Murdoch’s Wall Street Journal spouts more lies about the Federal debt, on behalf of the rich, to the detriment of the rest

The Wall Street Journal is owned by Rupert Murdoch, who supports 32 times convicted felon Donald Trump. Murdoch also owns extreme right-wing Fox News, which paid an $800 million fine for lying.

Need I say more?

Here are excerpts from an article that appeared in the WSJ. Comments are noted.

Federal Debt Is Soaring. Here’s Why Trump and Harris Aren’t Talking About It.
Story by Richard Rubin, richard.rubin@wsj.com

The U.S. isn’t fighting a war, a crisis or a recession. Yet the federal government is borrowing as if it were.

The U.S. federal government is Monetarily Sovereign. It has the unlimited ability to create U.S. dollars:

Alan Greenspan: “There is nothing to prevent the federal government from creating as much money as it wants and paying it to somebody.”

If you owned a money-printing machine and had the unlimited, legal ability to create as many $100 bills as you wanted — at no cost to you — would you ever borrow dollars? Think about it.

The government has that “money-printing machine” and the legal right to create dollars. Why on earth would the government ever borrow dollars? Answer: The U.S. government never borrows dollars. Not ever.

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.”

The confusion is semantic. In the private sector, the words “bills,” “notes,” and “bonds” denote debt. “Bills” are what you owe in your daily life. Corporate “notes” and “bonds” are evidence of corporate debt.

By contrast, Treasury bills, notes, and bonds have nothing to do with government borrowing. They are deposits into Treasury Security accounts. Depositors, like China, the UK, and private citizens like you, own the money in these accounts; the federal government doesn’t.

The federal government never accesses those dollars for federal spending. It creates new dollars to pay all its bills.

To pay a creditor, the federal government creates instructions in the form of checks or wires. The instructions tell the creditor’s bank to increase the balance in the creditor’s checking account by a certain amount.

At the moment the bank obeys those instructions, new dollars are created and added to the M2 money supply measure.

To pay off the so-called “debt,” the federal government merely returns the depositors’ dollars that already reside in their T-security accounts. (Think of a safe deposit box in which depositors place valuables. The bank doesn’t use those valuables and returns them upon request by the depositors.)

Returning existing dollars is not a financial burden on the government or on federal taxpayers.

The confusion is not only semantic but also arises from the fact that the total of deposits equals the total of federal deficits. This is an anachronism from when the federal government was not wholly sovereign over the dollar and tied itself to silver and gold.

That tie ended in 1971, when President Richard Nixon ended the last semblance of a U.S.gold standard. 

In short, federal “debt” is nothing like personal debt. The federal government is not “in debt.” It pays all its bills timely and in full, and can continue doing so.

Since dollars are a creation of laws, so long as the federal government has the ability to pass laws, it has the ability create dollars.

This year’s budget deficit is on track to top $1.9 trillion, or more than 6% of economic output, a threshold reached only around World War II, the 2008 financial crisis and the Covid-19 pandemic.

Publicly held federal debt—the sum of all deficits—just passed $28 trillion or almost 100% of GDP.

The “debt”/GDP ratio is meaningless. It says nothing about the federal government’s ability to pay. Debt nuts often quote this number to scare you, but it has absolutely no relevance to the federal government’s ability to pay its bills.

If Congress does nothing, the total debt will climb by another $22 trillion through 2034. Interest costs alone are poised to exceed annual defense spending.

These are big numbers but completely meaningless concerning the federal government’s solvency. The misnamed “debt” could be ten times or a hundred times as large, and the federal government easily could continue to pay all its bills.

Even if the government didn’t collect a single penny in taxes and the “debt” was a hundred times larger, it still could continue to pay its bills in full and in a timely manner.

Federal taxes are different from state and local taxes. State and local governments are monetarily non-sovereign. They do not have the unlimited ability to create dollars. They use tax receipts and borrowing to pay their financial obligations.

By contrast, the U.S. federal government does not use tax dollars or borrowing to pay its bills. The purposes of federal taxes are:

  1. To control the economy by taxing what the government wishes to discourage and by giving tax breaks to what the government wishes to reward.
  2. To assure demand for the U.S. dollar by required taxes to be paid in dollars.

Economists and policymakers already worry that the growing debt pile could put upward pressure on interest rates, restraining economic growth, crowding out other priorities and potentially impairing Washington’s ability to borrow in case of a war or another crisis.

In one sentence, the author, Mr. Rubin, has articulated the four common lies about the so-called federal debt (that neither is federal nor debt).

  1. The U.S. Federal Reserve sets interest rates at its whim in an effort to control inflation. This has nothing to do with the size of the federal “debt” as shown by the following graph:
There is no relationship between changes in federal “debt” (bleu) and interest rates (red).

