production towards domestic demand.”

Yes, European euro nations should be worried. They cannot control their own finances. They are slaves, not only to the EU, but to the rest of the world, and it all was so predictable.

Because of the Euro, no euro nation can control its own money supply. The Euro is the worst economic idea since the recession-era, Smoot-Hawley Tariff. The economies of European nations are doomed by the euro.” The Meteorology of Economics,” 2005

The austerity and free-market policies of the modern global trade order create a permanent shortfall in global demand, thus driving a race to the bottom as every country tries to outwit its neighbor and grab more of the demand that remains.

Rather than attempt to change that game, both Trump’s and China’s protectionism are just attempts to be the player who comes out on top.

Austerity is merely the attempt by the very rich to widen the income/wealth/power gap and to squeeze more dollars out of the middle and the poor.

No people in human history (other than the rich) have benefited from their nation adopting austerity.

By contrast, protectionism by a Monetarily Sovereign nation can be quite beneficial to that nation’s populace.

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

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The most important problems in economics involve:

  1. Monetary Sovereignty describes money creation and destruction.
  2. Gap Psychology describes the common desire to distance oneself from those “below” in any socio-economic ranking, and to come nearer those “above.” The socio-economic distance is referred to as “The Gap.”

Wide Gaps negatively affect poverty, health and longevity, education, housing, law and crime, war, leadership, ownership, bigotry, supply and demand, taxation, GDP, international relations, scientific advancement, the environment, human motivation and well-being, and virtually every other issue in economics.

Implementation of Monetary Sovereignty and The Ten Steps To Prosperity can grow the economy and narrow the Gaps:

Ten Steps To Prosperity:

1. Eliminate FICA

2. Federally funded Medicare — parts A, B & D, plus long-term care — for everyone

3. Provide a monthly economic bonus to every man, woman and child in America (similar to social security for all)

4. Free education (including post-grad) for everyone

5. Salary for attending school

6. Eliminate federal taxes on business

7. Increase the standard income tax deduction, annually. 

8. Tax the very rich (the “.1%”) more, with higher progressive tax rates on all forms of income.

9. Federal ownership of all banks

10. Increase federal spending on the myriad initiatives that benefit America’s 99.9% 

The Ten Steps will grow the economy and narrow the income/wealth/power Gap between the rich and the rest.

MONETARY SOVEREIGNTY

Do you believe fortune tellers, Nigerian princes, and people who say the federal debt is a “ticking time bomb”?

Do you believe fortune-tellers, Nigerian princes, and assorted other snake oil salesmen? Do you accept phone calls from strangers offering you free time-shares and cruise vacations?Image result for crystal ball

No, fortunately, you are too smart to fall for those scams perpetrated by liars and fools.

But somebody must be deceived because those frauds have been around for a long time. If they didn’t work they would have died out by now.

In this world where presumably we have graduated from the dark ages, actual facts are easy to obtain from legitimate sources. But, many of us still accept the words of Tarot card readers, crystal ball gazers,  and other mass deceivers. Trump University is one proof of that.

Even today, you continue to be barraged with sad phone calls from non-existent grandchildren and claims by fake IRS employees, telling you urgently to send money, now, now, now.

It never ends.

And that is why you continue to experience the “federal-debt-is-a-ticking-time-bomb” scam, one of the most subtle, yet long-lived scams in history.

It is subtle and long-lived for three reasons:

  1. The speaker (or writer) does not directly ask you for money. No, he/she asks for something even more valuable: Your vote. He wants you to vote against your own best interests.
  2. It sounds so logical, so every-day reasonable, so innocent, so prudent — far more logical, reasonable, innocent, and prudent than that $5 million you will receive from Nigeria.
  3. It isn’t immediately clear to you who exactly benefits from the scam, but there are beneficiaries, big beneficiaries, and later in this article, I’ll tell you who they are.

