How Forbes Magazine misleads the public

Forbes is a highly respected financial magazine. Like too many other highly respected financial magazines, it often publishes articles espousing utter nonsense.

Here are excerpts from one such article.

Trump’s Big “Win”: The Largest Budget Deficit With A Strong Economy
Chuck Jones, Senior Contributor

Federal deficits are one way to measure how well a President manages the economy.

However, for a number of reasons a President can’t control the deficit; Congress is the governing body that decides the budgets (but the President does have to approve them), entitlement programs will grow unless they are changed and the economy goes through expansions and contractions (sometimes violently).

A President can propose and get policies implemented that impact the budget and therefore deficits, but to a large degree, economic forces can overwhelm the best policies and intentions.

It is true that “federal deficits are one way to measure how well a President manages the economy” but, as you will see, not in the one way author Chuck Jones claims.

While most people tend to look at the amount of the deficit in billions (or even $1 trillion plus) of dollars, a better way to gauge it is to look at the deficit as a percentage of the nation’s GDP.

This removes the impact of inflation on the government’s revenue and spending and makes for a better comparison.

Here is an example of Jones’s graph showing the deficit as a percentage of the nation’s GDP:

Deficit/GDP. Vertical lines are recessions

Please note that recessions almost always begin when the Deficit/GDP ratio goes down, and recessions almost always are cured when the Deficit/GDP ratio goes up.

The above graph diametrically contradicts the point Jones tries to make: The deficits are negative for the economy.

As seen in President Trump’s tax bill, there has been a fairly sizable reduction in corporate tax receipts, which negatively impacted the deficit in fiscal 2018 and the first three months of fiscal 2019.

Correct Translation: ” . . .there has been a fairly sizable {reduction in the amount of money corporations are forced to send to the federal government], which [increased the amount of money left in the economy] in fiscal 2018 and the first three months of fiscal 2019.”

Image result for giving dollars A simple picture of what happens to the economy (left) when the federal government (right) runs a deficit.

I never have spoken to anyone — professional economist or layperson — who doesn’t understand that putting dollars into the economy helps the economy grow, and taking dollars out shrinks the economy.

Yet that is exactly what Jones implies.

Federal deficits add dollars to the economy, helping the economy grow, yet Jones wants smaller deficits. It makes no sense at all.

President Trump’s budget deficits as a percentage of GDP will exceed any other President’s during a time of economic expansion.

From the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget or CFRB, at the projected 4.6% for fiscal 2019 it will the be largest in a non-recession year and is expected to stay above this level in the future.

It will only be worse if the 2017 tax cuts that are scheduled to expire for individuals and the increased 2018 discretionary spending caps are extended.

This is a good thing for the economy. Unfortunately, Trump doesn’t know it’s a good thing, otherwise he would boast about it.

We have written about the CFRB many times. It is a group supported by the very rich, whose sole mission seems to be to make you believe that the more federal taxes you pay, and the fewer federal benefits you receive, the better off you will be. 

Multiple organizations ranging from the Congressional Budget Office to the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget are projecting that the Federal deficit will increase even as the economy grows.

Their projections are for it to increase less in 2019 than 2018, but still have many years of growth even though the current economic expansion is about to hit a decade.

Correct Translation: ” . . . the Federal deficit will increase [which will help the economy grow].” Their projections are for it to increase less in 2019 than 2018, but still [cause] many years of growth even though the current economic expansion is about to hit a decade.

The scary thing is if the economy stumbles and growth slows more than expected or enters a recession, the deficit will increase even more than what the chart shows.

Yes, if the economy stumbles, the deficit must increase to add dollars to the economy and to resume economic growth. Otherwise we will have a recession or a depression.

Tariffs will have a positive impact on the government’s receipts but these are really a hidden tax on consumers and corporations.

Here Jones seemed to tangle in his own beliefs. He says tariffs have a “positive impact.”

Then he says, they really are taxes, which have a negative impact on the economy (unless Jones thinks taxes have a positive impact on the economy.)

So, why does he describe tariffs as “positive”? They are not “positive” in any way.

Trump seems to believe (or at least that is what he says and his advisors have told him) that reducing taxes and cutting regulations will grow the economy enough to solve the debt problem.

The above paragraph is so mixed up, it almost is impossible to disentangle.

“Reducing taxes” does grow the economy by leaving more dollars in the private sector (the “economy.”)