There have been scattered warning signs already, including downgrades to the U.S. credit rating and lackluster demand for Treasury debt at some auctions.

Interest rates also are set to attract depositors, an exercise that became obsolete in 1971, when the government no longer required itself to match income with outflow.

2. Credit agencies set ratings based on the debtor’s ability and likelihood of paying promptly and in full. The federal government always pays timely and in full, so why would the rating ever go down?

Answer: This is not because of the size of the “debt” but because of Congress’s political gamesmanship. The party out of power limits the party in power’s ability to pay. It uses one of the more ridiculous laws, the so-called “debt limit” (which doesn’t limit the non-existent “debt.” It limits the government’s ability to pay its daily bills).

While the federal “debt” has grown from $400 billion to $33 trillion in just 80 years, “debt” downgrades have been few and sporadic, and related only to the fear that the debt nuts will prevent the government from paying, not to the size of the “debt.”

3. Federal deficits are necessary to grow the economy. It is mathematically impossible for the U.S. economy to grow unless the federal government pumps more money into the private sector (aka, the economy) than it takes out.

4. Federal deficit spending does not “crowd out” anything. It adds lending dollars to the economy.

With more dollars on deposit, the banks can lend more easily, and when the economy has more money, it is more likely to expand by borrowing. Nothing impairs Washington’s ability to borrow; the federal government never borrows.

5. “Lackluster demand” for T-securities is not a problem for the federal government. Selling T-securities doesn’t benefit the federal government. T-securities benefit buyers looking for a safe place to store unused dollars. That is why China buys them. T-securities are more secure than any bank China could find.

T-securities have two purposes, neither of which is to provide spending funds to the U.S. government:

— To help stabilize the dollar by providing safe storage for unused dollars
— To help the Fed control interest rates.

Both Harris and Trump have promised to protect the biggest drivers of rising spending—Social Security and Medicare. And both want to extend trillions of dollars in tax cuts set to lapse at the end of 2025, amid bipartisan agreement that federal income taxes shouldn’t rise for at least 97% of households.

Those are good political promises that would benefit the economy. Of course, the reality is that debt nuts will prevail because of voter ignorance. Thus, you can expect the same strong support for cutting benefits to the middle- and lower-income groups as we have seen in the past. The eligibility age for Social Security will continue to go up, and benefits will be taxed further.

Trump has promised to exempt tips from taxation, end income taxes on Social Security benefits, eliminate taxes on overtime pay, lower tax rates for companies that manufacture in the U.S., and create a new deduction for new parents’ expenses, offering more than $2 trillion in tax cuts atop $4 trillion to extend his first-term tax cuts.

These are good ideas, but as has been typical of Trump’s promises, they’re all verbal tooth-fairy stuff. It’ll happen only in your dreams.

Harris matched Trump’s tips idea and called for an expanded child care tax credit, including $6,000 for parents of newborns.

If the Republican House allows an expanded child care tax credit and $6,000 for newborns — which it won’t.

How did the U.S. fiscal path simultaneously become economically more alarming yet politically less relevant? Federal debt and deficits have blown past various imagined red lines and feared consequences have not materialized.

Keep that phrase in mind: “Feared consequences have not materialized.” The reason: The feared consequences were based on lies. There are no adverse consequences for federal deficits. The consequences are for not running deficits or even for deficits that are too low.

Interest rates, at least until 2022, stayed low. The dollar remains the world’s reserve currency, giving the U.S. far more running room than other major countries. The U.S. of 2024 is not Greece of 2007. There is risk, but there is no fiscal crisis.

There has been no financial crisis simply because federal “debt” is not a financial crisis. The whole thing is a giant lie spun by the rich to prevent the rest of us from receiving benefits.

The tax on Social Security benefits is ludicrous. Why would any sane government tax the benefits it provides?

The fact that the U.S. dollar is the world’s most common reserve currency does not give the U.S. “more running room” (whatever that is). It merely means that the world’s banks carry more U.S. dollars in reserve to facilitate international trade.

It does not protect us from financial difficulties; Monetary Sovereignty protects us from financial difficulties.

And yes, the U.S. is not Greece (or France, Germany, or Spain), none of which is Monetarily Sovereign. Those nations are more like Illinois, New York, and Wisconsin. They cannot create the money they use. The European Union (EU) is like the U.S. federal government in that it is Monetarily Sovereign and has the unlimited ability to create euros.

“We’ve learned we borrowed more than we realized we could,” said Jason Furman, a Harvard economist who was a top aide to President Barack Obama. “And we’ve actually borrowed more than we expected.”

Actually, Mr. Harvard economist, we haven’t borrowed at all. You’re surprised because the economy has grown due to increased federal deficit spending.