As recently as August of this year, we added yet another example to the list of ticking-time-bomb scams that goes back to 1940, when the federal debt was only $40 billion. (It’s above $20 trillion today, and that ole time-bomb still’s a’tickin’.)

And here’s yet another one: Same wording to the same lies.  It even includes that same ridiculous “debt clock” currently parked in a Manhatten alleyway.Image result for debt clock

Our national ticking time bomb
By Bill Yeargin, SPECIAL TO THE SUN SENTINEL |
SEP 12, 2019

The U.S. has a big problem that, if not corrected soon, will have a significant negative impact on our country, including Florida.

Our growing national debt has resulted in a debt-to-GDP ratio that is over 100 percent, one of the world’s worst.

See the scam language. Something has to be done “soon”. (Even though the federal debt has grown more than 50,000% over the past 70 years, and the U.S. economy is the strongest in the world, something must be done, SOON. Don’t think. Just act, soon!)

And that meaningless debt-to-GDP ratio, which is one of the world’s “worst.” For the U.S., it’s a bit above 100%.  Don’t you wish it was more like Russia’s (14%) or Zimbabwe’s (21%)? Or does Mr. Yeargin prefer Guatemala’s ratio of 25% or Nigeria’s ratio of 30%?

Or how about Japan’s ratio of 238%? Which economy and which inflation would you prefer, Japan’s or Zimbabwe’s?

Here is a list of national debt/GDP ratios for countries. See if you can see a relationship between that useless ratio and the strength of a nation’s economy. Save your effort. There is no relationship. As we said, it is a useless ratio.

Mr. Yeargin’s article continues:

In retrospect, it is hard to believe in the late 90s, the U.S. was running budget surpluses and on track to have no national debt by 2006.

Uh, excuse me, Mr. Yeargin, but the Clinton surpluses of 1998-2001 led directly to the recession of 2001. We actually were lucky then, because surpluses, which remove dollars from the economy, often have a worse result than a recession:

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.

Ah, those pesky facts.

And the ignorance becomes laughable:

Now, we have a national debt approaching $23 trillion dollars — about $68,000 per citizen — and it’s still growing fast.

The past two years the federal deficit has exploded to over a trillion dollars a year (yep, a trillion.) It is endangering our country and state’s future. We need our leaders to deal with this problem now.

The “per citizen” line is supposed to make you think you owe the federal debt, or your taxes will be taken to pay it off. Neither is true.

The so-called federal debt is not like your debt or my debt. The federal debt is nothing more than the total of deposits into Treasury security accounts, which are paid off every day simply by returning the dollars in those accounts to the account holders. Neither you nor your taxes are involved.

The federal government does not use those dollars. They remain in the T-security accounts until maturity, at which time they are returned.

Even if the federal government did not collect a single penny in taxes, it could pay off the entire federal debt today, simply by closing all those accounts and sending the dollars back.

And then there’s the line that includes the words, “and states.” The false implications seem to be either that state financing is like federal financing, or that somehow states are liable for federal debt.  Mr. Yeargin isn’t clear about what he means, but either meaning is wrong.

And now we come to the really, really ignorant part (Yes, amazingly even less knowledgeable than the preceding).

So, how did we get here?

After World War 2, the U.S. had a huge national debt, but a growing economy and fiscal discipline (at least more than we have now) reduced it to manageable levels.

Here is the “fiscal discipline” Mr. Yeargin claims we had, but no longer have: Beginning in 1945, we had 5 recessions in only 15 years. That is his version of “fiscal discipline.”

By contrast, our “undisciplined,” debt-based economy has not had a single recession in 11 years, and is not even close to one now.

But it gets even worse:

By the late 90s, the president and Congress had worked to generate national surpluses and were heading toward a debt-free U.S.

If the federal debt is, as Mr. Yeargin warns, “approaching $23 trillion,” to have a “debt-free U.S.” would require us to have a combination of spending cuts and tax increases totaling $23 trillion!

Can you imagine what taking $23 trillion out of the U.S. economy would do? It would be a financial disaster unparalleled in U.S. history.