“Cutting regulations,” especially regulations that protect the middle-classes and the poor, most likely will hurt the economy over the long haul, but greatly widen the Gap between the rich and the rest.

And then, Jones switches from “deficits” (which are the annual difference between federal income and federal spending), to “debt,” which is the historical total of deposits into T-security accounts at the Federal Reserve Bank).

The two are unrelated except for regulations requiring them to be equal. Other than that, we could have federal deficits without federal debt, and we could have federal debt without federal deficits.

Federal debt, being nothing more than interest-paying savings accounts, easily are paid off by returning the dollars in these accounts.

Unfortunately, in the first year of the tax cuts, the deficit increased from $666 billion in fiscal 2017 to $779 billion in fiscal 2018, an increase of $113 billion or 17%.

It looks like they are on a path to $1 trillion or more as far as the eye can see.

Translation to the facts: [Fortunately,] in the first year of the tax cuts, the deficit increased from $666 billion in fiscal 2017 to $779 billion in fiscal 2018, an increase of $113 billion or 17%.

It looks like they are on a path to $1 trillion or more as far as the eye can see.

While it will take a few years to play out it appears that the tax cuts gave the economy an initial boost in the June quarter but that it may have fallen off in the September and December quarters.

In the end, Jones admits that “the tax cuts gave the economy an initial boost.”  Why did that happen?

Because tax cuts allow more growth dollars to remain in the private sector (aka “the economy”).

Similarly, spending increase put more dollars into the private sector.

Since federal deficits result from federal tax cuts and spending increases, federal deficits grow the U.S. economy.

Rodger Malcolm Mitchell
Monetary Sovereignty
Twitter: @rodgermitchell
Search #monetarysovereigntyFacebook: Rodger Malcolm Mitchell

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

The most important problems in economics involve the excessive income/wealth/power Gaps between the richer and the poorer.

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 The Ten Steps To Prosperity can 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 you.

MONETARY SOVEREIGNTY

Why it’s OK that Trump is an ignorant, bigoted, mean, immoral, lying, pompous adulterer.

I have friends who are Trump backers. They mystify and frustrate me.

Many times in the past three years I have thought, “Finally he has gone too far. Finally, you will have to admit that he has no business being in the White House,” only to be shocked that they still love him.

Trump: “Continental Army ‘took over airports’ in 1775.”

How can you continue to back someone who is of such low character, intelligence, and competence?

How can you keep inventing excuses for this clown’s abhorrent behavior?

What do you love? Is it his tax cut for the rich? His backing of Israel? His position on abortion? His appointing of conservative judges? His bigotry?

Yes, to all of those “assets” perhaps, though in my humble opinion they are far outweighed by his massive flaws.

I now have found an article in the Economist that explains the illogic roaming far beyond rational thought.

Excerpts shed a bit of light on the mysteries of Trump’s appeal.

Hate thy neighbour
When American evangelicals fall out
A twitter-spat over Donald Trump’s immigration policy reveals a deep cleavage in America’s religious right. Erasmus, Jul 5th 2019

(There is a) widening ideological and personal schism within the very group of citizens who should be a conservative president’s most natural supporters.

That group is the white evangelical Christians, of whom 80% are thought to have voted for Mr. Trump.

Evangelicals argue perpetually about many things: for example over whether the fate of a human soul is predetermined, or how exactly a believer can be redeemed from the “total depravity” which is, in the view of John Calvin, the natural state of humanity.

When people energetically argue about things that cannot be determined you know that reason has lost the battle and departed.

According to a new book, “Believe Me”, by John Fea, a history professor at Messiah College in Pennsylvania, all these theological disagreements are being transcended by a more salient issue: whether or not to support Mr. Trump wholeheartedly and therefore overlook his character flaws.

These days, by far the most important distinction is between what Mr. Fea calls “court evangelicals”, who stridently support the president and are rewarded with access to him, and every other kind of evangelical.

And now we come to the part that really gets weird, at least in the eyes of someone who is not an evangelical:

Among those who inhabit the court, Mr Fea discerns three main groups: first, a section of the mainstream religious right whose origins go back to the 1980s; second, a cohort of independent “charismatics” who claim the gifts of the Pentecostal tradition (visions, miracles and direct revelations from God) but do not belong to any established Pentecostal group; and third, advocates of the “prosperity gospel” who resemble the second category but put emphasis on the material rewards which following their particular version of Christianity will bring.