You simply can’t figure out why deficit spending seems to grow the economy while insufficient deficit spending leads to recessions (which are cured by more deficit spending).

Why it’s a mystery to you is the real mystery.

When deficit growth declines, we have recessions (vertical gray bars), which are cured by deficit increases.

Sadly, this simple graph shows that declines in deficit growth repeatedly lead to recessions, which are cured by increases in deficit growth.

Yet economically ignorant pundits continue to rail against deficit growth.

If anything, borrowing kept the economy afloat during the 2007-09 financial crisisand pandemic, and lawmakers were rewarded for it. Polls show the public is concerned about the deficit, but they also prefer politicians who dangle tax cuts, stimulus checks and money for the military.

If you believe borrowing “kept the economy afloat,” why do you oppose it?

At any rate, there was no borrowing. There was money creation, which the federal government can do in any amount, at will. The financial crisis was caused by excessive private-sector borrowing, not by non-existent federal borrowing.

The author demonstrates a failure to understand the difference between private sector and federal finances.

“No president in history, Republican or Democrat, gets a gold star or a Nobel Prize for reining in spending, the deficits and our debt,” said Rep. Jodey Arrington (R., Texas), chairman of the House Budget Committee. “Nobody gets the golden meat cleaver award.”

Thank heaven for that, because the “golden meat cleaver” cuts the legs off economic growth. (See: Ignorance is hard to conquer if the ignorant want to remain that way.)

Whoever wins in November will soon face two big fiscal tests. One is the need to raise the federal debt limit, likely in mid-2025.

No, the test will be to eliminate, not raise, the ridiculous “debt limit,” a law based on the rich’s desire to widen the income/wealth/power Gap between them 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.

The two ways for the rich to become richer are: Gain more for themselves and/or make sure those below them have less. That is why cutting your benefits makes the rich richer.

In both 2011 and 2023, the threat of default without a debt-limit increase led to compromises that reduced red ink.

Any default would be caused by the idiotic, unnecessary “debt ceiling.” Compromises are political theatre based on lies.

The other trigger is the looming expiration of much of the 2017 tax law.

That is the tax law Trump passed to help the rich widen the income/wealth/power Gap between the rich and the rest.

It was a tax law that If Congress doesn’t act by the end of 2025, taxes would rise on most households, a path to deficit reduction that both parties say they don’t want.

Imagine that. Congress wants to keep taxes low, but not increase the deficit. Anyone have a magic wand to make that happen?

In the early 1990s, when deficits were much smaller, deficit hawks were powerful enough in both parties to produce bipartisan deals that raised taxes and lowered spending. Those agreements helped drive the budget into balance in the late 1990s. Federal debt fell to about one-third of GDP.

And that budget balancing is what led to the recession of 2001, which was cured by federal deficits.

As deficit growth fell, we had a recession, which was cured when deficit growth resumed. This has happened repeatedly in U.S. history, yet debt nuts still call for deficit reduction.

When he first ran for president in 2016, Donald Trump said he would pay off the national debt within eight years. He went in the opposite direction: Debt rose from less than $15 trillion to more than $21 trillion by the time he left office.

What?? Donald Trump lied? Hard to believe. But good thing he did. The rise in “debt” fueled economic growth.

Trump made two major decisions that broke with Republicans in Congress and drove up federal borrowing.

Republicans had long advocated making Social Security and Medicare less generous and more fiscally sustainable. To appeal to middle-class voters, Trump embraced what had long been a Democratic position and shut down discussion of broad benefit cuts.

As always, Republicans wanted to cut benefits for those who are not rich. Trump saw that the voters would not buy into the  lie, so he wisely increased the “debt.”

And to call Social Security and Medicare “generous” is laughable. No one can live on Social Security benefits, and Medicare covers, at best, only 80% of costs. Still, the right-wing can hardly wait to cut, cut, cut.

Then in 2017, when House Republicans sought to cut tax rates, Trump resisted their attempts to offset the full cost. The Tax Cuts and Jobs Act Trump eventually signed into law was projected then to increase deficits by $1.5 trillion over a decade.

And it helped make the rich richer.

Once the pandemic started, Trump joined the broad economic consensus that the U.S. needed to pour money into the economy, eventually adding more than $3 trillion to the debt to provide stimulus checks, enhanced jobless benefits and other relief.

O.K., debt nuts, why does pouring money into the economy grow the economy, but only is a good thing when the economy is in trouble? It makes no sense.

President Biden and Harris expanded on Trump’s pandemic spending with the $1.9 trillion American Rescue Plan, which included another round of stimulus checks and aid to state and local governments.

The stimulus checks were a toe-in-the-water introduction of Social Security for All, which America should have. It worked as desired, which is why Congress didn’t repeat them.