The Great Depression was caused by a removal of only 36% of the debt; Mr. Yeargin wants to remove 100%. It boggles.

And it continues:

Then, in the early 2000s, the combination of tax cuts, increased Medicare benefits for the elderly, and waging two wars on a credit card resulted in the return of national deficits and we lost our opportunity to be debt-free.

The financial crisis in 2008 resulted in huge government spending to avert a depression.

Mr. Yeargin manages to confuse even his own confusion. He claims correctly that huge government spending averted a recession, but he already has claimed that huge government spending is a danger, a “ticking time-bomb.”

Federal spending pumps dollars into the economy, which grows the economy. Federal surpluses take dollars from the economy, which causes depressions and recessions.

So which is it Mr. Yeargin? Did huge spending endanger us or save us? You can’t have it both ways. Or, if you know nothing about economics, perhaps you can have it both ways — in your imagination.

After we got through the Great Recession, our deficit was high but dropping. The past three years has seen increased spending and tax cuts, which have exploded the annual deficit to over $1 trillion.

(Meaning that the federal government, which never can run short of dollars, will add $1 trillion to the economy, which needs dollars to grow. And this is a bad thing?)

And then, just when you hope it could not possibly be dumber, yes, it gets even dumber.

So, why is it a problem?

At some point investors will become concerned about lending to a debt-riddled U.S., which will result in having to offer higher interest rates to attract the money.

Even with rates low today, interest expense is the federal government’s third highest expenditure following the elderly and military.

The U.S. already borrows all the money it uses to pay its interest expense, sort of like a Ponzi scheme. Lack of investor confidence will only make this problem worse.

Because the U.S. federal government has the unlimited ability to create its own sovereign currency the U.S. dollar, it has no need to borrow dollars from anyone.

And indeed, despite the misleading use of the words “debt” and “borrow,” the U.S. government does not borrow. It provides T-security accounts, into which investors can deposit dollars.

Why does it provide these accounts if it doesn’t touch the dollars in them? Two primary reasons:

  1. To provide a safe “parking place” for unused dollars, which helps stabilize the dollar, and
  2. To assist the Federal Reserve in setting interest rates.

No, Mr. Yeargin, the federal government is not like state and local governments; it is not like businesses; it is not like you and me. It doesn’t borrow. It doesn’t need or use borrowed money.

St. Louis Federal Reserve: “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.

The federal government uniquely is Monetarily Sovereign, a term Mr. Yeagin clearly does not understand. The government creates dollars by passing laws, at the press of a computer key.

The article drones on, sliding ever downhill from a low beginning:

Additionally, we have lost two of our most powerful tools to pull out of a future recession.

From Economics 101, recall that deficit spending and low interest rates are tools used to end a recession. But we are now using them in a good economy, which is sort of like eating your seed corn.

Except that the federal government has the unlimited ability to deficit spend, and contrary to popular perception, low interest rates are not stimulative. They help control inflation, but do not add growth dollars to the economy.

So, why do we accept this?

It feels good to spend. Just like anyone who borrows to buy something they cannot afford, the U.S. finds it to easy to use its credit card (deficit spending).

In the short run, this spending makes politicians look like geniuses because it fuels the economy and drives votes.

In the long run, the politicians will be out of office when the problems occur. When the economy is doing well — even when artificially propped up with huge deficit spending — people feel like things are going well and don’t worry about those huge credit card bills (national debt) piling up.

Well, golly, the so-called “credit card bills (national debt)” has been “piling up” for 70 years, and here we are, stronger than ever. Again, those pesky facts.

So, what’s the solution?

We need leaders who have the will, character and courage to tackle this problem like any business leader would for their organization.

More ignorance. He still doesn’t understand the differences between federal (Monetarily Sovereign) financing and business (monetarily non-sovereign) financing.

If we want low taxes, then we must decide how to cut expenses. The challenge with federal expenses is that most of the money goes to the elderly, through Social Security and Medicare, and the military.