What defines all these “courtiers” is an insistence that loyalty to Mr. Trump must be unconditional.

In their world, the president is presented not just as the least-worst political option whose merits outweigh his flaws, but as a man assigned by God to restore America to its divinely set course, and therefore almost above human criticism.

In short, there are groups of evangelicals who have elevated Trump to a god-like status.

If Trump is above criticism, all conversation is closed. You must march like little robots. Do and believe whatever Trump tells you. He has been anointed by God.

To get around the problems posed by Mr. Trump’s ruthless business career, messy personal life, and scatological language, they use several arguments, of which one is a comparison with Persia’s King Cyrus, who liberated the Jews from captivity in Babylon and allowed them to return to Israel.

From the Jewish or Christian point of view, Cyrus was a pagan, not a worshipper of the one God, but he was still an instrument of God’s purpose.

Likewise, Mr. Trump can be regarded as a divinely ordained ruler, regardless of any personal flaws.

In essence, Trump and God are interchangeable. Think: Jesus.

But amazingly (If anything wholly illogical can further amaze), it goes even beyond that. 

Another popular view holds that Mr Trump’s rude and rumbustious character is really a merit in a time of great geopolitical and spiritual danger.

As Robert Jefress, a megachurch builder and Trump favourite, told a newspaper in his native Texas: “When I’m looking for a leader who’s gonna sit across the table from a nuclear Iran, or who’s gonna be intent on destroying [the jihadists of] ISIS, I couldn’t care less about that leader’s temperament or his tone or his vocabulary. I want the meanest, toughest son of a gun I can find.”

At its purest, Mr Fea adds, pro-Trump sentiment among evangelicals exudes a kind of fascination with political power as an end in itself.

Thus, the worse, meaner, less intelligent, less moral, more bigoted Trump is, the more he is to be loved.

Even torturing children at the border is seen as a sign of toughness — an admirable thing. His bigotry against browns, blacks, gays, Muslims, et al is welcomed by bigots, who hate those same people.

Trump is loved by bigots because he hates the same people they do.

If you ever foolishly have attempted to argue religion, then you understand the impossibility of arguing Trump. He is God or appointed by God.

Trump is perfect in every way. To the “courtier” evangelicals, Trump is above the law and above criticism. He is Hitler, Stalin, Mao, Kim, and Pharoah, all rolled into one.

You also understand why nothing seems to affect his followers. Trump caught cheating with porn stars? Who cares?

He lies compulsively? So what?

Takes from the poor and gives to the rich? Why worry?

As he himself said, “I could stand in the middle of Fifth Avenue and shoot somebody and I wouldn’t lose any voters.”

Now you know why despite his repeated demonstrations of unfitness (claimed the Continental Army “took over the airports” from the British during the American Revolutionary War in the 1770s) his followers never will leave him.

Note to Democrats: Demonstrating that Trump is unfit to hold office, will not change his followers’ minds. An unfit god is exactly what they want blindly to follow.

Rodger Malcolm Mitchell
Monetary Sovereignty
Twitter: @rodgermitchell
Search #monetarysovereigntyFacebook: Rodger Malcolm Mitchell

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

The most important problems in economics involve the excessive income/wealth/power Gaps between the richer and the poorer.

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 The Ten Steps To Prosperity can 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 you.

MONETARY SOVEREIGNTY

The latest dumb, political idea

It’s that time of the election process, when politicians, desperate to be remembered by the voters, come up with silly ideas.

Today’s SI (silly idea) award goes to a guy whom I believe to be one of the more intelligent of the candidates, Pete Buttigieg.

This only goes to show that even smart people can be silly when under pressure.

Pete Buttigieg wants Americans to expect a year of ‘national service’ after college, 10:44 a.m., Politico,  Kathryn Krawczyk

Pete Buttigieg is serving up a brand new plan.

The South Bend, Indiana mayor and 2020 Democrat has proposed “A New Call to Service” that would push the number of people participating in national service to 1 million by 2026.

He’d like to expand the ranks of 7,300 Peace Corp volunteers and trainees and 75,000 AmeriCorps members to a total of 250,000, (then) grow that total to 1 million by 2026, with an estimated cost of $20 billion over the next decade.