Biden, with Harris’s strong backing, canceled student debt in a series of executive orders that could cost the government more than $1 trillion, according to the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget. The plan is now stuck in litigation as (right-wing) courts have curtailed Biden’s authority to cancel debt.

“I don’t think we’ve seen a president spend nearly as much without Congress as Biden,” said Marc Goldwein, the CRFB’s senior vice president.

Biden took over where the Republican Congress played politics with the economy. Putting students into debt is as stupid as it gets for a nation that claims it needs an educated population to compete on the world stage.

What happens if Trump wins depends on Congress. If Republicans also control the House and Senate, his next term could look a lot like his first—occasional talk about debt and deficits paired with tax cuts that expand both.

“Paired with tax cuts” for the rich along with deportations of much of our workforce (which would destroy the economy), the promised firing of millions of government workers (which would destroy our government), and the hiring of Trump’s incompetent friends and relatives (which would make Trump a dictator).

In his acceptance speech at the Republican National Convention, Trump said, “We’ll start paying off debt and start lowering taxes even further.”

Nonpartisan experts say there’s virtually no chance of that. Paying off debt would require the U.S. to shift from massive deficits to surpluses.

Tax cuts would work in the opposite direction. Low tax rates can encourage growth and generate some revenue, but not enough to offset the loss of revenue, economists in both parties acknowledge.

Federal surpluses take dollars out of the economy. How this is supposed to cause economic growth is a mystery never explained by the debt nuts.

Every federal surplus in history has caused a depression, but one, the 1997 recession “only” caused 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.
1997-2001: U. S. Federal Debt reduced 15%. Recession began 2001.

The reason for the above is no mystery. GDP = Federal Spending + Nonfederal Spending + Net Exports. Reduce federal deficits, and you will reduce both federal spending and nonfederal spending. Simple algebra.

Trump has indicated that he wants to extend the pieces of his 2017 tax law that expire after 2025 and lower the 21% corporate tax rate to 20%, and 15% for some companies. His recent proposals—eliminating taxes on workers’ tips, overtime pay and retirees’ Social Security benefits—dig a deeper hole.

He’s also made other proposals that would entail significant new spending, including a mass deportation program and a domestic missile-defense system.

These are good proposals except for his deportation crime. This would destroy lives, destroy the economy of America and the world, and destroy America ‘s reputation. We would forever be stamped as a vicious, mean-spirited banana-republic dictatorship.

Trump has touted several ideas that could reduce deficits. One is impoundment, in which the president refuses to spend money Congress has appropriated. That’s legally and constitutionally dubious.

And economically suicidal.

The other is tariffs. Trump wants to impose a tariff of 10% to 20% on all imported goods and even higher on Chinese products. That could raise about $2.8 trillion over a decade, according to the Tax Policy Center.

That $2,8 trillion would come from the pockets of American consumers and the economy. It’s incredibly ignorant, which is why debt nuts will love it.

House Republicans have proposed capping federal spending growth at a level lower than inflation, though the party is split and some want significant increases in the defense budget.

Capping spending will cause a recession or depression, as it always has.  Sadly, the American voter is ignorant about federal finances, so will vote for a damaging and unnecessary cap.

Arrington, who is helping cobble together Republicans’ agenda if they have full control of Congress, said they need to tackle spending and entitlement programs and hopes Trump, despite his statements to the contrary, could be open to that.

“We have an opportunity to live up to what we claim we believe when we campaign and why almost every Republican member was sent here to Congress by their constituents,” he said.

Arrington claims Republican constituents want Congress to cut Social Security and Medicare. That’s what his voters want? Really?

First, while the budget would raise taxes on the rich and corporations, the revenue isn’t enough to deliver the claimed deficit reduction, pay for Harris’ child tax credit and home-buyer subsidy proposals, and cover the Biden-Harris proposals to extend expiring cuts to prevent tax increases on households earning less than $400,000.

Second, the chances Congress would agree to such a plan are slim, even in the unlikely event Democrats control both the House and Senate. Biden couldn’t get centrist Democratic senators to pass his tax increases in 2022. Harris could face similar opposition and already dialed back Biden’s proposed capital-gains tax increase.

All of the above nonsense is due to one thing: The Big Lie that federal taxes fund federal spending. Let’s clarify this as simply as possible.

  1. Federal taxes do not fund anything.
  2. Even if the government collected $0, it could continue spending forever.
  3. The government pays for everything by creating new dollars ad hoc.
  4. Federal tax dollars are destroyed upon receipt by the Treasury.

Biden officials see next year’s tax debate as a crucial pivot point, and the White House has said any extension of expiring tax cuts should be paired with tax increases.