Unlike state and local governments, which being monetarily non-sovereign and so use tax dollars to pay for spending, the Monetarily Sovereign federal government does not use tax dollars.

So why does the federal government collect taxes?

  1. To control the economy by taxing things it wishes to discourage and by giving tax breaks to things it wishes to encourage
  2. To help the rich, who run America, widen the Gap by giving them tax breaks not available to the non-rich.
  3. To convince the public that benefits must be rationed or taxes increased. The rich, who run America, fear that if you, the public, knew the truth, you would demand more benefits, thereby narrowing the Gap. (Think of Medicare for All and Social Security for all, etc.)

And finally, we get to the heart of it. Mr. Yeargin suggests the need to cut Social Security and Medicare which mostly benefit the middle-classes and the poor.

Gap Psychology tells us that the rich promulgate lies about federal financing, in order to widen the Gap between the rich and the rest.

It is the Gap that makes them rich (Without the Gap no one would be rich; we all would be the same.) And the wider the Gap, the richer they are.

One easy way to widen the Gap is to cut benefits to the non-rich.

The “federal-debt-is-a-ticking-time-bomb” scam benefits the rich because it widens the Gap between the rich and the rest.

I apologize if I seem to pick on Mr. Yeargin this way. He may be a very nice, honest gentleman, but clearly, he is not an economist. Perhaps, all the errors in his article are innocent and without any malicious intent.

But he writes about economics, which is typical of what you read, day after day: Writings by people who do not understand that federal finances are nothing like personal finances, though you are led to believe they are alike.

Your intuition and incorrect information combine to fool you.

I don’t know Mr. Yeargin, but according to his web site:

“Bill Yeargin is CEO of Correct Craft, a boat-building business based in Orlando. He’s also on the board of the University of Central Florida.”

Someone please, please assure me that Mr. Yeargin has nothing to do with the teaching of economics at the University of Central Florida.  Please.

Social Security and Medicare Funds Face Insolvency, Report Finds

It’s old news, fake news, and a lie — a “Big Lie.” But it demonstrates why the public is so confused and misinformed about federal financing.

Image result for national enquirer fox newsThis following came from the venerable and venerated New York Times, but the article is as accurate as an article in Breitbart, Fox News, or the National Enquirer.

Social Security and Medicare Funds Face Insolvency, Report Finds By Alan Rappeport, economic policy reporter, who covers the Treasury Department and writes about taxes, trade and fiscal matters, April 22, 2019

WASHINGTON — The financial outlook for Medicare and Social Security, two of the nation’s most important social safety net programs, remains precarious, threatening to diminish retirement payments and increase health care costs for Americans in old age, the Trump administration said on Monday.

An annual government report on the status of the programs painted a dire portrait of their solvency that will saddle the United States with more debt at a time when the economy is starting to cool and taxes have just been cut.

Let’s get this straight. The NY Times incredibly is being as honest as Breitbart, Fox News,  and the National Enquirer.

But, the U.S. federal government cannot become insolvent. That is 100% impossible.

Who says so? How about:

Alan Greenspan: “A government cannot become insolvent with respect to obligations in its own currency.”

Image result for greenspan
Greenspan

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.”
St. Louis Federal Reserve: “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.

Since the U.S. federal government cannot become insolvent, no agency of the federal government can become insolvent, unless the federal government wishes it.

Social Security and Medicare are agencies of the federal government. Therefore, neither Social Security nor Medicare can become insolvent unless the federal government wishes it.

And as far as “saddling the United States with more debt,” the scare-mongers have been shoveling this manure for at least 80 years (See: “It is 2019, and the phony federal debt “time bomb” still is ticking.“)

Neither the United States nor U.S. taxpayers are “saddled” with even one cent of federal “debt.” The misnamed “debt” is nothing more than the total of deposits into Treasury security accounts. These accounts are paid off, not with federal tax dollars, but rather by simply returning the contents of those accounts to the account holders. No “saddle” there.