Buttigieg hopes to fill all these programs by promising a credit toward workers’ student debts under the already existent Public Service Loan Forgiveness Program.

That looks similar to debt forgiveness service programs mentioned by fellow candidates Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.), Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand (D-N.Y.), and former Rep. John Delaney.

I can almost visualize Pete and his handlers, crouched together in a locked room, sweating and mumbling:

“Bernie has Medicare, and Liz has corporate fraud. We need something. Something!
“How about student debt?
“It’s being done. We need something else. Something really unique and patriotic.
“Like military service?
“You mean college kids tramping around in the infantry?
“No. OK, wait. I’ve got it: Student debt combined with the Peace Corps.  That’s unique, liberal and patriotic, all rolled into one.”

What a wonderful idea.

To compete economically and scientifically, America needs educated people — not just high school graduates, but college grads and advanced degree people: Medical doctors, engineers, scientists — all those people that really advance our nation.

So here’s what we do. First, we already have discouraged kids from going to college, and punished them if they do go to college, by putting them deeply into debt.

Now, rather than simply relieving them of this debt, we have them to waste a couple of the most productive years in their lives by forcing them to take a low pay job they don’t want — a job that has nothing to do with their college education and expertise.

I can see it now. All those PhDs planting crops in Batswana, building huts in Burkina Faso, carrying water jugs in Eswatini.

Our indebted college grads and future leaders will flock to the idea, and it will greatly benefit American competitiveness, especially in Comoros and Lesotho (where I’m told the volunteers learn to speak Sesotho).

Of course, the alternative would be to encourage advanced education by making college free, for the same reason we already make grade school and high school free.

But then we wouldn’t be able to send our best and brightest young people to Benin (where “volunteers learn to speak local languages, including Bariba, Ditamari, Dendi, Fon, French, Mahi, and Nagot.”)

O.K., seriously, I admire the young people who volunteer to go to 3rd world countries and help. But the key word is “volunteer.”

The notion of basing the payoffs of those outrageous college loans, on a couple years of forced labor in Myanmar not only is repugnant but is counter to the best interests of America.

Pete, we should do everything possible to encourage advanced education, instead of discouraging it.

Rodger Malcolm Mitchell
Monetary Sovereignty
Twitter: @rodgermitchell
Search #monetarysovereigntyFacebook: Rodger Malcolm Mitchell

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

The most important problems in economics involve the excessive income/wealth/power Gaps between the richer and the poorer.

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 The Ten Steps To Prosperity can 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 you.

MONETARY SOVEREIGNTY

 

Crocodile tears for taxpayers

Crocodile tears (or superficial sympathy) is a false, insincere display of emotion such as a hypocrite crying fake tears of grief.

The phrase derives from an ancient belief that crocodiles shed tears while consuming their prey, and as such is present in many modern languages, especially in Europe where it was introduced through Latin.

While crocodiles do have tear ducts, they weep to lubricate their eyes, typically when they have been out of water for a long time and their eyes begin to dry out. However, evidence suggests this could also be triggered by feeding.

The media continually cry crocodile tears for the American taxpayer, bemoaning the “unsustainable” federal spending that supposedly forces federal taxpayers to pony up.

In reality, federal spending benefits all Americans by pumping dollars into the private sector, and federal taxpayers do not pay one dime to fund that spending.

Even if all federal tax collections — FICA, income taxes, luxury taxes, etc. — totaled $0, our Monetarily Sovereign federal government could continue spending, even increase it dramatically, forever.

Here are excerpts from an article that ran in the 7/1/19 Chicago Tribune (Marc A. Thiessen writes for The Washington Post. He is a fellow at the American Enterprise Institute and former chief speechwriter for President George W. Bush.):

The debates’ biggest losers? American taxpayers
By Marc A. Thiessen

Sen. Kamala Harris of California may have been the breakout winner of Wednesday and Thursday’s Democratic presidential debates, but there was one clear loser: the American taxpayer.

These were the most expensive presidential debates in American history. Never have so many candidates proposed to spend so much.

The author, Marc A. Thiessen knows as much about economics as does the average America, i.e virtually nothing.

No harm in knowing nothing. We all know nothing about many things. But if you know nothing about a subject, either do some research or don’t embarrass yourself by writing nonsense.

That is why I don’t pontificate about quantum chromodynamics. I assume you don’t either.