Ridiculous. Federal taxes pay for nothing. They are a useless drain on the economy.

Biden has proposed some Medicare savings through prescription drug pricing and has called for shoring up Social Security, which is paying out more in benefits than it collects in taxes.

Federal payment of more benefits than it collects in taxes grows the economy (aka the private sector).

But the parties are at odds over whether Social Security taxes and benefits should increase, and that gridlock means the program likely won’t be addressed for about a decade, when its trust fund is projected to be exhausted, triggering benefit cuts.

The federal government should simply pay for Social Security and Medicare to “shore up” them.

Not including interest, the U.S. government will spend $1.21 for every $1.00 it collects in revenue this year. Add interest and that climbs to $1.39.

Mathematically, that $.21 (or $.39) difference will grow the economy. Growing the economy is impossible if the federal government runs a surplus.

Voters often support balanced budgets in theory, but they also like the low taxes and higher spending of the past few decades.

Wanting federal balance budgets merely indicates that the public, having been fed the Big Lie so often, has become ignorant about federal finances.

“It’s really the combination of high deficits, high debt level, high interest burden,” said Richard Francis, the lead U.S. analyst for Fitch Ratings, one of those companies. “And we didn’t see any willingness to tackle the big issues.”

Total BS. Since 1940, the U.S. government has had high deficits, a high “debt level,” and often high interest rates, but it has never been downgraded. Why? Because Congressional infighting has become so fierce that the rating agencies were afraid the government would refuse to pay its bills out of spite toward the other side.

At some point, maybe, the U.S. will find it difficult to borrow.

The U.S. government never borrows.

At some point, interest costs may constrain policymakers.

The U.S. government has the infinite ability to pay interest.

At some point, bond investors may look at the U.S. political system and decide there’s a real risk they won’t get paid back—then begin demanding higher interest rates.

That only could happen if we continue with the astoundingly stupid, totally unnecessary, absolutely harmful “debt ceiling.”

“It’s going to be a 2029, 2030 exercise,” said Schneider of Piper Sandler.

Write to Richard Rubin at richard.rubin@wsj.com

It will be worse if publications like the Wall Street Journal continue printing lies, politicians continue speaking lies, and economists continue teaching lies to fool the public. 

Are you planning to vote for the end of Medicare and Social Security? These people are.

The Libertarians (also known as the Republican Party) want to cancel Medicare and Social Security under the guise of fiscal prudence and courage. The right wing has created a fake “debt crisis” and then invented a non-solution that requires exactly what they deny they want: The end of Medicare and Social Security. (See: Congressional Republicans Want Big Cuts to Social Security) Although Congress is accustomed to misleading statements and outright lies, nowhere are the lies piled deeper than the discussions of Medicare’s and Social Security’s impending “insolvency.” Let’s get something straight. The US government, being Monetarily Sovereign, cannot become insolvent. It has the infinite ability to create U.S. dollars. This means no agency of the U.S. government can become insolvent unless Congress and the President vote for insolvency. Look at this list of federal departments and agencies that cannot run short of money unless Congress and the President vote for insolvency. The list runs alphabetically from the U.S. AbilityOne Commission to the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars. There are 15 executive departments in the United States federal government, each of which is headed by a Cabinet member appointed by the President. The following is a list of the 15 executive departments:

Department of Agriculture Department of Commerce Department of Defense Department of Education Department of Energy Department of Health and Human Services Department of Homeland Security Department of Housing and Urban Development Department of the Interior Department of Justice Department of Labor Department of State Department of Transportation Department of the Treasury Department of Veterans Affairs

In addition to these departments, there are over 430 federal agencies in the United States, including 9 executive offices, 259 executive department sub-agencies and bureaus, 66 independent agencies, 42 boards, commissions, and committees, and 11 quasi-official agencies. Not one of the departments, agencies, executive offices, sub-agencies, bureaus, boards, commissions, committees, and quasi-official agencies can or will run short of dollars unless that is what Congress and the President want. Who says so? How about:

Former Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan said: “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.

Not many people realize that while state/local taxes pay for state/local spending, federal taxes pay for nothing. Rather than funding federal spending, the sole purposes of federal taxes are:
  1. To control the economy by taxing what the federal government wishes to discourage and by giving tax breaks to what the federal government wishes to reward,
  2. To assure demand for the U.S. dollar by requiring dollars to be used in paying taxes and
  3. To fool the public into believing some benefits are unsustainable unless taxes are raised, which reduces benefits.

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.”