The NY Times editors surely know this. So why do they scare-monger a lie? Why did they publish the “Big Lie”? There is a reason, which we will discuss.

According to the report, the cost of Social Security, the federal retirement program, will exceed its income in 2020 for the first time since 1982. The program’s reserve fund is projected to be depleted in 16 years, at which time recipients will get smaller payments than they are scheduled to receive if Congress does not act.

Meanwhile, Medicare’s hospital insurance fund is expected to be depleted in 2026 — the same date that was projected a year ago. At that point, doctors, hospitals and nursing homes would not receive their full compensation from the program and patients could face more of the financial burden.

The so-called “reserve fund” is an accounting fiction. It is not a fund and it is not held in reserve. It merely is a record showing the difference between FICA and spending. It’s just a piece of information about the difference in two numbers; it does not reveal anything about the government’s ability to pay for things.

The U.S. government is Monetarily Sovereign, and so has the unlimited ability to create its own sovereign currency, the U.S. dollar. Even if all FICA collections totaled $0, the federal government could pay infinite Social Security benefits, forever.

An infinite account cannot be “depleted.”

The article continues:

“Lawmakers should address these financial challenges as soon as possible,” the trustees of the program wrote.

“Taking action sooner rather than later will permit consideration of a broader range of solutions and provide more time to phase in changes so that the public has adequate time to prepare.”

There are no trustees because there is no trust. It is just an accounting record, that has none of the qualities of a trust. (See: Fake federal trust funds and fake concerns)

The above makes the naive and false assumption that federal (Monetarily Sovereign) financing is the same as personal (monetarily non-sovereign) financing.

For the federal government, there are no “financial challenges” that need “solutions.” And while the author of the article claims benefits will need to be cut or taxes increased, the public should not be prompted to “prepare” for those unnecessary changes.

It is all the “Big Lie.

Some Republicans sought to take credit on Monday for the fact that the news was not worse while also calling for changes to the programs.

“Following historic reforms to America’s tax code, this strong economy has strengthened these important programs, but today’s reports remind us of a fact we have known for far too long: Medicare is going broke and Social Security is not solvent,” Representative Kevin Brady, Republican of Texas, said in a statement.

Either Rep. Brady either is incredibly ignorant about economics, or he is an incredible liar. Pick one. There are no other alternatives.

The United States will not become insolvent, and for the same reasons, neither Medicare nor Social Security will go broke, unless a bribed Congress forces that to happen. 

Lawmakers have been struggling to come to grips with a solution for the country’s eroding entitlement programs, which have for years been at the center of a political tug of war between Republicans and Democrats.

No. Lawmakers have been struggling to find more ways to continue fooling the public. It’s been a struggle because arguing against plain facts always is difficult.

Mr. Trump was initially resistant to calling for cuts to the programs, but his budget proposal last month did just that. The request, which is being ignored by Congress, proposed shaving $818 billion from projected spending on Medicare over 10 years.

Completely unnecessary.

It also called for $26 billion less on Social Security programs, including a $10 billion cut to Social Security Disability Insurance, which provides benefits to disabled workers.

Well, of course, Mr. Trump wanted to cut Social Security and Medicare, two programs that benefit the middle classes and the poor. Isn’t that what the GOP always wants to do?

And of course, the GOP Congress passed tax cuts that mostly benefitted the rich. Isn’t that also what the GOP always wants to do?

The problem is not that the GOP, the party of the rich, wants unnecessarily to gut programs that benefit the non-rich. The problem is that the Democrats, supposedly the party of the middle- and lower-income groups, go along with the fiction of federal insolvency. 

“That fact that we now can’t guarantee full benefits to current retirees is completely unacceptable, and it should be cause enough for every policymaker to rally around solutions to restore solvency to those programs,” said Maya MacGuineas, the president of the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget.

“Certainly we should be focused on saving Social Security and Medicare before we start promising to expand these programs.”