Sadly, Thiessen thinks federal taxpayers fund federal spending. They don’t.

Yes, state taxpayers fund state spending. County taxpayers fund county spending. City taxpayers fund city spending. States, counties, and cities are monetarily non-sovereign. they don’t have a sovereign currency.

But the federal government, being Monetarily Sovereign, has a sovereign currency, the U.S. dollar, which it creates, ad hoc, every time it pays a creditor.

Thiessen’s headline, “The debates’ biggest losers? American taxpayers” is wrong, and not just wrong but diametrically wrong. He prattles about finances, but doesn’t even understand the differences between Monetary Sovereignty and monetary non-sovereignty.

What next? Writing about accounting and not knowing the difference between a debit and a credit?

America’s taxpayers gain from federal spending, because those newly created dollars go into the private sector, i.e the pockets of Americans.

Image result for bernanke

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Ben Bernanke: “The U.S. government can produce as many U.S. dollars as it wishes at essentially no cost.”

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In speaking about finances, Thiessen’s headline should have been something like: The debates’ biggest winners? Americans.”

That is how fundamental Monetary Sovereignty is to economics.

In the first debate, NBC anchor Savannah Guthrie asked Massachusetts Sen. Elizabeth Warren about the economic impact of her plans for “free college, free child care, government health care, cancellation of student debt” and in the second asked Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., whether his proposals “for big, new government benefits, like universal health care and free college,” would require middle-class tax increases. (They would.)

(No they wouldn’t). Think about it. If taxes funded federal spending, why would the federal government pretend to borrow dollars?

I say “pretend,”  because the federal government not only doesn’t need to tax, it also doesn’t need to borrow. It has the unlimited ability to create unlimited dollars.

So what is the purpose to Treasury Securities, if not to obtain dollars?

I’m glad you asked. The purposes of issuing Treasury Securities are:

  1. To assist the Fed in setting interest rates, which helps moderate inflation.
  2. To provide the world with a safe place to “park” unused dollars, which helps stabilize the value of the dollar.
  3. To make you believe the federal government does not have the unlimited ability to create dollars, and is in danger of running short of dollars, so you will not demand more federal benefits.

 

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

Instead of shoring up Medicare, Democrats want to expand it to cover virtually everyone in the country.

Sanders’ “Medicare for All” legislation has been co-sponsored by Sens. Warren, Harris, Cory Booker of New Jersey and Kirsten Gillibrand of New York.

Medicare doesn’t need “shoring up.” It needs truth from our politicians.

The federal government easily could pay for a comprehensive, no deductible Medicare plus long term care, the same way it pays for everything else: By creating new dollars.

Nonpartisan estimates put its cost at $32 trillion over the first 10 years.

If true, that would add $32 trillion growth dollars to the U.S. economy. Today, it’s the people in the private sector (the “taxpayers” Thiessen pretends to be concerned about.

There are only two health care alternatives: Pay for it or do without it. 

The federal government has the unlimited ability to pay for it. People do not. When the federal government pays that helps grow the economy.

So who should pay?

Or take free college. Harris, Warren, Gillibrand and Booker have signed on to the Debt-Free College Act, which would cost at least $840 billion over 10 years.

Sanders has introduced a $2.2 trillion College for All Act that would make public colleges and universities tuition-free and debt-free, and erase the roughly $1.6 trillion in student loan debt.

Warren has also proposed a $640 billion student loan debt cancellation plan.

Warren has proposed a plan for “universal child care” and early learning that would cost $700 billion over 10 years, while Harris, Beto O’Rourke and Rep. Eric Swalwell, D-Calif., have endorsed the Child Care for Working Families Act, which would cost $700 billion over 10 years.

As with health care, there are only two alternatives for college: Pay for it or do without. When the government pays, the populace is enriched. When the people pay, they are impoverished.

Further, education helps grow the U.S. economy and make it more competitive.

That is why states, counties, and cities, which do not have a sovereign currency, still pay for education.

“Those who regularly preach doom because of government budget deficits (as I regularly did myself for many years) might note that our country’s national debt has increased roughly 400 fold during the last of my 77-year periods. That’s 40,000%!” Image result for warren buffett
Warren Buffett 

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Amazingly, none of the NBC anchors asked about the Green New Deal, but climate change was front and center in both debates.