Anyone who claims a federal “debt crisis” is ignorant about, or lying about, federal finances. There is no federal debt crisis. The Libertarians and their alter egos, the Republicans, are doing their best to provide you with false information. Here is a Libertarian article that could have been written by the Republicans:

Congress Is Trying To Avoid Taking Responsibility for the Debt Crisis It Created A fiscal commission might be a good idea, but it’s also the ultimate expression of Congress’ irresponsibility. ERIC BOEHM | 11.29.2023 2:30 PM

It’s inaccurate to say that no one in Congress wants to talk about the national debt and the federal government’s deteriorating fiscal condition.

How can the federal government, which as you’ve just read, has the infinite ability to create dollars, have a deteriorating fiscal condition”? It can’t. It’s like claiming the world’s oceans have a deteriorating liquid condition, or the universe has a deteriorating atomic condition. The lie about “deteriorating fiscal condition” forms the basis for the rest of the lies.

Indeed, during Wednesday morning’s meeting of the House Budget Committee, there was a lot of talk about exactly that.

“Runaway deficit-spending and our unsustainable national debt threatens not only our economy, but our national security, our way of life, our leadership in the world, and everything good about America’s influence,” said Rep. Jodey Arrington (R–Texas), the committee’s chairman.

Rep. Jodey Arrington either is stupendously ignorant or stupendously lying. The phrase “unsustainable national debt” consists of three words, all three of which are lies.
  1. “Unsustainable”: Interestingly, this word never is explained by those who use it incessantly. I suspect it means something like this: Federal finances are like personal finances. If your expenses are larger than your income, eventually, you won’t be able to pay your bills, so your debt will be “unsustainable.”The problem is that the federal government is Monetarily Sovereign while you are monetarily non-sovereign, which is totally different. You can run short of money. The federal government cannot.
  2. “National” This has to do with Treasury Securities, which indeed are national or federal. The federal government is the sole authority to issue T-bills, T-notes, and T-bonds. However, the owner of those T-bills, T-notes, and T-bonds is not the federal government. When someone or some nation buys a T-security, their dollars go into their T-security account. Those dollars remain the property of the buyer.They never are owned by the federal government. When the T-security reaches maturity, the dollars are returned to their owner. Think of a bank safe-deposit box. The bank never owns the contents. It holds them for safekeeping and returns the contents to the owner. The government’s storage of unused dollars for safekeeping, stabilizes the dollar.
  3. “Debt” relates to the mistaken claim that T-securities represent borrowing. But our Monetarily Sovereign government, with its infinite ability to create dollars, never borrows dollars. The only dollars the federal government ever owes are the dollars it uses to pay for things. Those dollars are paid in a timely fashion by a government that has the infinite ability to create dollars. There is no long-term buildup of federal “debt.”

He pointed to the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) projections showing that America’s debt, as a share of the size of the nation’s economy, is now as large as it was at the end of the Second World War—and that interest payments on the debt will soon cost more than the entire military budget.

The above paragraph refers to the infamous and much-misunderstood Debt/GDP ratio. It is a meaningless ratio that tells nothing and predicts nothing about a Monetarily Sovereign nation’s finances. A high or low ratio does not indicate solvency, growth, or any other financial factor. It is entirely useless. The so-called “Debt” (that isn’t a real debt) is the net total of all T-securities purchased and still outstanding for the past 10 years. They are not a burden on the federal government, which merely returns the dollars it holds for the owners when the security matures. By contrast, GDP is a one-year (or less) total of America’s (not just the federal government’s) spending. The formula for GDP is:

GDP = Federal Spending + Non-federal Spending + Net Exports

Comparing federal “Debt” to GDP is worse than comparing your 10-year income to the federal government’s spending this week: It is meaningless. The sole purpose of this comparison is to fool you into believing the federal government is running short of the dollars it has the infinite ability to create.

What’s missing, however, is any sense that Congress is willing to turn those words into action. Just look at the premise of Wednesday’s hearing: “Examining the need for a fiscal commission.”

Yes, it was a meeting about possibly forming a committee to discuss perhaps doing something to address the problem. In fact, it was the second such committee hearing in front of the House Budget Committee within the past few weeks.

It seems like there ought to be a more direct way to address this. , say, if a committee already existed within Congress was charged with handling budgetary issues. A House Budget Committee, perhaps.

But instead of using Wednesday’s meeting to seek consensus on how to solve the federal government’s budgetary problems, lawmakers debated a series of bills that aim to let Congress offload that responsibility to a special commission.