She added that “now isn’t the time for partisan bickering — we need solutions.”

Just as Wayne LaPierre, of the National Rifle Association (NRA) is a mouthpiece for gun manufacturers, Maya MacGuineas, of the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget (CRFB) is a mouthpiece for the very rich.

The rich in America, and all over the world, for that matter, never are satisfied. They want to become richer and richer. To become richer, you must widen the income/wealth/power Gap between you and those below you on any economic scale.

It isn’t sufficient that your income increases if the incomes of those below you increase even more. Without the Gap, no one would be rich; we all would be the same.

It is the Gap that makes you rich, and the wider the Gap, the richer you are.

This is known a “Gap Psychology,” the desire to distance yourself from those below and to approach those above.

So the rich bribe your three main economic information sources — the media,  the politicians, and the economics professors — to tell you the Big Lie, that federal spending is funded by federal taxes rather than by money creation.

–The rich bribe the media via advertising dollars and media ownership.
–The rich bribe the politicians via political contributions and promises of lucrative employment after they leave office.
–The rich bribe the economics professors via contributions to universities and with jobs at think “tanks.”

The public accepts the Big Lie because it equates to personal experience, where personal spending is funded by personal income.

One day, perhaps within your lifetime, the general public will learn that federal taxes do not fund federal spending, that the federal government and its agencies cannot become insolvent, and that social programs can and should be funded for the benefit of all America.

It will have to begin with a moral billionaire, a moral politician, or a moral economist who has both the money and the influence to promulgate the truth, and to have it accepted.

Waiting.

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

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The most important problems in economics involve:

  1. Monetary Sovereignty describes money creation and destruction.
  2. Gap Psychology describes the common desire to distance oneself from those “below” in any socio-economic ranking, and to come nearer those “above.” The socio-economic distance is referred to as “The Gap.”

Wide Gaps negatively affect poverty, health and longevity, education, housing, law and crime, war, leadership, ownership, bigotry, supply and demand, taxation, GDP, international relations, scientific advancement, the environment, human motivation and well-being, and virtually every other issue in economics.

Implementation of Monetary Sovereignty and The Ten Steps To Prosperity can grow the economy and narrow the Gaps:

Ten Steps To Prosperity:

1. Eliminate FICA

2. Federally funded Medicare — parts A, B & D, plus long-term care — for everyone

3. Provide a monthly economic bonus to every man, woman and child in America (similar to social security for all)

4. Free education (including post-grad) for everyone

5. Salary for attending school

6. Eliminate federal taxes on business

7. Increase the standard income tax deduction, annually. 

8. Tax the very rich (the “.1%”) more, with higher progressive tax rates on all forms of income.

9. Federal ownership of all banks

10. Increase federal spending on the myriad initiatives that benefit America’s 99.9% 

The Ten Steps will grow the economy and narrow the income/wealth/power Gap between the rich and the rest.

MONETARY SOVEREIGNTY

What will trigger the next recession?

Longtime readers of this blog are quite familiar with the following graph:

It shows the relationship between U.S. federal debt/deficit growth (green line) and U.S. recessions (vertical gray bars).

You can see this relationship detailed at: The relationship between federal deficit spending and GDP growth, but in summary, recessions follow a period of reduced federal debt/deficit growth, and are cured by increased federal debt/deficit growth.

The reasons relate to these fundamental truths:

  1. Every form of money is a form of debt. Debts require collateral. The U.S. dollar is a debt of the U.S. federal government. The collateral for the U.S. dollar is the full faith and credit of the U.S. government.
  2. Economic growth requires debt/money growth. Large economies have more money than do small economies. To move from smaller to larger, an economy must have an increased supply of debt/money.
  3. To cure a recession requires growing the economy which requires increasing growth in the debt/money supply.
  4. Federal deficits add money to the economy, and federal surpluses take money from the economy.

The above is why every depression in U.S. history has been introduced with a period of federal surpluses. (See item #3 of “To understand economics, you must understand Monetary Sovereignty.”),  and every depression has been cured by federal deficit spending.