Joe Biden’s climate plan would cost $1.7 trillion over a decade. Warren has pitched a $2 trillion plan, O’Rourke’s proposal would cost $5 trillion, while Washington Gov. Jay Inslee’s green jobs plan would cost $9 trillion.

Regarding the moderation of climate change, once again there are only two alternatives: Pay for it or let it go and pray that Trump is correct that it’s a “Chinese hoax”, and 97% of climatologists are wrong about major floods, species loss, farmland loss, more disease, and greater poverty.

Between Trump and the scientists, I’ll go with the scientists.

Then there are government-guaranteed jobs. Harris, Warren and Gillibrand have co-sponsored Booker’s Federal Jobs Guarantee Development Act, while Sanders has proposed an ambitious government jobs plan with guaranteed wages of $15 an hour, retirement and health benefits, child care and paid family leave.

I can’t disagree with his comment about the Jobs Guarantee program. I have written against it many times.

Andrew Yang proposed a government-provided universal basic income that would give every American over the age of 18 a monthly check of $1,000 — which would cost between $28 trillion and $40 trillion over 10 years.

If correct, that would add $28 trillion – $40 trillion growth dollars to the economy. Is it better for the economy, businesses, and people to do without those dollars?

As if all of the above weren’t ignorant enough, now comes the really ignorant part:

Where things get really expensive is the nexus between the Democrats’ spending plans and their immigration policies.

During the first debate, former housing and urban development secretary Julián Castro said he would decriminalize illegal border crossings.

When the candidates in the second debate were asked how many supported his plan, nearly every candidate’s hand went up. (Sen. Michael Bennet of Colorado was the only one to abstain.)

Every candidate raised a hand when asked if their government health plan would provide coverage for illegal immigrants.

The combination of decriminalizing illegal entry and offering those who enter illegally free health care would create a magnet for millions to enter our country — dramatically increasing the cost of every public health care plan.

And once here, these migrants would presumably also seek to take advantage of other free programs the Democrats are proposing, which means their costs would also skyrocket beyond these estimates.

Like all migrants before them, these migrants also would be workers, consumers, creators, and thinkers, i.e economy builders.

That is how America grew from a few thousand people to more than 330 million, and became the most powerful nation on earth.

Contrary to President Trump’s wrong-headed warnings, the U.S. is not “full.” (Later, he admitted we need more people, but him speaking on two sides of his mouth is not news.)

Open borders and socialism are a path to national suicide.

Thiessen knows so little about economics that he thinks federal spending is socialism. It isn’t, but it’s a term the ignorant right loves to toss around because it has become a pejorative. (Socialism is government ownership and control, not just spending.)

And no one but Trump uses the term “open borders” to describe having an immigration policy similar to what our policies have been for 200+ years.

It’s a lie, but what can you expect?

According to the Congressional Budget Office, under current law — without all the Democrats’ new entitlements — debt held by the public is already projected to increase from 78% of gross domestic product today to 144% by 2049.

This level of debt is unsustainable and could lead to another financial crisis.

First, it’s not “debt.” It’s investments in T-securities, which are paid off every day, simply by returning the dollars that reside in T-security accounts.

The federal government neither needs nor uses those dollars. It simply returns them when T-securities mature.

Second, the economically ignorant have been making exactly the same “unsustainable”claim for at least 80 years. (See “ticking time bomb.”)

They were wrong then, in 1940 when the so-called “debt” was $40 billion, and they have been wrong every year since, now that the “debt has grown about 50,000%.

Last I saw, Japan’s “debt” was 250% of GDP, and so far they have “sustained.”

Third, every depression and most recessions in U.S. history have corresponded with “debt” reduction, not “debt increase.”

The reason is simple. “Debt” increases add dollars to the nation’s economy, and “debt” decreases take dollars from the nation’s economy.

Which is more likely to cause recessions and depressions?

So you now can add Marc A. Thiessen’s name to the depressingly long list of people who talk and write about economics, but are clueless about the science.

What next, Mr. Thiessen, an article about quantum chromodynamics?

Rodger Malcolm Mitchell
Monetary Sovereignty
Twitter: @rodgermitchell
Search #monetarysovereigntyFacebook: Rodger Malcolm Mitchell

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

The most important problems in economics involve the excessive income/wealth/power Gaps between the richer and the poorer.

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 The Ten Steps To Prosperity can 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 you.

MONETARY SOVEREIGNTY