Unlike you, me, local governments, and businesses, the federal government’s only true “budgetary problem” is to decide where it wishes to spend its infinite hoard of dollars. While you et al. must worry about the availability of dollars, the federal government has no such constraints. It creates dollars by spending dollars. This is the process:
  1. When the federal government buys something and receives an invoice, it sends to the seller’s bank instructions (not dollars), instructing the bank to increase the balance in the seller’s checking account.
  2. When the bank does as instructed, new dollars are created and added to the M2 money supply measure.
  3. The instructions then are approved by the Federal Reserve, an agency of the federal government.
In short, the federal government creates dollars by spending dollars, and this creation is approved by the Federal Reserve, an agency of the federal government. The federal government creates the laws that approve its money-creation process. Being Monetarily Sovereign, the federal government can create any money-related laws it wishes, which is why no federal agency can run short of dollars unless the federal government wants it to run short. Federal agencies are not supported by federal taxes; they are supported by federal money creation. Medicare and Social Security can run short of dollars only if that is what Congress and the President want.

What that commission would look like and how its recommendations would be handled will depend on which proposal (if any of them) eventually becomes law—and even that seems somewhat unlikely, with Democrats voicing their opposition to the idea throughout Wednesday’s hearing.

To be fair, there are plenty of good arguments for why a fiscal commission might be the best way for Congress to fix the mess that it has made. It is an idea that’s certainly worthy of being considered, even if the whole exercise seems a little bit over-engineered.

All this blah, blah, blah is meant to disguise one simple fact: The rich, who run the U.S.  government, want to cut benefits for the middle and lower-income groups. Here is why:
  1. “Rich” is a comparative. A man owning a million dollars is rich if everyone else has a thousand dollars. But a man owning a million dollars is poor if everyone else has a hundred million dollars. During the Great Depression, anyone earning $20,000 a year was rich. Today, that salary would mark him as poor.
  2. To become richer requires widening the income/wealth/power Gap below you and narrowing the Gap above you.
  3. The rich always want to be richer, i.e.,  to widen the Gap below them.
  4. Because Social Security, Medicare, Obamacare, and all aid to the poor help narrow the Gap between the rich and the rest, the rich repeatedly try to eliminate all such benefits (while giving tax loopholes to the rich).
  5. Under the guise of fiscal responsibility, the right-wing makes unending efforts to cut the federal deficit spending that benefits those who are not rich (while continuing to run deficits that benefit the rich).

Romina Boccia, director of budget and entitlement policy at the Cato Institute, argues persuasively in her Substack that a fiscal commission is the best way to overcome the political hurdles that prevent Congress from taking meaningful action on borrowing and entitlement costs (which are driving a sizable portion of future deficits).

And there it is, the true purpose of a “fiscal commission” is to cut spending on so-called “entitlements” (i.e. Medicare and Social Security.) All the lies about Social Security and Medicare “trust funds” running short of dollars are to make you compliant with the Republican effort to make you poorer and the rich, richer. What you may not realize, these so called “trust funds” aren’t even trust funds.  To quote from the Peter G. Peterson Foundation web site:
A federal trust fund is an accounting mechanism used by the federal government to track earmarked receipts (money designated for a specific purpose or program) and corresponding expenditures. The largest and best-known trust funds finance Social Security, portions of Medicarehighways and mass transit, and pensions for government employees. Federal trust funds bear little resemblance to their private-sector counterparts, and therefore the name can be misleading. A “trust fund” implies a secure source of funding. However, a federal trust fund is simply an accounting mechanism used to track inflows and outflows for specific programs. In private-sector trust funds, receipts are deposited and assets are held and invested by trustees on behalf of the stated beneficiaries. In federal trust funds, the federal government does not set aside the receipts or invest them in private assets. Rather, the receipts are recorded as accounting credits in the trust funds, and then combined with other receipts that the Treasury collects and spends. Further, the federal government owns the accounts and can, by changing the law, unilaterally alter the purposes of the accounts and raise or lower collections and expenditures.
Thus, the federal government can do whatever it wishes with the “trust funds.” It can add to them, subtract from them, or change them from the wrongly presumed mission of supporting federal expenditures. At the click of a computer key or the passage of a law, the balance in the federal “trust funds” could be changed to $100 trillion or $0, and neither would affect taxpayers. Thus, the notion that any federal “trust funds” are, as the right wing claims, “in trouble,” is a lie, unless “trouble” comes from those who don’t wish you to understand the differences between the private sector’s real trust funds vs. the federal government’s phony “trust funds.”

Boccia’s preferred solution would allow the commission’s proposals to be “self-executing unless Congress objects,” meaning that legislators would have the “political cover to vocally object to reforms that will create inevitable winners and losers, without re-election concerns undermining an outcome that’s in the best interest of the nation.”

This would be the Republican’s way of saying, “Don’t blame us for cutting your Social Security. It was the commission that did it.”

It’s probably true that Congress itself is the biggest hurdle to managing the federal government’s fiscal situation. Unfortunately, that’s also the biggest reason to be skeptical: any decisions made by a fiscal commission will only be as good as Congress’ willingness to abide by them.