We have discussed these facts many times with respect to federal deficits and debt.

However federal debt is only a fraction of total deficits and debt.

The above graph compares federal debt (green line) with the total debt of all sectors (blue line — state & local governments, domestic non-financial sectors, etc.).

While federal debt currently approximates $20 trillion, the total of all sectors approximates $75 trillion.

While federal deficits and debt are under direct federal control, and can be made to fluctuate significantly, “all-sectors” debt is not directly controlled, and has much greater inertia.

Though federal debt is an important source of U.S. dollars, there can be periods when federal debt changes in one way, while all-sectors debt changes another way.

Because the origin of money has less economic effect than does the existence of money, the all-sectors data (blue) most parallel Gross Domestic Product (red line in the below graph).

Total debt % annual change of all sectors (blue); GDP % annual change (red).

Yet, in a September 2, 2019 article in Fortune Magazine, you can read:

“We do know that there is a recession coming,” said Cindy Kuppens, the COO of O’Brien Wealth Partners. “Maybe next year, maybe 2021. We’re coming to the end of a business cycle.”

We could even be in a recession now without knowing. Economists have to wait for the data to measure GDP and new estimates come as additional information arrives. A previous quarter can slide in hindsight and a current period may be starting to slow.

That is just one example of numerous “recession is coming” predictions based on “this can’t growth go on forever” pontificating.

But “this can’t go on forever” is not a prediction. Nothing goes on forever. The world can’t go on forever. Predicting a recession because we haven’t had one recently, is the height of ignorance.

So pay no attention to the “it can’t go on forever” Chicken Littles.

Then there are the more scientific types, as in the article: “Is there a recession coming? Keep an eye on these key indicators.  They talk about such factors as: Yield curve inversion, employment figures, unemployment figures, housing prices, construction rates, housing supply, Consumer Confidence Index, manufacturing numbers, business sentiment, and a summary index like the Conference Board’s Leading Economic Index.

So which is/are the most important predictors, and how should these factors be weighted? No one knows, but we do know this: The U.S. economy, and indeed all economics, is ruled by money.

With federal debt growth, all-sector debt growth, and GDP growth all increasing, there are no signs of a coming recession, and until we see growth declining in at least one of the three, there absolutely will not be a recession.

The GOP, despite its long-time opposition to federal deficits, especially when a Democrat was in the White House, has now created what is predicted to be a $1 trillion deficit — and that is a good thing for the American economy.

Ironically, it will be remembered as the sole beneficial act by President Donald Trump’s administration.

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

…………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………..

The most important problems in economics involve:

  1. Monetary Sovereignty describes money creation and destruction.
  2. Gap Psychology describes the common desire to distance oneself from those “below” in any socio-economic ranking, and to come nearer those “above.” The socio-economic distance is referred to as “The Gap.”

Wide Gaps negatively affect poverty, health and longevity, education, housing, law and crime, war, leadership, ownership, bigotry, supply and demand, taxation, GDP, international relations, scientific advancement, the environment, human motivation and well-being, and virtually every other issue in economics.

Implementation of Monetary Sovereignty and The Ten Steps To Prosperity can grow the economy and narrow the Gaps:

Ten Steps To Prosperity:

1. Eliminate FICA

2. Federally funded Medicare — parts A, B & D, plus long-term care — for everyone

3. Provide a monthly economic bonus to every man, woman and child in America (similar to social security for all)

4. Free education (including post-grad) for everyone

5. Salary for attending school

6. Eliminate federal taxes on business

7. Increase the standard income tax deduction, annually. 

8. Tax the very rich (the “.1%”) more, with higher progressive tax rates on all forms of income.

9. Federal ownership of all banks

10. Increase federal spending on the myriad initiatives that benefit America’s 99.9% 

The Ten Steps will grow the economy and narrow the income/wealth/power Gap between the rich and the rest.

MONETARY SOVEREIGNTY