President Obama, of all people, tried this with the notorious Simpson/Bowles Commission, which made exactly the recommendations expected of it. Fortunately, America learned the plot, and the commission’s recommendations never were implemented. The commission’s recommendations included increasing the Social Security retirement age, cuts to military, benefit, and domestic spending, restricting or eliminating certain tax credits and deductions, and increasing the federal gasoline tax. The Simpson-Bowles proposal would have cut entitlement and social safety net programs, including Social Security and Medicare, which was opposed by critics on the left, such as Democratic Representative Jan Schakowsky (a Commission member) and economist Paul Krugman.

There’s no secret knowledge about reducing deficits that will only be unlocked by bringing together a collection of legislators and private sector experts, which is what most of the bills to create a commission propose doing.

Federal deficit spending is necessary for economic growth. Deficit reduction leads to recessions, which then are cured by deficit increases.
When federal deficits decline (red line). We have recessions (vertical gray bars), which are cured by increases in federal deficits.
One would think that repeatedly seeing the same effect — nine consecutive recessions caused by deficit reduction, 9 successive recessions cured by deficit increases — our leaders eventually would realize that far from being a bad thing, federal deficits are necessary. The ignorant have been claiming for more than 80 years that the federal budget is “unsustainable” and a “ticking time bomb.” Read a list of some such claims here. In all those years, much to the consternation of the ignorant, the ticking time bomb never has exploded.

Congress should hold hearings, invite experts to share their views, draft proposals, vet those ideas through the committee process, and then put the resulting bills on the House floor for a full vote.

Shielding Congress from the electoral consequences of making poor fiscal decisions doesn’t seem to improve budget-making quality. We need Congress to be held more accountable for this mess.

No, we need our leaders to be held accountable for disseminating the lie that federal deficits are harmful. Here is what happens when we ignore the fundamental truth that federal deficits are a blessing, not a curse: Every depression in U.S. history began with a reversal of federal deficit creation:

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.

Here is what should be done: Step 1. Call it what it really is. Rather than talking about a federal “debt,” we should talk about the economy’s income. The misnamed “debt” is income for the economy. It’s money flowing from the infinitely wealthy federal government into the economy that needs and uses the money for growth. Step 2. Rather than instituting a commission to cut private sector income, thus causing recessions and depressions, America should create a plan to improve the lives of our people. Use the infinite money-creation power of the federal government to:
  • Fund public education about the benefits of Monetary Sovereignty
  • Fund a comprehensive, no-deductible Medicare for every man, woman, and child in America.
  •  for the homeless
  • Fund college for everyone in America who wants an advanced degree.
  • Fund Social Security benefits for every man, woman, and child in America.
  • Eliminate FICA, which funds nothing but is America’s most regressive tax.
  • Fund various research projects, including medical, physical, psychological, and environmental.
  • Fund long-term care
  • Fund housing
  • Fund childcare for working families.
And fund all the other projects that would benefit the public and narrow the Gap between the rich and the rest.

A $33 trillion national debt didn’t come crashing out of the sky like an asteroid that couldn’t be avoided.

“No responsible leader can look at the rapid deterioration of our balance sheet, the CBO projection of these unsustainable deficits, and the long-term unfunded liabilities of our nation and not feel compelled to intervene and change course,” Arrington said Wednesday.

He’s right, but that only draws a line under the contradiction. A responsible Congress would be working on a serious plan to get the deficit under control. Instead, the Budget Committee is working on proposals to avoid doing that.

The article ends with ignorance and lies. Contrary to the above statements, the facts are:
  1. The federal government’s balance sheet is not “deteriorating.”
  2. Deficits are necessary, not “unsustainable.”
  3. All federal liabilities are funded by the federal government’s infinite ability to create sovereign currency.
Finally, if you vote for the right-wing here is a letter you may wish to send to your children and grandchildren:

Dear Loved Ones

I sincerely apologize for electing people who fouled your water, your earth, and your air, cut Social Security, cut Medicare, cut Obamacare, increased your taxes, lied about COVID and vaccinations, and did nothing to improve the lives of all (except the rich, who were well rewarded).

I also apologize for electing a Hitler clone who admitted he would arrest everyone disagreeing with him and give all the nation’s wealth to those who already are wealthy.

I could claim ignorance, but to be honest, I was warned about what would happen. I guess I yielded to my hatred of blacks, browns, yellows, reds, Jews, Muslims, women, the poor, immigrants, and gays. 

I should have learned about Monetary Sovereignty, but I was so busy denying the danger of guns and the attempted coup I had neither the time nor the inclination to learn anything.

Perhaps you will be wiser.

I hope you will forgive me for the miserable, ignorant, hate-filled world I have left for you.

But at least the very rich are very happy.

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

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

MONETARY SOVEREIGNTY